UNESCO Science Prize

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The UNESCO Science Prize is a biennal prize awarded by UNESCO to "a person or group of persons for an outstanding contribution they have made to the technological development of a developing member state or region through the application of scientific and technological research (particularly in the fields of education, engineering and industrial development)."

The candidates for the Science Prize are proposed to the Director-General of UNESCO by the governments of member states or by non-governmental organizations. All proposals are judged by a panel of six scientists and engineers. The prize consists of US$15,000, awarded together with a UNESCO Albert Einstein Silver Medal at a ceremony held in odd years (2001, 2003, etc.), jointly with UNESCO’s General Conference.

[edit] Past winners

1968
UK

Robert Simpson Silver

for his discovery of a process for the demineralization of sea water
1970
Mexico

International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre

Philippines
International Rice Research Institute

for their work which made it possible to produce, in the space of a few years, improved strains of cereals
1972
USSR

Viktor Kovda

Austria
Group of 9 researchers

for his theory on the hydromorphic origin of the soils of the great plains of Asia, Africa, Europe and America

for their development of the L-D process designed for recovery of steel from low phosphorus pig iron

1976
France

Alfred Champagnat

for his findings on the low-cost mass production of new proteins from petroleum
1978
UK

A team of research workers from the Lawes Agricultural Trust

for their work on synthetic insecticides related to natural pyrethrum
1980
Ireland

A group of 4 scientists from the Medical Research Council of Ireland

Costa Rica
Leonardo Mata

for their work on the synthesis of an anti-leprosy agent, B-633

for his work on the relationship between malnutrition and infection, particularly in infants

1983
UK

Roger Whitehead

for his work on the role of maternal nutrition and lactation in infant growth
1985
Australia


A group of six scientists from the Australian Research Group of Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization

For their work on the biological control of Salvinia molesta infestations in the Sepik River Basin of Papua New Guinea
1987
China

Yuan Longping
National Hybrid Cooperative Research Group

for his work leading to the creation of an hybrid rice with high yield potential

1989
Brazil

Johanna Döbereiner
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (EMBRAPA)

for her work in exploiting biological nitrogen fixation as the major

source of nitrogen in tropical agriculture

1991
Venezuela

A group of researchers and engineers from the Instituto Tecnológico Venezolano del Petróleo S.A.

for their contribution to the development of hydrocracking distillation and hydrotreatment technology
1993
Mexico

O.A. Novaro-Peñalosa

for his contribution to the phenomenon of catalysis
1995
China

Wang Xuan
Informatics Institute, Beijing University

for his contribution to the Chinese photocomposition system
1997
Mexico

Marcos Moshinsky
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México 

for his work in nuclear physics
1999

Pakistan
Atta Ur Rahman
Director, H.E.J. Research Institute of Chemistry, University of Karachi

Brazil
José Leite Lopes
Co-founder, Latin American School of Physics and Centro Brasileiro de Pesquisas Físicas

for his work in organic chemistry which has contributed to the development of plant-based therapies for cancer, AIDS and diabetes


for his contribution to the development of physics in Latin America

2001
Mexico

Baltasar Mena Iniesta
Institute of Materials Research and the Faculty of Engineering at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM)

for his ability to relate his research in rheology and new materials

to technological applications

2003

 

Thailand

Somchart Soponronnarit

 

[edit] External links