Polymers for Africa
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by Dhanjay Jhurry
Polymers for Africa
The 8th UNESCO School and IUPAC Conference on Macromolecules was held in Mauritius in June 2005, and for the first time since its inception, the meeting took place outside South Africa. It was a great honor for the Mauritian organizers to have been given the opportunity to host this meeting and also a great challenge to achieve the high level set in the past by Professor Ron Sanderson and his team at Stellenbosch University.
The meeting started with a two-day UNESCO School on 4–5 June 2005 held at the University of Mauritius. The School was officially opened on 4 June 2005 by Dr. M.S. Alam, director, Division of Basic & Engineering Sciences, UNESCO, Paris. The UNESCO School aims at capacity building in existing and emerging areas in polymer science and technology through training of undergraduate/graduate students and young researchers. An important innovation brought to the UNESCO School was the organization of lectures both in English and French, the first setup of this kind in the world.
Eight lectures were delivered covering a wide range of topics in polymer science, including biopolymers, biodegradable polymers, and polysaccharides, all of which are of prime interest to the region vis-àvis sustainable development: Professor Michel Vert, “Biodegradable Polymers”; Professor Robert Gilbert, “Polysaccharides: Molecular Weights in Synthetic and Natural Polymers”; Dr. Daniela Held, “Polymer Characterization: Size-Exclusion Chromatography”; Professor Goerg Michler, “Polymer Characterization: Electron Microscopy Techniques”; Professor Helmut Ritter, “Functionalized Polymers: Synthesis and Modification”; Professor Henri Cramail, “Coordination Polymerization: Ziegler-Natta/Metallocenes”; Dr. Bert Klumperman, “Polymer Synthesis: Living Free-radical Polymerization”; and Professor Axel Müller, “Polymer Synthesis: Living Anionic Polymerization.”
All lectures have been compiled on a CD-ROM available free of charge to all 50 participants. The enthusiasm of both lecturers and students and their hard work during the weekend was highly commendable and contributed to the success of this first event.
The IUPAC Conference was held 6–9 June 2005 at the La Pirogue Hotel, Flic en Flac, Mauritius. The first day of the conference started with the opening ceremony in the presence of University of Mauritius officials and other distinguished guests. UNESCO and IUPAC were represented by Dr. M.S. Alam and Professor R. Gilbert, respectively.
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| Participants at the 8th UNESCO/IUPAC Conference on Macromolecules. Front row, center right, wearing a tie is Professor Dhanjay Jhurry, and on his right is Professor Jean Fréchet. |
The IUPAC Conference was attended by approximately 100 participants, including 70 from 17 foreign countries. Participants included high-caliber polymer scientists as well as young researchers and postgraduate students. Major objectives of the conference included providing young scientists of the region a forum for presenting their research work, providing networking opportunities, and fostering research collaborations between the north and the south.
The conference featured five plenary lectures, 27 invited lectures, 15 contributed papers, and 30 poster presentations covering the following five major themes in polymer science and frontier areas of particular interest to the greater African region (Africa and Indian Ocean island states):
• biopolymers/biodegradable polymers/polysaccharides
• polymers in food and textile
• polymers in health and medicine
• functional polymers
• new emerging materials and characterization techniques
The enthusiastic participation of numerous young graduate students and scientists led to many lively discussions during the well-attended poster sessions. Eighteen papers presented at the IUPAC Conference have been collected in a special volume of Macromolecular Symposia entitled "Polymers for Africa" (Vol 231, 2006; ISBN 3-527-31334-6). In the preface of that volume, Professor Jean Fréchet writes:
"It is obvious that this conference series can make an important contribution to the development of polymer science in the African continent as more young scientists are exposed to and participate in state-of-the-art polymer research in contexts of relevance to their local environment. While it is clear that holding such conferences on the African continent stimulates the all-important participation of both young and more mature African scientists, should the rest of the world not be exposed to the needs and issues of polymer science in the developing world? Should topics such as “Polymers for Africa” or “Polymers for the Developing World” be included in the major IUPAC sponsored polymer conferences held in the developed world to sensitize polymer scientists to the special needs of developing nations? It is hoped that the readers will be stimulated to attend and participate in the next edition of the “Polymers for Africa” conference for a better understanding of the global significance of this topic."
It is undeniable that the organization of such meetings in countries far from the major centers of education and research can contribute to the development of polymer science and help lay the groundwork for future economic development in those countries and regions. Professor Gilbert wrote: “Because of the excellent organization, the relaxed atmosphere and the high quality of invited speakers, this was one of the most fruitful conferences I have ever attended.” Sponsors included the University of Mauritius, UNESCO, IUPAC, ACU, the French Embassy in Mauritius, TWAS, and the Tertiary Education Commission (Mauritius).
Dhanjay Jhurry <djhurry@uom.ac.mu> is associate professor and head of the Department of Chemistry at the University of Mauritius in Réduit. He was chairman of the local organizing committee.
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Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- From the Editor
- Contents
- Encouraging Involvement Among Chemists
- Looking in the Same Direction
- Frontier Science in the Middle East
- Communicating Science Information Clearly
- Can Ambiguous Terminology Cause a Barrier to Trade?
- What Is Butadiene?
- Alexandra Navrotsky Awarded the 2006 Rossini Lecture
- The Year of . . .
- Safety Training Program – Call for Applicants
- ACD/Labs’ Free Naming Software Service Generates 200 000 IUPAC Names via the Web
- Chmoogle Search Engine Integrates ChemSketch
- Chemical Education: Responsible Stewardship
- Young Ambassadors for Chemistry Krasnoyarsk, Russia, 14–18 November 2005
- Microstructure and Properties of Thermotropic Liquid-Crystalline Polymer Blends and Composites
- Validation of Qualitative and Semi-Quantitative (Screening) Methods by Collaborative Trial
- Calibration of Organic and Inorganic Oxygen-Bearing Isotopic Reference Materials
- IUPAC Seeks Your Comments
- Nonspecific Sensor Arrays (“electronic tongue”) for Chemical Analysis of Liquids (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Supramolecular Assemblies With DNA (Special Topic Article)
- Macromolecule-Metal Complexes
- Analytical Chemistry and Chemical Analysis
- Novel Materials and Synthesis
- Polymers for Africa
- Carotenoids
- Biocalorimetry 30 April – 4 May 2006, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
- Macro and Supramolecular Architectures and Materials 28 May – 1 June 2006, Tokyo, Japan
- Advanced Polymeric Materials 11 June – 15 June 2006, Bratislava, Slovakia
- Chemical Thermodynamics 30 July – 4 August 2006, Boulder, Colorado, USA
- Physical Organic Chemistry 20 – 25 August 2006, Warsaw, Poland
- Radical Polymerization 3 – 8 September 2006, Il Ciocco, Italy
- Inorganic Materials 23 – 26 September 2006, Ljubljana, Slovenia
- Conference Call
- Mark Your Calendar
