Q&A: Princess Sumaya on science after the Arab Spring
Princess Sumaya bint El Hassan of Jordan talks to SciDev.Net about hopes for science in the Middle East, science diplomacy and the role of women scientists.
25 January 2012 | EN

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Princess Sumaya bint El Hassan of Jordan talks to SciDev.Net about hopes for science in the Middle East, science diplomacy and the role of women scientists.
25 January 2012 | EN
Awards for young female scientists in developing nations are giving them motivation and global acclaim.
Source: Times Higher Education
Developing countries need more women scientists. Jeanne Therese H. Andres charts the obstacles and how to overcome them.
Women from Jordan, Kenya, Pakistan, Peru and the Philippines tell SciDev.Net how they realised their dreams of careers in science.
Nearly forty years since its inception, India's Barefoot College has trained 15,000 women in a range of poverty-stemming skills.
Source: Wired UK
29 March 2011 | EN
African Women in Agriculture Research and Development is helping researchers bring the fruits of their labour to those who most need it.
Source: IPS
17 August 2010 | EN
Prudence Mutowo, winner of a 2006 L'Oreal UNESCO fellowship, speaks to SciDev.Net about her experiences as a woman in science.
30 April 2008 | EN
13 August 2006 | ES
15 May 2006 | EN
Zohra Ben Lakhdar leads by example in showing how Tunisians can join the science community by persevering — regardless of gender.
Source: Science
2 December 2005 | EN
Source: IslamOnline
20 July 2005 | EN
Ehsan Masood describes the changes that are making it easier for women in Pakistan to pursue careers in science.
Source: Nature
3 February 2005 | EN
Gopilal Acharya examines factors affecting the reluctance of girls in Bhutan to study or pursue careers in science.
Source: Keunsel Online
21 June 2004 | EN