The following is a list of recipients of the Paralympic Order .
The Paralympic Order is the highest award of the Paralympic Movement, since 1994. The recipients get a medal with the IPC logo on it. The Paralympic Order is awarded to individuals for particularly distinguished contribution to the Paralympic Movement. [1] [2]
Before 2003, the Paralympic Order was given out in three categories: Gold, Silver and Bronze. [3] [4]
Year | Name | Title | NPC | Lvl. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | Gerhard Heiberg | President of the Lillehammer 1994 Winter Olympic Games Organizing Committee and (LOCOG) Lillehammer 1994 Paralympic Games Organizing Committee (LPOC) | Norway | |
John Magdal | Managing director of LPOC | Norway | ||
Lill-Unni Østern | Office Manager of LPOC | Norway | ||
Rolf Jenssen | Venues Consultant of LPOC | Norway | ||
1996 | Juan Antonio Samaranch | President of the International Olympic Committee IOC | Spain | |
Andrew Fleming [5] | President of the Atlanta 1996 Paralympic Games Organizing Committee (APOC) | United States | ![]() | |
1998 | Goro Yoshimura | President of the Nagano 1998 Paralympic Games Organizing Committee (NAPOC) | Japan | |
Tasuku Tsukada | Mayor of Nagano | Japan | ||
Yoshifumi Ihara | Deputy Secretary General of NAPOC | Japan | ||
1999 | Joan Scruton | Past Secretary General of the International Stoke Mandeville Wheelchair Sports Federation (ISMWSF) | Great Britain |
Year | Name | Title | NPC | Lvl. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | John Grant | President of the Sydney 2000 Paralympic Games Organizing Committee (SPOC) | Australia | |
2001 | Robert Steadward | First President of the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) | Canada | |
Michael Riding | Past IPC Medical Officer | |||
André Auberger | Past IPC Treasurer | |||
Elisabeth Dendy | Past President of the Cerebral Palsy International Sports and Recreation Association (CPISRA) | Great Britain | ||
Lina Faria | Past President of CPISRA | |||
Enrique Sanz | Past President of the International Blind Sports Federation (IBSA) | |||
Guillermo Cabezas | Past President of the International Sports Organization for the Disabled (ISOD) | |||
Harry Fang | Founding Father of the Far East and South Pacific Games for the Disabled (FESPIC) | China | ||
Walter Tröger | International Olympic Committee (IOC) Delegate Member for Disabled Sport | |||
George Dunstan | Past International Paralympic Committee (IPC) Regional Representative South Pacific | Australia | ||
Gilbert Felli | IOC Sports Director | |||
2002 | Bob Garff [4] | Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Salt Lake 2002 Organizing Committee (SLOC) | ![]() | |
Mitt Romney [4] | Chief executive Officer and President of SLOC | United States | ![]() | |
Fraser Bullock [4] | Executive Vice-President and Chief Operating Officer of SLOC | United States | ![]() | |
Bob McCullough [4] | Past president of the International Stoke Mandeville Wheelchair Sports Federation (ISMWSF) | Australia | ![]() | |
Gudrun Doll-Tepper [4] | Past IPC chairperson of the science committee and president of the International Council of Sport Science and Physical Education (ICSSPE) | ![]() | ||
Gertrude Krombholz [4] | Past IPC chairperson Wheelchair Dance Sport | ![]() | ||
Hans Lindström [4] | Past IPC technical officer and regional representative Europe | ![]() | ||
2003 | Yasuhiro Hatsuyama | Former IPC Executive Committee member and East Asia Representative | ||
Colin Rains | President of the Cerebral Palsy International Sports and Recreation Association (CPISRA) | |||
Hector Ramirez | Past President of the Pan American Wheelchair Sport Federation, President of the Argentine Paralympic Committee (COPAR) | |||
Donald Royer | President of the Canadian Wheelchair Sports Association | |||
Jean Stone | Technical Secretary to the IPC Sports Council, Women in Sport Committee | |||
Carl Wang | Chairperson of the Norwegian Sports Organization for the Disabled and President of the European Paralympic Committee | Norway | ||
Xavier Gonzalez | Paralympic Games Liaison Director and interim COO | |||
2004 | Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki | President of the Athens Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (ATHOC) | Greece | |
