Amina Helmi to receive Suffrage Science award
On International Women’s Day, 8 March 2019, Prof. Amina Helmi of the Kapteyn Institute, University of Groningen, will receive the Suffrage Science Award at the Royal Society in London. The awards celebrate women in science and engineering and encourage others to enter science and reach senior leadership roles. The awards themselves are items of jewellery and are passed on as heirlooms from one female scientist to the next. The previous award holder who choose Helmi for awardee is Prof. Marileen Dogterom of the Delft University of Technology, who won a Spinoza prize last year.
At the ceremony on 8 March, 12 female scientists and engineers from across the world will receive a Suffrage Science award. The Suffrage Science scheme was initiated in 2011 for female scientists in Life Sciences, followed by awards in Engineering and Physical Sciences, and in Maths and Computing.
Science inspired jewellery
The awards are pieces of jewellery , whose design is inspired by science. After two years, each previous holder chooses whom they want to pass their heirloom onto. Professor Marileen Dogterom, Delft University of Technology on her nomination of Professor Amina Helmi, University of Groningen: “Amina's ground-breaking discoveries on galaxy evolution and dynamics , especially on the Milky Way, manage to inspire many outside her own research area, including myself. She provides an excellent role model to young female scientists.”
Community of talented female scientists
Handing on the awards has created a self-perpetuating network of talent and contacts to help others succeed in science and engineering. This year’s awardees join a community of over 120 women scientists. Since 2011 the awards have travelled from the UK, across Europe to the USA, Hong Kong and to Uganda, illustrating the international nature of science and engineering, and the global effort to improve female representation.
More information
Last modified: | 08 March 2019 09.20 a.m. |
More news
-
06 January 2025
Medical AI as a sparring partner
Andra Cristiana Minculescu studied how an AI-tool could collaborate with a team of medical experts. Today, her project was awarded the Impact Award of the Faculty of Science and Engineering at the University of Groningen.
-
06 January 2025
How a contrarian cracked rubber recycling
A small company in Grootegast produces bicycle baskets and slippers from recycled rubber. That is remarkable because, until recently, it was impossible to recycle rubber. However, Francesco Picchioni, Professor of Chemical Technology at the...
-
06 January 2025
Building top-notch telescopes to look into our past
RUG professor Scott Trager is developing new methods to unravel the evolution of stars in the Milky Way – and of galaxies far away. ‘There is a sense of wonder in looking out at the universe and thinking: how did this come to be? How does it all...