Clive Stafford Smith

Clive Stafford Smith is a human rights activist who has been involved in working for the prisoners disappearing in the US gulags around the world, e.g., Guantanamo. Smith has also been active campaigning against the use of drone bombing/assassinations around the world, but primarily in the Middle East/Afghanistan.

Biographical Details
"After graduating from Columbia Law School in New York, Clive spent nine years as a lawyer with the Southern Center for Human Rights working on death penalty cases and other civil rights issues. In 1993, Clive moved to New Orleans and launched the Louisiana Crisis Assistance Center, a non-profit law office specialising in representation of poor people in death penalty cases.

"In 1999 Clive founded Reprieve and, the following year, he was awarded an OBE for ‘humanitarian services’...

"Clive has received a great many awards and honours. He was a Soros Senior Fellow, Rowntree Visionary (2005) and Echoing Green Fellow (2005). In addition, he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from The Lawyer Magazine (2003) and The Law Society, the Benjamin Smith Award from the ACLU of Louisiana (2003), the Gandhi Peace Award (2004), a Lannan Foundation Cultural Freedom Award (2008), International Freedom of the Press Award (2009), Unione Nazionale Cronisti Italiani (for the defence of Sami el Haj) and the International Bar Association's Human Rights Award (2010)."

External Resources

 * Guardian profile