Ioannis Spanudakis | Managing director of ATHOC | |||
Ioanna Karyofylli | General Manager of ATHOC | |||
Ludwig Guttmann | Pioneer of sport for persons with a disability and founder of the Paralympic Movement | Germany | ||
Organizacion Nacional de Ciegos (ONCE) | For their involvement in the Barcelona 1992 Paralympic Games, their support of the Paralympic Movement in Spain and their contributions to the International Blind Sports Federation (IBSA) | Spain | ||
2005 | Jack Benedick | Former athlete; World Championship and Paralympic Games Technical Delegate. Chairperson of IPC Alpine Skiing. Board of Directors of the US Ski and Snowboard Association | ||
Birgitta Blomquist | Past representative to a variety of sport federations (Swimming Committee Chairperson 1984-1992 and Wintersport Committee Chairperson 1986–1992) | |||
Chris Cohen | Chairperson of the IPC Athletics Executive Committee | |||
Leen Coudenys | IPC Executive Assistant | |||
Ian Harrison, MBE | President of the International Foundation for Disabled Sailing (IFDS) | |||
Robert Jackson | Past director, vice-president and president of the International Stoke Mandeville Games Federation from 1972 until 1984 | |||
Carol Mushett | Past IPC Technical Officer of the IPC Executive Committee | |||
Enrique Perez | Past President of the International Blind Sports Federation (IBSA) and President of the World Blind Union | |||
Deng Pufang | President of the National Paralympic Committee of China, the China Disabled Persons’ Federation (CDPF) and Executive President of the Beijing 2008 Organizing Committee (BOCOG) | China | ||
Albert Tricot | Founder of the Belgian Paralympic Committee | |||
Whang Youn Dai | Vice-president of the Korea Sports Association for the Disabled (KOSAD) and founder of the ‘Whang Youn Dai Prize’ | |||
2006 | York Chow | Member of the international task force that formed the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) in 1989; former Vice President Policy and Planning on the IPC Executive Committee/Governing Board until 2005 | ||
Giuseppe Ferrari | Secretary General of the Organizing Committee for the Paralympic Winter Games of Torino 2006 (ComParTo) | |||
Björn Hedman | Current member of the IPC Medical and Anti-Doping Committee; IPC Medical Officer and member of the IPC Executive Committee/Governing Board (2001 to 2005) | |||
Fred Jansen | Current Chairperson of the IPC Sports Council; former member of the IPC Executive Committee/Governing Board (1998 to 2005). Co-opted as a member of the IPC GB in March 2006 | |||
Tiziana Nasi | President of the Organizing Committee for the Paralympic Winter Games of Torino 2006 (ComParTo) | |||
Juan Palau | Former President of the International Sports Organisation for the Disabled (ISOD) and IOSD Representative on the IPC Executive Committee/Governing Board from (1993 to 2005) | |||
Bob Price | Former Chairperson of the British Paralympic Association. President of the European Paralympic Committee (2001 to 2005) and former member of the IPC Executive Committee/ Governing Board (2001 to 2005) | |||
François Terranova | Former Chairperson of the Paralympic Games Liaison Committee since 1997; former Vice President of Paralympic Games on the IPC Executive Committee/Governing Board (1997 to 2005) | |||
Cesare Vaciago | Chief executive Officer of the Organizing Committee for the XX Olympic Winter Games (TOROC) | |||
2007 | Silas Chiang | Former Secretary General of the Hong Kong Disabled Sports Association and involved in the organization of the FESPIC Games for over 25 years | ||
Spyros Stavrianopoulos | First president of the Hellenic Paralympic Committee and promoter of sports for persons with a disability in Greece. | |||
2008 | Liu Qi | Former mayor of Beijing,resident of the Beijing 2008 Organizing Committee (BOCOG), Member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee, Secretary of the CPC Beijing Committee | ||
Hui Liangyu | Vice Premier of the State Council, Member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee | |||
Liu Yandong | Vice-president of BOCOG, Member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee, State Councilor | |||
Chen Zhili | Vice-president of BOCOG, Vice Chairperson of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress | |||
