The Mercury News

Justice Ginsburg wins $1M Berggruen Prize

- By Jennifer Schuessler

She’s already a Supreme Court justice and a popculture action hero. And now, Ruth Bader Ginsburg can claim another outsize distinctio­n: winner of a $1 million prize.

Ginsburg has been named the recipient of the 2019 Berggruen Prize, which is given annually to a thinker whose ideas “have profoundly shaped human self-understand­ing and advancemen­t in a rapidly changing world.”

The previous winners of the prize, which was first awarded in 2016, have all been philosophe­rs.

Ginsburg, 86, chosen from a pool of over 500 nominees, will direct the prize money to a charitable or nonprofit organizati­on. She was hailed by the prize committee as “a lifelong trailblaze­r for human rights and gender equality,” and “a constant voice in favor of equality, the rights of workers and the separation of church and state.”

“Few in our era have done more to bring vital philosophi­cal ideas to fruition in practical affairs than Ruth Bader Ginsburg,” philosophe­r Kwame Anthony Appiah, chairman of the prize committee and a professor at New York University, said in a news release. “She has been both a visionary and a strategic leader in securing equality, fairness, and the rule of law not only in the realm of theory, but in social institutio­ns and the lives of individual­s.”

The prize comes amid increased public recognitio­n for Ginsburg, a stalwart liberal voice on the court who underwent treatment for a tumor on her pancreas in August.

She was the subject of two movies released last year: the biopic “On the Basis of Sex,” which focused on her early years as a pioneering sex-discrimina­tion litigator at the American Civil Liberties Union, and the more irreverent documentar­y “RBG,” which included footage of a petite, steely-eyed Ginsburg lifting hand weights while wearing a sweatshirt reading “Super Diva!”

In the prize announceme­nt, jurors paid tribute to her jurisprude­nce and the power of her personal story.

“By grit and determinat­ion, brains, courage, compassion and a fiery commitment to justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg rose from unadorned beginnings to become one of the most respected, and most beloved, jurists of our time,” Amy Gutmann, president of the University of Pennsylvan­ia, said.

 ?? JESSICA HILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg claps after listening to students sing opera at Amherst College in Massachuse­tts on Oct. 3. Ginsburg, recipient of this year’s $1million Berggruen Prize for philosophy and culture, will direct the money to charity.
JESSICA HILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg claps after listening to students sing opera at Amherst College in Massachuse­tts on Oct. 3. Ginsburg, recipient of this year’s $1million Berggruen Prize for philosophy and culture, will direct the money to charity.

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