ASU Law to honor Africa’s first elected female head of state with 2025 O’Connor Justice Prize


Nobel Peace Prize laureate Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the first democratically elected female head of state in Africa, has been named the 10th recipient of the O’Connor Justice Prize.

The award, administered by the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University, was established in 2014 to honor the legacy of the school’s namesake, the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor.

The O’Connor Justice Prize recognizes those who have made extraordinary efforts to advance the rule of law, justice and human rights around the world. An advisory board, spearheaded by Ambassador Barbara Barrett and the Honorable Ruth McGregor, selects each recipient annually who best embodies Justice O’Connor’s legacy of service.

The 2024 O’Connor Justice Prize honoree was Rangina Hamidi, an Afghan American writer, educator, social entrepreneur and politician who served as Afghanistan’s education minister until August 2021. She was the first cabinet-level female minister of education to hold that position in 30 years.

Headshot of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf

Johnson Sirleaf, known globally as “Africa’s Iron Lady,” earned international acclaim for leading Liberia through the Ebola crisis and through recovery after a decade-long civil war. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2011 for her achievements. She is also a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the U.S. for her commitment to freedom for all Africans and the Ibrahim Prize, the most prestigious award an African leader can be given.

Johnson Sirleaf rose through the political ranks in her home country throughout the 1960s and '70s, reaching the position of minister of finance in 1979. She was forced to flee Liberia in 1980 amid a coup d'état and founded Measuagoon, a Liberian nongovernmental organization, while in self-imposed exile in Cote d’Ivoire.

She eventually returned home and was elected president of the Republic of Liberia in 2005, just two years after the country’s civil war ended. She served for two terms and was instrumental in rebuilding the country, lifting United Nations trade sanctions and increasing the national budget. She stepped down from the presidency in 2018 and was key in a peaceful transfer of power — the first in Liberia in over 73 years.

“Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s exemplary leadership and dedication to the principles of justice, integrity and equality embody the spirit of the O’Connor Justice Prize,” said Stacy Leeds, Willard H. Pedrick Dean, Regents and Foundation Professor of Law. “Like Justice O’Connor’s presence as the first woman on the U.S. Supreme Court, her tenure as Liberia’s first female democratically elected head of state marked a historic moment for Liberia and Africa and the world at large. Few embody the ideals of this award better than she does.”

Johnson Sirleaf is a member of The Elders, an organization founded by Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu, in which world leaders work together to advance peace, justice and human rights. Since leaving the presidency, she has served on the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation’s inaugural Development Advisory Council and was appointed co-chair of the World Health Organization’s Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response. She has also established the Ellen Johnson Sirleaf Presidential Center for Women and Development, where she continues to pave the way for women’s leadership and advancement.

Johnson Sirleaf will accept the O’Connor Justice Prize in early 2025 at a ceremony in Phoenix.

Additional past recipients include:

  • Inaugural recipient Navanethem Pillay of South Africa, the former U.N. high commissioner for human rights, was honored for her fight against apartheid and her championing of international human rights.
  • Ana Palacio was honored as the first woman to serve as the foreign affairs minister of Spain, member of the Council of State of Spain, and former senior vice president and general counsel of the World Bank Group.
  • Jimmy Carter, the 39th president of the United States, was honored for his humanitarian work after leaving office. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002 for his efforts to find peaceful solutions to conflicts, to advance democracy and to promote economic and social development.
  • Anson Chan, the former chief secretary of Hong Kong, is known as “Hong Kong’s conscience.” She was honored for her decades of devotion to social justice and democracy. She helped oversee Hong Kong’s transition from British control in 1997.
  • Frederik Willem de Klerk, the former South African president, honored for leading the effort to dismantle that country’s apartheid system and co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize with Nelson Mandela in 1993.
  • Nadia Murad, the acclaimed Yazidi human rights activist, honored for founding a global initiative to advocate for survivors of violence and genocide, becoming the first Iraqi and Yazidi to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, which she received in 2018.
  • Judge Elizabeth Odio Benito, president of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, honored for her work in creating the modern framework for international justice and decades of teaching, research and leadership around international human rights and, more specifically, women’s rights.
  • The Honorable Louise Arbour, former justice of the Supreme Court of Canada and high commissioner for human rights for the United Nations. She secured the first conviction for genocide since 1948 and the first indictment for war crimes by a sitting European head of state, Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic.

More Law, journalism and politics

 

A stack of four pizza boxes

How to watch an election

Every election night, adrenaline pumps through newsrooms across the country as journalists take the pulse of democracy. We gathered three veteran reporters — each of them faculty at the Walter…

A group of students stand as someone talks at a lectern emblazoned with the ASU logo.

Law experts, students gather to celebrate ASU Indian Legal Program

Although she's achieved much in Washington, D.C., Mikaela Bledsoe Downes’ education is bringing her closer to her intended destination — returning home to the Winnebago tribe in Nebraska with her…

A Navajo woman smiles while holding an I Voted sticker toward the camera

Native Vote works to ensure the right to vote for Arizona's Native Americans

The Navajo Nation is in a remote area of northeastern Arizona, far away from the hustle of urban life. The 27,400-acre reservation is home to the Canyon de Chelly National Monument and…