Deng Pufang | President of the China Disabled Persons’ Federation (CDPF), Executive President of BOCOG, Vice Chairperson of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) | |||
Liu Peng | Executive President of BOCOG, Minister of the General Administration of Sport of China, President of the Chinese Olympic Committee | |||
Guo Jinlong | Mayor of Beijing, Executive President of BOCOG | China | ||
Tang Xiaoquan | President of the Executive Board and Vice President of the China Disabled Persons’ Federation, Executive Vice President of BOCOG | |||
Zhao Wenshi | Deputy of Paralympic Games Command Center, Vice Chairperson of CPPCC Beijing Committee | |||
Manolo Romero | Managing director of Olympic Broadcasting Services (OBS) | |||
Anne Ebbs | Former Secretary General of the Paralympic Council of Ireland (PCI) | |||
2009 | Valeriy Sushkevych | President of the National Paralympic Committee of Ukraine | ||
Maura Strange | Executive Director and Secretary General of the International Wheelchair and Amputee Sports Federation (IWAS) | |||
Pol Wautermartens | Former Chairperson of the IPC Powerlifting Sport Technical Committee | |||
Tony Sainsbury | Former Vice-President of IWBF Europe and five-time Chef de Mission of the British Team for the Paralympics | |||
Jerry Johnston | Founder of the Canadian Association for Disabled Skiing (CADS) | |||
Jens Bromann | Former President of the International Blind Sports Federation (IBSA) | |||
Bob Fisher [6] | Former Chairperson of the Football 7-a-Side Committee of the Cerebral Palsy International Sports and Recreation Association (CPISRA) |
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Year | Name | Title | NPC |
---|---|---|---|
2010 | John Furlong | CEO of the Vancouver 2010 Organizing Committee (VANOC) | |
Dena Coward | VANOC Paralympic Games Director | ||
Jack Poole | VANOC Chairman of the Board of Directors (posthumous award) | ||
Rusty Goepel | VANOC Chairman of the Board of Directors | ||
2011 [7] | Matthias Berg | Seven-time Paralympian. Member of the National Paralympic Committee of Germany (2011). | |
Luca Pancalli | President of the National Paralympic Committee of Italy (2011). Eight-time Paralympian. Commissioner of the Italian Football Federation (2011). | ||
Nabil Salem | Former president of the National Paralympic Committee of Egypt; former president of the African Paralympic Committee; former vice president of the International Paralympic Committee. | ||
Randy Snow | Three-time Paralympian and first Paralympian to be inducted into the United States Olympic Hall of Fame (2004). [8] | ||
2012 | Sebastian Coe | Chair of London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) | |
Paul Deighton | CEO of LOCOG | ||
Chris Holmes | Director of Paralmypic Integration of LOCOG | ||
Boris Johnson | Mayor of London during the 2012 Summer Paralympics. | ||
Keith Mills | Deputy chair of LOCOG | ||
2013 | Bob Balk | Former Chairman of the IPC Athletes’ Council | [9] |
Michael Barredo [9] | Former president of International Blind Sports Federation | Philippines | |
Duncan Campbell | Wheelchair rugby inventor | [9] | |
Jonquil Solt | Former chairwoman of the Equestrian Committee of the International Paralympic Committee | [9] | |
2014 | Dmitry Chernyshenko | President of Sochi 2014 Olympic and Paralympic Organizing Committee (SOOC) | |
Alexander Gorovoy | Deputy Chief of Interagency Security for the 2014 Winter Olympics | ||
Dmitry Kozak | Deputy Prime Minister of Russia | ||
Vladimir Lukin | President of Russia Paralympic Committee | ||
Anatoly Pakhomov | Mayor of Sochi | ||
Oleg Syromolotov | Chief of Interagency Security for the 2014 Winter Olympics | ||
Alexander Tkachov | Governor of Krasnodar Krai | ||
2015 | Dr. Axel Bolsinger | Ophthalmologist for the National Paralympic Committee Germany | [10] |
Georgios Fountoulakis | President of Hellenic Paralympic Committee | [10] | |
Sylvana Mestre | Former chairwoman of the alpine skiing IPC committee | [10] | |
2016 | The citizens of Rio de Janeiro and Brazil | For "outstanding support" of the 2016 Summer Paralympics. [11] [12] | Brazil |
The people of the Rio de Janeiro government | |||
The volunteers and staff of the 2016 Summer Olympics | |||
2017 | Ann Cody | United States | |
