Four Ghanaians are among the 20 women scientists who will receive research grants under the OWSD Early Career fellowship programme.
They have been selected as part of the second cohort of the OWSD Early Career fellowship programme.
The four are Dr Mavis Owureku-Asare, Dr Mercy Badu, Dr Edem Mahu and Dr Priscilla Kolibea Mante.
These scientists will receive up to $50,000 to lead research projects at their home institutes and to build up research groups that will attract international visitors.
Funding for the fellowship is provided by Canada’s International Development Research Centre (IDRC).
The Early Career fellows were selected from a highly competitive pool of candidates based on the strength of their research proposals and their proven scientific excellence as well as leadership skills.
They come from 14 countries across Africa, the Asia-Pacific region, and Latin America and the Caribbean, and include a computer scientist from Tanzania building an app to help farmers diagnose poultry diseases through deep learning technology, a biologist from Laos trying to catalog and preserve the diversity of reptiles and amphibians in her country, and a biologist from Guatemala harnessing the natural detoxification properties of aquatic plants to filter harmful contaminants from lakes.
Check below for all the 2019 Early Career fellows: