Oslo Freedom Forum (OFF) is a series of global conferences run by the New York–based non-profit Human Rights Foundation under the slogan "Challenging Power".[1] OFF was founded in 2009 as a one-time event and has taken place annually ever since. The forum aims to bring together notable people, including former heads of state, winners of the Nobel Peace Prize, prisoners of conscience, as well as of other public figures in order to network and exchange ideas about human rights and exposing dictatorships.
The main OFF conference is held annually in central Oslo, Norway, while satellite events have been held in San Francisco, New York, Taiwan, and on college campuses in the United States. OFF talks are live-streamed and consist of lectures and panel discussions taking place in front of a live audience.[2]
The inaugural 2009 Oslo Freedom Forum, titled "The Nobility of the Human Spirit and the Power of Freedom", had over 30 speakers with an emphasis on the importance of literature in advancing the cause of freedom. Participants included Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel; Czech playwright and politician Václav Havel; Kurdish rights advocate Leyla Zana; and Tibetan former political prisoner Palden Gyatso.[1]The Wall Street Journal described OFF as "unlike any other human-rights conference... the emphasis was on promoting basic rights in all nations at all times."[3]
The 2010 Forum, organized around the theme "From Tragedy to Triumph", with participants from more than 40 countries and six continents. The event focused on the progress made in the realms of civil liberties and freedoms over the past century, while highlighting the innovation of modern-day advocates—activists, policy makers, world leaders, and media entrepreneurs. The Economist described is as "on its way to becoming a human right equivalent of the Davos economic forum."[4]
In 2011 the Forum theme was "Spark of Change", focused on the world's most prominent dictatorships, and the impact that a single individual can have on the world.[5]Peter Thiel praised the Forum engaging "the intellectual debate as well as the moral cause."
The conference received more international press coverage this year, chronicled in VICE, BuzzFeed, El País, El Mundo, Aftenposten, and Verdens Gang. Speakers were profiled in The Atlantic, CNN, The Economist, The New York Times, CNET, The Wall Street Journal, NPR, Dagens Næringsliv, and Finansavisen. BuzzFeed described the conference as "an internationalist networking party where dissidents trade tips on overthrowing authoritarian regimes," while Al Jazeera wrote it "gives the people who challenge repressive regimes a platform to speak."
One-day events have been held in San Francisco, New York, and Taipei.
In 2012, Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi headlined the San Francisco Freedom Forum, which featured talks exploring various paths to freedom. Other speakers included: Saudi women's rights pioneer Manal al-Sharif; conflict psychologist Justine Hardy; Iranian author and former prisoner of conscience Marina Nemat; Slate editor and author William J. Dobson; drug policy reformer Ethan Nadelmann; Chinese scholar and former political prisoner Yang Jianli; Ghanaian economist George Ayittey; Moroccan journalist Ahmed Benchemsi; and Kazakhstani theater director Bolat Atabayev.[22]
In 2013, the first College Freedom Forum took place at Tufts University on 5 November. Speakers included Iranian author and former prisoner of conscience Marina Nemat; Moroccan journalist and media entrepreneur Ahmed Benchemsi; Equatoguinean human rights lawyer Tutu Alicante; president and CEO of Liberty in North Korea (LiNK) Hannah Song; and Egyptian journalist Abeer Allam.[23]
In 2015, the College Freedom Forum was held at Yale University on 26 March 2015. Speakers included North Korean defector Yeonmi Park; American journalist William Dobson; and Serbian expert on nonviolent resistance Srđa Popović. Talks were followed by a question and answer session with the audience.[25]
Regular participants include HRF board member and chess champion Garry Kasparov and activist Bill Browder.
Václav Havel Prize
The Václav Havel International Prize for Creative Dissent was set up in 2012 to honor artists who creatively fight back against authoritarian regimes through art. The inaugural 2012 recipients included Aung San Suu Kyi.[27]
2013 recipients were Syrian cartoonist Ali Ferzat, North Korean democracy activist Park Sang Hak, and Cuban civil society group Ladies in White—represented by their leader Berta Soler.