L’Oréal–UNESCO Awards for Women in Science 2015 Announced
Five exceptional women scientists from around the world received the 2015 L’ORÉAL-UNESCO Prize in Physical Sciences in an Awards Ceremony which took place on 18 March 2015 at the Grand Amphitheatre of the Sorbonne University (Paris, France). The Awards promote scientific excellence and the contribution of women to science, in particular in Life Sciences and the Physical Sciences, and in the service of advancement of knowledge, its impact on society, and sustainable development. By giving these female researchers increased visibility, the awards show the way for new generations, encouraging young women to follow their example.
Since the launch of the programme, 82 outstanding women researchers have received the L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Prize, two of whom have gone on to receive the Nobel Prize.
IUPAC congratulates all the Awardees. A special recognition goes this year to Professor Yi Xie, laureate Asia-Pacific, who was, in 2013, one of the Awardees of the IUPAC Distinguished Women in Chemistry or Chemical Engineering.
Asia-Pacific: Professor Yi Xie
Committed to preserving our planet, Prof.Yi Xie has dedicated her life to finding new and intelligent solutions to address the environmental challenge. She has been rewarded for her significant contributions to creating new nanomaterials with promising applications in the conversion of heat or sunlight into electricity. Her work will greatly contribute to lessening pollution and boosting energy efficiency, and will open promising prospects for the future

Yi Xie, photograph © Brgitte Lacombe
Europe: Profesor Dame Carol Robinson
A risk-taker, Prof. Robinson has always done things her way: she left school at 16, studied part-time while working, and then took an eight year career break to raise her children before returning to academia. Prof. Dame Carol Robinson has been honored for creating a revolutionary method for studying how proteins function, particularly membrane proteins, and establishing a whole new scientific field: gas phase structural biology. Her pioneering work could have a significant impact on medical research.
Latin America: Professor Thaisa Storchi Bergmann
Passionate and determined, Prof. Bergmann is convinced that education for all is the key to a better world and hopes to contribute to promoting science as a captivating and fun career path through her work. Prof. Thaisa Storchi Bergmann has been honored for her work leading to the understanding of massive black holes, one of the most enigmatic and complex phenomena of the universe: she was the first researcher to discover that matter could escape from black holes.
North America: Professor Molly S. Shoichet
A people person, Prof. Shoichet also participates in special athletic events for people with spinal cord injuries, is actively involved in human rights issues, and has contributed to launching a social media campaign designed to “connect today’s research with tomorrow’s reality.” She has been rewarded for the development of new materials to regenerate damaged nerve tissue and for a new method that can deliver drugs directly to the spinal cord and brain. Her work is putting chemistry at the service of medicine in spectacular new ways.
Africa and the Arab States: Professor Rajaa Cherkaoui El Moursli
Nicknamed «research activist», Prof. El Moursli dedicates much of her time to raising the level of scientific research in her country, and has been instrumental in improving Moroccan healthcare by creating the 1st master’s degree in medical physics. Prof. Rajaâ Cherkaoui El Moursli has been honored for her key contribution to one of the greatest discoveries in physics: proof of the existence of the Higgs Boson, the particle responsible for the creation of mass in the universe.
