Women and Mathematics EMS Committee

October 29, 2007

EWM Mailing Lists

Filed under: EWM, Portraits of living women mathematicians — Dusanka Perisic @ 3:18 pm

 

Elizabeth Baldwin elizabeth-baldwin.jpg is a postdoctoral research assistant at the University of Oxford, associated to the Somerville College as a junior research fellow. She works with Prof. Frances Kirwan, and her research is in algebraic geometry; to be more precise, it is in geometric invariant theory and moduli spaces of stable curves and stable maps.

Elisabeth is in charge of EWM mailing lists. We have asked her to tell us something about the lists, and here’s her answer:

The ewm-all mailing list connects European women academic mathematicians, allowing them to advertise jobs, fellowships and conferences, particularly the ones of special relevance to women in mathematics. It is associated with the organisation of European Women in Mathematics.

With around five postings per month, this is not a high volume list. There are about 170 people currently subscribed. Details on how to subscribe are given at http://www.math.helsinki.fi/EWM/info/mailinglist.html

There is another list, ewm-uk, specially designed for women working in the UK, which is used to advertise events of more local interest. Instructions for joining can be found at the same place.

There was a third mailing list, ewm-discuss, but it has not been used in recent years and EWM has decided to promote the blog of EMS Committee to a discussion forum instead.

Elizabeth Baldwin

 

October 23, 2007

On EWM

Filed under: EWM — Dusanka Perisic @ 8:34 am

Marjo Lipponen marjolipponen.jpg and Paula Steinby paulasteinby.jpg has prepared a multimedia presentation on EWM.

You can find it on the page EWM multimedia presentation.

October 20, 2007

Women & Science, Statistic and Indicators

Filed under: Science, Statistics, Women — Dusanka Perisic @ 5:46 am

 

On European Commission web page http://ec.europa.eu/research/science-society/women/wssi/index_en.html one can find interesting post:

Women & Science

Statistics and Indicators

 

  • Exactly how many women are there in European research?
  • Are there more women than men?
  • How are women distributed across European research?
  • Is European research affected by a gender bias?
  • Are women interested in different areas than men? Do they go on to work in the fields in which they have studied?
  • Can they expect the same rewards and benefits from a scientific career as their male counterparts?
  • Are there barriers to women’s productivity within the scientific system?
  • Do women achieve and produce more than men?
  • Why are women less likely than men to seek research funding?
  • How are women scientists regarded by their peers, both male and female?
  • Who defines the rules of the scientific game?

Although it is still not possible to answer all of these questions, the following pages contain information that can help us begin to understand the answers. You can download the latest indicators available on the subject of women and science for the 25 EU Member States and the 7 countries associated to the European Union’s 5th and 6th Framework Programmes. If you want to examine these data for your own analysis, you can also download the raw statistics.

Where do these data come from?

For many years, both women scientists and policy makers have been asking for data about women’s participation in the different scientific fields. The need to build indicators is acknowledged in the Commission’s Communication, in two Council’s Resolutions (20 May 1999 and 26 June 2001) and Council Conclusions (18 April 2005), as well as a Resolution of the European Parliament. In order to approach the lack of sex-disaggregated data on scientists, the Commission has developed a double-track strategy:

The Women and Science Unit in collaboration with the Statistical Correspondents of the Helsinki Group on Women and Science and Eurostat have been collecting data on women scientists for nearly 2 years. These pages contain consolidated statistical information from the cross-national perspective for all available years since 1990 on a variety of themes.

 

 
 
   

October 19, 2007

AWM Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize

Filed under: Uncategorized — Dusanka Perisic @ 8:23 am

Are you subscribed to EWM mailing lists?

Members of EWM e-network have received by mail information on AWM Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize.

For those who are not members of the network we publish the mail.

Dear AWM members,

I am writing to remind you of the AWM Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize.

Please consider applying if you are eligible and please encourage your eligible colleagues to apply. Note that the application deadline is November 1.

More information, including application instructions, can be found at: http://www.awm-math.org/michlerprize.html. I’ve appended this information at the end of this message.

