Home Physical Sciences Young Chemists Travel Far with Canadian National Committee Awards
Article Publicly Available

Young Chemists Travel Far with Canadian National Committee Awards

  • by Vedene Smith
Published/Copyright: September 1, 2009
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

_

IUPAC Forum

_

Two National Adhering Organizations reacted to Dr. Pryzbylowicz's essay published in the previous issue of CI (Vol. 24, No. 1, pp. 79, January 2002), regarding the U.S. Young Observer Program. The Japanese NAO describes how the programs can challenge an old stigma, and invites young scientists to attend IUPAC General Assemblies. On a somewhat different note (see below), the Canadian NAO favors young participation in broader IUPAC-related activities by offering travel awards to IUPAC-sponsored conferences.

Please send your comments to <edit.ci@iupac.org>.

_

Young Chemists Travel Far with Canadian National Committee Awards

by Vedene Smith

In 1982, the Canadian National Committee for the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (CNC/IUPAC) established a program of Travel Awards whose purpose is to help young Canadian chemists and chemical engineers (within 10 years of gaining their PhDs) present papers at IUPAC-sponsored conferences outside continental North America. The annual awards are financed by a trust fund and funding from CNC/IUPAC's Company Associates. The criteria used in making these awards include evidence of an independent research program, a high-quality publication record, and the ability to attract high-quality research funding.

Normally, five or six of these awards are given each year, but an individual can only receive an award once. Although the amount of an award covers only a portion of total travel costs, it can help to catalyze additional support. Within the chemistry community, the CNC/IUPAC Travel Awards are considered prestigious. Numerous past winners are now established and prominent researchers.

Vedene Smith is a professor at Queeen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, and is a member of CNC/IUPAC.

<http://www.sao.nrc.ca/sims/upac_e.html>

Published Online: 2009-09-01
Published in Print: 2002-03

© 2014 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Masthead
  2. Contents
  3. Broadening Active Participation in IUPAC Activities
  4. If IUPAC is to be successful in representing worldwide chemistry, it needs to foster synergistic relationships with the global community of chemists.
  5. The Bureau International des Poids et Mesures: Establishing Standards in the Physical Sciences
  6. The kilogram is, today, the only base unit still defined in terms of a material artifact
  7. The Synthesis and Naming of Elements 110 and Beyond
  8. Reliable Solubility Data in the Age of Computerized Chemistry: Why, How, and When?
  9. Modeling, regardless of the discipline, has one common feature: Reliable data are an essential element.
  10. Breaking Away from the Old Three Ss
  11. Young Chemists Travel Far with Canadian National Committee Awards
  12. Chemical Nomenclature and Structure Representation
  13. Nomenclature of Inorganic Chemistry
  14. SCOPE/IUPAC International Symposium on Endocrine Active Substances
  15. Generic Source-Based Nomenclature for Polymers (IUPAC Recommendations 2001)
  16. Quantum Chemical B3LYP/cc-pvqz Computation of Ground-State Structures and Properties of Small Molecules with Atoms of Z ≤ 18 (Hydrogen to Argon) (IUPAC Technical Report)
  17. Standards in Isothermal Microcalorimetry (IUPAC Technical Report)
  18. Critical Evaluation of Stability Constants of Phosphonic Acids (IUPAC Technical Report)
  19. IUPAC Seeks Your Comments
  20. Quantities, Terminology, and Symbols in Photothermal and Related Spectroscopies
  21. The Naming of New Elements
  22. The Biogeochemistry of Iron in Seawater
  23. Polymerization Processes and Polymer Materials, Volumes I and II
  24. Characterization of Compounds in Solution: Theory and Practice
  25. CRC Handbook of Optical Resolutions via Diastereomeric Salt Formation
  26. Medicinal Chemistry
  27. Analytical Sciences
  28. CAS/IUPAC Conference on Chemical Identifiers and XML for Chemistry 1 July 2002, Columbus, Ohio, USA
  29. Central European Conference on “Chemistry Towards Biology” 8-12 September 2002, Portoroz, Slovenia
  30. The Ninth International Conference on Flow Analysis 10-14 February 2003, Geelong, Victoria, Australia
  31. Conference Announcements in Brief
  32. Calendar of IUPAC Sponsored Conferences
Downloaded on 27.12.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/ci.2002.24.2.12a/html
Scroll to top button