Sir Philip Craven | United Kingdom | ||
Paul DePace | United States | ||
Gerard Masson | France | ||
Karl Vilhelm Nielsen | Denmark | ||
Jacques Rogge | Belgium | ||
Miguel Sagarra | Spain | ||
2018 | Patrick Jarvis | Canada | |
Lee Hee-beom | South Korea | ||
Choi Moon-soon | South Korea | ||
Yeo Hyungkoo | South Korea | ||
Kim Jooho | South Korea | ||
Kim Jaeyoul | South Korea | ||
Kim Kihong | South Korea | ||
2019 | Jose Luis Campo | ||
Greg Hartung [13] | Australia | ||
Alan Dickson | |||
Rudi van den Abbeele | |||
Bassam Qasrawi | |||
Mahmoud Khosravi Vafa | |||
Georg Schlachtenberger | |||
Year | Name | Title | NPC |
---|---|---|---|
2021 | Seiko Hashimoto | President of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Organizing Committee (TOCOG) | Japan |
Toshirō Mutō | Secretary-General of TOCOG | ||
Tamayo Marukawa | Minister of Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games | ||
Yuriko Koike | Governor of Tokyo | ||
Mitsunori Torihara | Chairman of Japan Paralympic Committee (JPC) | ||
Tarō Asō | Former Vice PM and Former PM of Japan | ||
Yoshirō Mori | Former CEO of TOCOG | ||
Yoshihide Suga | PM of Japan | ||
The Paralympic Games or Paralympics, also known as the Games of the Paralympiad, is a periodic series of international multisport events involving athletes with a range of disabilities. There are Winter and Summer Paralympic Games, which since the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea, are held almost immediately following the respective Olympic Games. All Paralympic Games are governed by the International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
The 2004 Summer Paralympics, the 12th Summer Paralympic Games, were a major international multi-sport event for athletes with disabilities governed by the International Paralympic Committee, held in Athens, Greece from 17 to 28 September 2004. 3,808 athletes from 136 countries participated. During these games 304 World Records were broken with 448 Paralympic Games Records being broken across 19 different sports. 8,863 volunteers worked along the Organizing Committee.
Kurt Harry Fearnley, is an Australian wheelchair racer, who has won gold medals at the Paralympic Games and crawled the Kokoda Track without a wheelchair. He has a congenital disorder called sacral agenesis which prevented fetal development of certain parts of his lower spine and all of his sacrum. In Paralympic events he is classified in the T54 classification. He focuses on long and middle-distance wheelchair races, and has also won medals in sprint relays. He participated in the 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2016 Summer Paralympic Games, finishing his Paralympic Games career with thirteen medals. He won a gold and silver medal at the 2018 Commonwealth Games and was the Australian flag bearer at the closing ceremony.
Alix Louise Sauvage, OAM is an Australian paralympic wheelchair racer and leading coach.
Matthew John Cowdrey is an Australian politician and Paralympic swimmer. He presently holds numerous world records. He has a congenital amputation of his left arm; it stops just below the elbow. Cowdrey competed at the 2004 Paralympic Games, 2006 Commonwealth Games, 2008 Paralympic Games, 2010 Commonwealth Games, and the 2012 Paralympic Games. After the 2012 London Games, he is the most successful Australian Paralympian, having won thirteen Paralympic gold medals and twenty three Paralympic medals in total. On 10 February 2015, Cowdrey announced his retirement from swimming.
The Paralympic symbols are the icons, flags, and symbols used by the International Paralympic Committee to promote the Paralympic Games.
Jessica Tatiana Long is a Russian-American Paralympic swimmer from Baltimore, Maryland, who competes in the S8, SB7 and SM8 category events. She has held many world records and competed at five Paralympic Games, winning 29 medals. She has also won over 50 world championship medals.
Trischa Zorn is an American Paralympic swimmer. Blind from birth, she competed in Paralympic swimming. She is the most successful athlete in the history of the Paralympic Games, having won 55 medals, and was inducted into the Paralympic Hall of Fame in 2012. She took the Paralympic Oath for athletes at the 1996 Summer Paralympics in Atlanta.