Yours sincerely,

Cathy Kessel
AWM President
The Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize of the AWM is awarded annually to a woman recently promoted to Associate Professor or an equivalent position in the mathematical sciences. The prize provides a fellowship for the awardee to spend a semester in the Mathematics Department of Cornell University without teaching obligations.

Recently promoted associate professors face many challenges as they prepare to take on greater leadership in research and in the profession. The Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize will honor outstanding women at this stage of their careers and enable them to focus on their research in the stimulating environment of the Cornell University Mathematics Department.

The recipient of the first award is Rebecca Goldin of George Mason University. She will spend the fall semester of the 2007-2008 academic year at Cornell. The award this first year is US $40,000, with an additional travel allowance provided by the Cornell University Mathematics Department.

The recipient of the second award will be announced in January 2008.

The recipient may use the fellowship during a semester of her choosing during the 2008-2009 academic year. The award amount for the second year is $42,000. Acceptance and use of the fellowship cannot be deferred.

The eligibility rules are as follows:

Applicants must be women recently promoted to Associate Professor or the equivalent in the mathematical sciences at an institution of higher learning other than Cornell University. There is no restriction either on the nationality of the applicant or on the country in which she holds a position. The primary selection criteria for the Michler Prize are the excellence of the candidate’s research and the potential benefit to the applicant of a semester in the Mathematics Department at Cornell. The applicant is expected to spend a full semester at Cornell.

Applications must include:

Curriculum Vitae including career history, list of publications and invited addresses, and other awards and support.

A proposal, approximately two to three pages in length, describing the research or book project to be undertaken during the fellowship period and explaining how the semester in the Mathematics Department of Cornell University will benefit the applicant’s project or her research career. If the proposal includes plans for joint work with a specific member of the Cornell faculty, then that faculty member should write a brief note confirming the willingness and availability to participate in the proposed research.

Three letters of recommendation addressing the candidate’s research strengths and accomplishments.

Please submit all application materials electronically through mathjobs.org. The “position” will be listed under “employer”

Association for Women in Mathematics. Applications received after the deadline will be considered as positions remain. No paper submission is needed unless the candidate is unable to submit electronically. Reference letter writers should be asked to submit their letters online through www.mathjobs.org. If they are unable to do so, they may send their letters to the following address: Michler Prize Committee, Association for Women in Mathematics, 11240 Waples Mill Road, Suite 200, Fairfax, Virginia 22030 USA.

Send inquiries to michlerprize@awm-math.org.

October 18, 2007

5th All Siberian Congress of Women Mathematician

Filed under: Conferences — Dusanka Perisic @ 4:39 am

5th All Siberian Congress of Women Mathematician will take place in Krasnoyarsk, Russia, from 15th to 18th January, 2008. For more information and application form (unfortunately only in Russian) please, visit the following link: anouncement of Krasnoyarsk meeting .

Natalia Lyulko, Sobolev Institute of Mathematics



October 15, 2007

The European Researcher’s Mobility Portal

Filed under: Uncategorized — Dusanka Perisic @ 12:15 pm

The European Commission has lunched the European Researcher’s Mobility Portal. With more than 31 partner countries, this online tool represents a gateway to opportunities for researchers and research bodies alike. Three main types of information are available:

  • Fellowships/grants
  • Research job opportunities
  • Practical information

Researchers can use one of the two available databases to upload their CVs and simultaneously consult job offers, as well as information on grants and training opportunities offered by research bodies.

The address of the portal is http://ec.europa.eu/eracareers .

 

The European Commission has also set up the European Network of Mobility Centers ERA-MORE, which offers researchers and their families comprehensive, up-to-date information, and customized assistance on all matters relating to their professional and daily lives in their EU host country.

The address is http://ec.europa.eu/eracareers/era-more .

October 13, 2007

Women mathematicians in contemporary Russia

Filed under: Portraits of living women mathematicians, Statistics — Dusanka Perisic @ 8:59 am

Natalia Lyulko, who is one of the regional coordinators of the EWM , prepared for today issue of our blog article “Women mathematicians in contemporary Russia” ,  presented at the EWM meeting in Cambridge.

Natalia lives in Novosibirsk. She has been working at the Sobolev Institute of Mathematics as a senior scientific researcher for twenty years, and gives lectures in “Functional Analysis” at Novosibirsk State University. Her research interest are in the field of hyperbolic problems on the plane. Her husband and her two sons (18 and 20 years old) are also mathematicians.


