Leymah Gbowee
Peace Activist and Nobel Peace Laureate
Leymah Gbowee is a Liberian peace activist responsible for leading a women’s nonviolent peace movement, Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace, which helped bring an end to the Second Liberian Civil War in
2003. Her efforts to end the war, along with her collaborator Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, helped usher in a period of peace and enabled a free election in 2005, which Sirleaf won.
Along with Sirleaf, Ms. Gbowee was awarded the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize “for their non-violent struggle for the safety of women and for women’s rights to full participation in peacebuilding work.”
Gbowee is the founder and president of Gbowee Peace Foundation Africa, founded in 2012 and based in Monrovia, which provides educational and leadership opportunities to girls, women, and youth in Liberia.
She is the former executive director of the Women Peace and Security Network Africa, based in Accra, Ghana, which builds relationships across the West African sub-region in support of women’s capacity to prevent,
avert and end conflicts. She is a founder member and former coordinator of the Women in Peacebuilding Program, part of the West African Network for Peacebuilding.