Norges Juristforbund, the Norwegian Association of Lawyers, celebrates its 50th anniversary in 2016. It is also 10 years since the association's Protection of the Law Prize (Rettssikkerhetsprisen) was awarded for the first time. This is why Crown Prince Haakon was invited to attend the presentation ceremony and the lecture in connection with the Protection of the law conference at the Grand Hotel in downtown Oslo today.
This year the prize was awarded to the foundation I work for, Lovdata.
As far as I can tell there was no news coverage of the event, but you can find photos of the presentation through the following Twitter links:
The Protection of the Law Prize is awarded one or several persons, an institution or an organisation which during the previous year or for some time has distinguished itself in its work by
Updated on Wednesday 28 September 2016 at 13.40 (photo identification corrected).
This year the prize was awarded to the foundation I work for, Lovdata.
As far as I can tell there was no news coverage of the event, but you can find photos of the presentation through the following Twitter links:
- Jon Wessel-Aas, 12.02 P.M. 27 Sep 2016
- Advokatbladet, 1.14 P.M. 27 Sep 2016
The Protection of the Law Prize is awarded one or several persons, an institution or an organisation which during the previous year or for some time has distinguished itself in its work by
- Strengthening the protection of the law and equality before the law within its field of work,
- Working for the rule of law principles, freedom of expression, equality, human rights and safety from trespass to person
- Contributing to increased understanding of and insight into the body of laws and rules
- Contributing to more efficient proceedings and more secure decision making through the use of (legal) competence
Updated on Wednesday 28 September 2016 at 13.40 (photo identification corrected).