News provided by
Blavatnik Family Foundation; The New York Academy of SciencesJun 03, 2013, 08:00 ET
NEW YORK, June 3, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- The Blavatnik Family Foundation and the New York Academy of Sciences announce the nationwide launch of the Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists program to identify and support America's most promising faculty-rank scientists age 42 and younger. Awarded annually, three of the country's most innovative young scientific researchers will each receive unrestricted cash prizes of $250,000—the largest unrestricted prize of its kind.
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"In contrast to the proliferation of awards aimed at renowned senior scientists, the Blavatnik Awards will recognize the value of empowering scientists when they are young and can benefit from early recognition," says Torsten Wiesel, Nobel Laureate, President Emeritus of The Rockefeller University, and Chairman Emeritus of the Academy.
"Our goal is to celebrate America's exceptional young scientists and showcase their achievements to inspire the next generation of scientists. The Blavatnik Family Foundation is committed to supporting groundbreaking work in science and technology to address society's most pressing global problems," says Len Blavatnik, Founder and Chairman of Access Industries, head of the Blavatnik Family Foundation, and an Academy Board Governor.
The national expansion of the Awards program builds upon the success of the regional Awards program established in 2007 to recognize exceptional young scientists in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut.
Past finalists and winners of the regional Blavatnik Awards have gone on to achieve ever greater success, often citing the Awards as a vital "tipping point" in their research careers. "The Blavatnik Awards program is very important as it recognizes the potential impact of our research. It identifies emerging scientific thought leaders and highlights their work to the broader scientific community," says Elisa Oricchio, 2012 Blavatnik Awards winner and Research Fellow of the Cancer Biology & Genetics Program at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. "It is a wonderful stimulus for a young scientist that increases self-confidence to pursue his or her dreams."
Nominations for the national Blavatnik Awards competition will be accepted from approximately 300 leading research universities, independent research institutions, and academic medical centers, as well as from a Scientific Advisory Council comprised of renowned scientists, Nobel laureates, and past Blavatnik Awards winners known for their innovative thinking.
Each eligible institution will be able to nominate their most outstanding young faculty member in each of three disciplinary categories: Physical Sciences & Engineering; Chemistry; and Life Sciences. Applications will be reviewed by an expert Judging Panel comprised of 60 of the nation's most distinguished scientists. The judges will select winners based on the quality, novelty, and impact of the scientist's research.
"The Awards program will provide exceptional opportunities for winners to serve as role models to the nation's youth—showing that young, creative individuals can indeed be the 'face' of science. The long-term goal of the Awards is to create a pipeline of scientific support, in which established scientists choose the most outstanding young faculty-rank scientists, who then go on to mentor the next generation of would-be scientists and award winners," says Ellis Rubinstein, President and CEO of the Academy.
Nominations for the premiere 2014 program will run from October to December 2013. National winners will be honored at an awards ceremony in September 2014.
Eligibility rules and other Awards information are available online at: http://www.nyas.org/awards/blavatnik.aspx
To follow the progress of the Blavatnik Awards and receive information on application deadlines, please follow us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/blavatnikawards/ and sign up for the Awards Newsletter.
For interview requests, please contact Marina Blinova ([email protected]; 212-298-8626). For additional programmatic information, please contact Marley Bauce ([email protected]; 212-298-8624).
Note to the Editor: Information regarding the Scientific Advisory Council and Judging Panel follows below.