www.loreal.com/csr-commitments/foundation/science/women-and-scientific-excellence
©2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead - Full issue pdf
- Contents
- Treasurer’s Column
- Ringing the Changes—For the Future
- Stamps International
- Dreams Make Good Stories
- Features
- Progress of Chemistry in South Korea
- Meeting the Google Expectation for Chemical Safety Information
- Medicinal Chemistry in IUPAC
- Youth Views on Sustainability: Chemical Waste Management at Clinical Laboratories
- IUPAC Wire
- Thieme–IUPAC Prize 2016 Call for Nominations
- 2016 IUPAC-SOLVAY International Award for Young Chemists announced
- 2016 IUPAC-ThalesNano Prize in Flow Chemistry—Call for Nominations
- CHEMRAWN VII Prize for Green Chemistry—Call for Nominations
- Standard Atomic Weight of Ytterbium Revised
- De Gruyter to Launch Chemistry Standards Database
- Solubility Data Series Books now Available on Web
- L’Oréal–UNESCO Awards for Women in Science 2015 Announced
- Berhanu Abegaz heads the UNESCO International Basic Sciences Programme (IBSP) scientific board
- Christo Balarew receives Presidential Honors
- In memoriam: Nikola Kallay (1942-2015)
- Project Place
- Storing Energy: with special reference to renewable energy sources
- Nomenclature for polymeric carriers bearing chemical entities with specific activities and names
- Measurement of Photoluminescence Quantum Yields
- Young Ambassadors for Chemistry (YAC) achievements in Thailand and Cambodia
- Making an ImPACt
- Latest Updates from PAC Conferences
- Brief guide to the nomenclature of inorganic chemistry
- IUPAC Glossary of terms used in neurotoxicology (IUPAC Recommendations 2015)
- IUPAC Provisional Recommendations
- Source-Based Nomenclature for Single-Strand Homopolymers and Copolymers
- Glossary of Terms Used in Extraction
- Bookworm
- Ionic Polymerization, Part I & II
- Polymers and Organic Chemistry
- Macromolecular Complexes
- Conference Call
- POLYCHAR 23 World Forum Advanced Materials
- Science Assessments and Research Integrity: Reconcilable or Antagonistic?
- Where 2B & Y
- Trans Mediterranean Colloquium on Heterocyclic Chemistry
- COSPAR 2016
- Organic Chemistry of Sulfur
- Mark Your Calendar
- Index 2015
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead - Full issue pdf
- Contents
- Treasurer’s Column
- Ringing the Changes—For the Future
- Stamps International
- Dreams Make Good Stories
- Features
- Progress of Chemistry in South Korea
- Meeting the Google Expectation for Chemical Safety Information
- Medicinal Chemistry in IUPAC
- Youth Views on Sustainability: Chemical Waste Management at Clinical Laboratories
- IUPAC Wire
- Thieme–IUPAC Prize 2016 Call for Nominations
- 2016 IUPAC-SOLVAY International Award for Young Chemists announced
- 2016 IUPAC-ThalesNano Prize in Flow Chemistry—Call for Nominations
- CHEMRAWN VII Prize for Green Chemistry—Call for Nominations
- Standard Atomic Weight of Ytterbium Revised
- De Gruyter to Launch Chemistry Standards Database
- Solubility Data Series Books now Available on Web
- L’Oréal–UNESCO Awards for Women in Science 2015 Announced
- Berhanu Abegaz heads the UNESCO International Basic Sciences Programme (IBSP) scientific board
- Christo Balarew receives Presidential Honors
- In memoriam: Nikola Kallay (1942-2015)
- Project Place
- Storing Energy: with special reference to renewable energy sources
- Nomenclature for polymeric carriers bearing chemical entities with specific activities and names
- Measurement of Photoluminescence Quantum Yields
- Young Ambassadors for Chemistry (YAC) achievements in Thailand and Cambodia
- Making an ImPACt
- Latest Updates from PAC Conferences
- Brief guide to the nomenclature of inorganic chemistry
- IUPAC Glossary of terms used in neurotoxicology (IUPAC Recommendations 2015)
- IUPAC Provisional Recommendations
- Source-Based Nomenclature for Single-Strand Homopolymers and Copolymers
- Glossary of Terms Used in Extraction
- Bookworm
- Ionic Polymerization, Part I & II
- Polymers and Organic Chemistry
- Macromolecular Complexes
- Conference Call
- POLYCHAR 23 World Forum Advanced Materials
- Science Assessments and Research Integrity: Reconcilable or Antagonistic?
- Where 2B & Y
- Trans Mediterranean Colloquium on Heterocyclic Chemistry
- COSPAR 2016
- Organic Chemistry of Sulfur
- Mark Your Calendar
- Index 2015