International Jury Selects Amazon Frontlines to Receive 2024 Hilton Humanitarian Prize

Amazon Frontlines is the first organization that promotes a scalable, proven model of Indigenous-led conservation and the first organization operating exclusively in South America to receive the Hilton Humanitarian Prize

Amazon Frontlines co-founders Mitch Anderson and Nemonte Nenquimo (center) with partners from the Indigenous organization Ceibo Alliance. The Conrad N. Hilton Foundation announced on August 13, 2024, that Amazon Frontlines will receive the 2024 Hilton Humanitarian Prize. (Photo: Christopher Fragapane/Amazon Frontlines)

WESTLAKE VILLAGE, Calif.--()--The Conrad N. Hilton Foundation today announced that Amazon Frontlines—a nonprofit that supports Indigenous people in defending their rights to land and their way of life, preserving biodiversity in the Amazon, and protecting the environment—has been selected as the 2024 Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize recipient.

Amazon Frontlines is the first organization of Indigenous and Western human rights and climate activists to receive the Prize. The world’s largest annual humanitarian award, the Prize is presented to a nonprofit organization judged to have made extraordinary contributions toward alleviating human suffering.

Each year, the Hilton Foundation reviews nomination submissions from nonprofits throughout the world, and an independent, international panel of distinguished jurors makes the final selection after a rigorous vetting process. The following individuals served on the 2024 Hilton Humanitarian Prize jury: The Right Honourable Helen Clark; Leymah Gbowee; Steven M. Hilton; Sister Joyce Meyer, PBVM; Her Majesty Queen Noor; Zainab Salbi; Ann M. Veneman; and Dr. Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León.

Peter Laugharn, president and CEO of the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, states: “The Jury’s selection of Amazon Frontlines to receive the 2024 Hilton Humanitarian Prize highlights the critical role Indigenous communities have in developing policies to protect the environment. For more than a decade, Amazon Frontlines has worked hand-in-hand with Indigenous leaders to develop proven, scalable, and sustainable models of locally led conservation—approaches that are vital to protecting the Amazon and therefore our entire planet.”

Since its founding in 2011, Amazon Frontlines has focused on permanently protecting the rainforest homelands of dozens of Indigenous nations from further mining, drilling, and deforestation using grassroots organizing, advocacy, legal defense, and cutting-edge technology like GPS mapping and drone and camera trap surveillance.

Through its work, Amazon Frontlines has partnered with Indigenous peoples to win some of the most significant climate victories in recent times, including the A'i Cofán and Waorani people’s triumphs in protecting hundreds of thousands of acres of rainforest and establishing legal precedents for Indigenous rights in the Amazon and a nationwide coalition that won a referendum in 2023 to indefinitely stop oil drilling in Ecuador’s Yasuni National Park. This is one of the most biodiverse territories on Earth and the home to two of the world’s last uncontacted Indigenous populations.

“Our work today in the Amazon is an urgent fight for the futures of all people, and for the Earth itself. We strive for a different future—where the global community deeply understands the land, the forest, and the ecosystem, and how it is providing life to all of us, and how interconnected all of us are across the globe,” Nemonte Nenquimo, co-founder of Amazon Frontlines said. “The Prize is a recognition of that work, and an acknowledgement that without the Amazon, there is no future. My life, the lives of my family and people, our homes, our culture, our language, the lives of myriad plant and animal species—many of which are endemic to the Amazon, the life of the forest itself, and the lives of millions of people all depend on it.”

"Since the founding of Amazon Frontlines, we have witnessed the power of collaboration between Indigenous peoples protecting their lands against destruction and Western activists committed to listening, learning, and partnering to secure lasting preservation of our rainforests,” said Mitch Anderson, executive director and co-founder of Amazon Frontlines. “Time is running out to avoid a climate catastrophe, but Indigenous peoples hold the solutions and wisdom needed to solve this climate crisis. The Hilton Humanitarian Prize is a bolt of energy to our movement when the world needs it most."

Amazon Frontlines will receive the Prize at the 2024 Hilton Humanitarian Prize Ceremony on Oct. 9, 2024, at The Beverly Hilton in Los Angeles, Calif.

Nominations for the Hilton Humanitarian Prize are open year-round.

The Conrad N. Hilton Foundation:

Founded by international hotelier Conrad N. Hilton in 1944, the Foundation invests in organizations tackling some of the world’s toughest challenges. We think big about solutions, working in partnership with local communities to improve lives, strengthen systems, and advocate for change. The Foundation partners with organizations worldwide, with a special focus on Africa, South America, and the United States, including our home in Los Angeles. Additionally, following selection by an independent, international jury, the Foundation annually awards the Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize to an organization doing extraordinary work to reduce human suffering. The Foundation is one of the world’s largest, with approximately $7 billion in assets. It has awarded grants to date totaling more than $3.2 billion worldwide, and $290 million in 2023. Visit www.hiltonfoundation.org for more information.

Amazon Frontlines:

Amazon Frontlines is a nonprofit organization based in the Upper Amazon, with headquarters in Lago Agrio, Ecuador, that helps Indigenous peoples work together to leverage technology, laws, media, clean energy, the global economy, and their forest knowledge to protect their way of life, their lands, and our climate. For more information, visit www.amazonfrontlines.org.

Visuals: Photos are available to the media. Broll available on request.

Contacts

Haines & Co. Integrated Communications (Media):
Nerissa R. Silao
nerissas@ca.rr.com
310-874-9230

Conrad N. Hilton Foundation Contact:
Flavia Draganus – Director, Communications
Flavia.d@hiltonfoundation.org
347-556-5973

Amazon Frontlines Contact:
Sophie Pinchetti – External Communications Manager
sophie@amazonfrontlines.org
(+593) 939-918-899

Contacts

Haines & Co. Integrated Communications (Media):
Nerissa R. Silao
nerissas@ca.rr.com
310-874-9230

Conrad N. Hilton Foundation Contact:
Flavia Draganus – Director, Communications
Flavia.d@hiltonfoundation.org
347-556-5973

Amazon Frontlines Contact:
Sophie Pinchetti – External Communications Manager
sophie@amazonfrontlines.org
(+593) 939-918-899