Scientific Advisory Panel |
Ellis Rubinstein - Chair |
President & Chief Executive Officer |
New York Academy of Sciences |
Director |
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory |
Tim Appenzeller |
News Editor (effective July 2013) |
Science |
Arthur & Marian Hanisch Memorial Professor |
Chair of Chemistry & Chemical Engineering |
California Institute of Technology |
Phillip Campbell |
Editor-in-Chief |
Nature |
Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1989) |
Distinguished Professor |
University of Colorado at Boulder |
Nobel Prize in Chemistry (2008) |
William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor |
Columbia University |
Nobel Prize for Physics (1997) |
Former Secretary |
United States Department of Energy |
Professor Emeritus |
Stanford University |
Chancellor |
University of California at San Francisco |
Editor-in-Chief |
Scientific American |
Chancellor Emerita |
University of California at San Diego |
President |
Lehigh University |
President |
University of Maryland at Baltimore County |
Director of the Broad Institute |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology & Harvard University |
David H. Koch Institute Professor |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Nobel Prize in Chemistry (2012) |
James B. Duke Professor of Medicine |
Professor of Pathology & Biochemistry |
Duke University |
Blavatnik Awards Faculty Winner (2010) |
Associate Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering |
Cornell University |
Blavatnik Awards Faculty Winner (2011) |
Walter O. LeCroy, Jr. Associate Professor of Physics |
Columbia University |
Blavatnik Awards Faculty Winner (2007) |
David W. Wallace Professor of Immunobiology |
Yale University |
President of the Global Health Program |
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation |
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1997) |
Director of the Institute for Neurodegenerative Diseases |
University of California at San Francisco |
Professor of Computational Neurobiology |
Salk Institute for Biological Studies |
President |
The Rockefeller University |
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer |
J. Craig Venter Institute |
Nobel Prize in Physics (2004) |
Herman Feshbach Professor of Physics |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Professor of Chemistry |
Harvard University |
Marguerite Blake Wilbur Professor in Natural Science |
Stanford University |
Professor of Molecular & Human Genetics |
Baylor College of Medicine |
Judging Panel |
Amy Smith Berylson Professor of Materials Science |
Harvard University |
Chief Science Office |
Unilever |
S.L. Mitchill Professor of Chemistry |
University Professor |
Columbia University |
Chair of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology |
Penn State University |
Professor Emeritus |
Princeton University |
Director of the Frank Hawkins Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise |
William R. Kenan, Jr. Distinguished Professor of Chemical Engineering |
North Carolina State University |
Professor of Chemistry |
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Director |
Leon Levy Professor |
Institute for Advanced Study |
Rebecca C. Lancefield Professor of Mammalian Cell Biology & Development |
The Rockefeller University |
Blavatnik Awards Faculty Winner (2012) |
Associate Professor of Epidemiology, Ecology, & Evolutionary Biology |
Yale University |
Stephen & Suzanne Weiss Dean |
Weill Cornell Medical College |
Provost for Medical Affairs |
Cornell University |
Arnold O. Beckman Professor of Chemistry |
Founding Director of the Beckman Institute |
California Institute of Technology |
Professor of Physics & Mathematics |
Columbia University |
Dean |
Professor of Engineering |
Dartmouth College |
Senior Vice Provost for Research |
New York University |
Director |
California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences |
President |
Research Foundation for the State University of New York |
Blavatnik Awards Faculty Winner (2012) |
Professor of Mathematics |
New York University |
Professor & Chair of Neuroscience |
Mount Sinai School of Medicine |
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1993) |
Chief Scientific Officer |
New England BioLabs |
Associate Dean for Research |
Yale University |
Professor of Chemistry |
Scripps Research Institute |
Professor of Neurobiology |
Stanford University |
President & Chief Executive Officer |
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory |
President |
Howard Hughes Medical Institute |
Professor of Biochemistry, Biophysics & Structural Biology |
University of California at Berkeley |
About the Blavatnik Family Foundation
The Blavatnik Family Foundation is an active supporter of leading educational, scientific, cultural, and charitable institutions in the United States, the United Kingdom, Israel, and throughout the world. The Foundation is headed by Len Blavatnik, an American industrialist and philanthropist. Mr. Blavatnik is the founder and Chairman of Access Industries, a privately-held U.S. industrial group with global interests in natural resources and chemicals, media and telecommunications, emerging technologies, life sciences and real estate. For more detailed biographical information on Len Blavatnik or Access Industries please visit: www.accessindustries.com.
About the New York Academy of Sciences
The New York Academy of Sciences is an independent, not-for-profit organization that since 1817 has been committed to advancing science, technology, and society worldwide. With 25,000 members in 140 countries, the Academy is creating a global community of science for the benefit of humanity. The Academy's core mission is to advance scientific knowledge, positively impact the major global challenges of society with science-based solutions, and increase the number of scientifically informed individuals in society at large. Please visit us online at www.nyas.org.
SOURCE Blavatnik Family Foundation; The New York Academy of Sciences
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