Dame Sophie Frances Pascoe is a New Zealand para-swimmer. She has represented New Zealand at four Summer Paralympic Games from 2008, winning a total of eleven gold medals, seven silver medals and one bronze medal, making her New Zealand's most successful Paralympian. She has also represented New Zealand at the Commonwealth Games.
Evan George O'Hanlon, is an Australian Paralympic athlete, who competes mainly in category T38 sprint events. He has won five gold medals at two Paralympic Games – 2008 Beijing and 2012 London. He also represented Australia at the 2016 Rio Paralympics and 2020 Tokyo Paralympics, winning a silver medal and a bronze medal respectively. In winning the bronze medal in the Men's 100m T38 at the 2019 World Para Athletics Championships in Dubai, O'Hanlon became Australia's most successful male athlete with a disability. His bronze medal took him to 12 medals in five world championships – one more than four-time Paralympian Neil Fuller.
Dame Sarah Joanne Storey, is a British Paralympic athlete in cycling and swimming, and a multiple gold medalist in the Paralympic Games, and six times British (able-bodied) national track champion. Her total of 28 Paralympic medals including 17 gold medals makes her the most successful and most decorated British Paralympian of all time as well as one of the most decorated Paralympic athletes of all time. She has the unique distinction of winning five gold medals in Paralympics before turning 19.
Toby Kane is an Australian Paralympian who won a bronze medal in the men's super G Standing at the 2006 Winter Paralympics in Torino and a bronze medal in the men's super G standing in his third Winter Paralympics at the 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi. Invited to join the Australian Winter Paralympic Development team when he was just 11, he became the youngest member of the Australian team in Torino at the age of 19. He had the honour of being Australia's flag bearer at the closing ceremony in Torino, and at the opening ceremony in Vancouver. Towards the end of the Sochi Games, Kane and Dutch snowboarder Bibian Mentel-Spee were named winners of the Whang Youn Dai Achievement Award, which is presented at every Paralympic Games for outstanding performances and overcoming adversity.
A team representing Ireland has competed at every Summer Paralympic Games but the country has never taken part in the Winter Paralympics. Irish athletes have won 178 Summer Paralympic medals, 47 gold, 57 silver and 74 bronze. Paralympics Ireland is the National Paralympic Committee. Athletes from Northern Ireland may compete for either Great Britain or Ireland at the Paralympics, on the same basis as at the Olympics.
Danielle Brown MBE is a British competitive archer and award winning children's author. She has competed in the Paralympic Games winning gold medals in Beijing and London and has also won medals shooting in the able bodied category including the Commonwealth Games.
Amy Louise Winters, OAM is an arm amputee Australian Paralympic athlete. She won seven medals at three Paralympic Games, including five gold medals.
Gregory Stephen Smith, OAM is an Australian Paralympic athlete and wheelchair rugby player who won three gold medals in athletics at the 2000 Summer Paralympics, and a gold medal in wheelchair rugby at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, where he was the flag bearer at the opening ceremony.
Hamish Anderson MacDonald, OAM is an Australian Paralympic athlete. He was born in Melbourne and lives in Canberra. He has cerebral palsy. His achievements and advocacy have made him one of Australia's most respected Paralympians.
Jacqueline Rose "Jacqui" Freney is an Australian Paralympic swimmer. At the 2012 London Games, she broke Siobhan Paton's Australian record of six gold medals at a single Games by winning her seventh gold medal in the Women's 400 m Freestyle S7. She finished the Games with eight gold medals, more than any other participant in the Games.
Kelly Cartwright is an Australian athlete and powerlifter. She won two medals at the London 2012 Paralympics, and represented Australia in the Beijing 2008 Paralympics.
Ann Cody is a three-time U.S. Paralympian who works at the United States Department of State in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor on the advancement of international disability rights. After debuting at the 1984 Summer Paralympics in wheelchair basketball, Cody won four silver medals in athletics at the 1988 Summer Paralympics. Cody also competed at the 1988 Summer Olympics in wheelchair racing. At her third Paralympics, Cody helped set a world record in the 4 × 100 m relay at the 1992 Summer Paralympics while winning one gold and one bronze medal.