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Media Coverage

Media Coverage

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More women are thriving in science – does that mean attitudes have changed?

Photo by Moustafa Cheaiteli/Courtesy of AfDB
Éliane Ubalijoro, who last year, became the first African female leader of a CGIAR research center.
As a woman at the top of my field, I am thrilled to see others rewarded. Their achievements are vital to inspiring more girls to dream big and overcome barriers

Over the past four years, you could be excused for thinking that there has been an avalanche of women excelling in the field of science.


We have seen half a dozen women collect Nobel prizes in physiology or medicine, physics and chemistry. Their staggering achievements range from Katalin Karikó’s contribution to the development of mRNA vaccines against Covid-19 to Andrea Ghez’s co-discovery of a supermassive black hole at the centre of our Milky Way galaxy.

In 2020, we witnessed the first science Nobel prize won by two women alone – without sharing the honour with a man – after Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier revolutionised the study of genetics with the development of Crispr genome editing, raising hopes for the treatment of many diseases.

So, what’s going on? Has there been a change in attitudes towards women in science?
Read more on The Guardian