The position of women mathematicians in contemporary Russia

by Natalia Lyulko

Russia gave the world a number of famous women mathematicians. Among them is Sofia Kovalevski - a worldwide known Russian woman mathematician, Barry, Oleynic, Kochin etc. More recently, one of the most prominent women mathematicians was Olga Alexandrovna Ladigenski (1922-2004). She was a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, a president of St. Petersburg Mathematical Society, a professor of Mathematics and Mathematical Physics. She used to be a chair of mathematical department for 50 years, published over 250 research papers, and seven books on the theory of differential equations with partial derivatives and the stability theory of the problems of hydrodynamics. She also became famous for solving problems number 19 and 20, posted by Hilbert at the beginning of the 20th century.

One can go on and on with famous women mathematicians, but I would like to highlight the position of women mathematicians in contemporary Russia. Nowadays, more than 90% of all mathematics teachers in schools, and about 70% of the teachers in higher learning institutions and colleges are women. Unfortunately, the proportion of women pursuing research careers in mathematics is very small.

I work as a senior scientific researcher at the Sobolev Institute of Mathematics in Novosibirsk Akademgorodok. It was founded 50 years ago by the decree of the Soviet government as a centre of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Science. Right now, it has more than 60 research institutions pursuing studies in different areas: Physics, Geology etc. Institute staff number about 280 employees, only 14% of which are women (there are two scientific degrees in Russia: one that corresponds to PhD and another one that is called a Doctor of Science – which does not correspond to English equivalent). During the last five-year period, the number of dissertations defended by women has doubled, compared to the number in the five-year period prior to that one. Now there are 28 women with PhD degrees working at our research Institute; only two of them hold a PhD of a higher level. One of them was awarded this degree last year.

The researchers about to work for the institutes obtain their education at the Novosibirsk State University. The department of Pure Mathematics has about 1,500 students, 25-30% of whom are women. About 40% of all students in the doctoral program are women; twenty years ago, only 25% of the doctoral students were women. Among the authors of dissertations defended at the University for the last five years there were 48% of women, while there were 18% of women in the Soviet Union during the same period. However, there were only two women in the last 16 years who were awarded a higher PhD, which makes a total of 11%.

One can see that there are very few women mathematicians in our Siberian region, but the number of women mathematicians awarded the PhD degrees at their younger age has doubled recently - compared to the time before the demise of the Soviet Union. The demise, during the 90s, had for its consequence a severe cut in funding of science and education. Naturally, scientific careers became less attractive. Many people adapted to these changes, set off for business entrepreneurship or politics, and went abroad. Women, however, continued responding to a higher call for teaching and researching.

We all know that if a meaningful creative work is to continue, the exchange of ideas and approaches to the solution of new problems is vital. Therefore, back in the 90s of the last century, when the crisis hit science and education, Russian branch of the European Association of “Women Mathematicians” came up with an initiative to establish an organization uniting women in science and education. The goal of the organization was to continue the tradition of Russian science and fundamental education. This organization became known as the Association of «Women in Science and Education». The first conference was held in 1994, and Professor Risnichenko, a Doctor of Mathematical and Physical sciences at Moscow University, was elected as its president. Presently, it is a very active organization; it holds annual conferences “Women-mathematicians”, “Mathematics, Computer, Education”, “and Non-linear World”. The published papers presented during these conferences comprise more than eighty volumes.

Professional branch of this organization is the Association of “Women Mathematicians.” Inna Emelyanova, a professor at Nijniy Novgorod University, has been a leader of the Association since 1993. Until 2004, the Association held annual conferences in Volgograd, Cheboksary, Voronej and Novorosiysk. Now these conferences are held every three years, gathering between 100-150 participants. Women delegates usually present their results of research in theoretical or applied mathematics, exchange professional information and problems, and share the pedagogical experience in doctoral programs. Mathematics, Information Technology, and Education are traditional topics of these conferences. These conferences are a good schooling opportunity for young women who undertake challenging careers in education and research. Publication of papers and theses usually follows the conferences.

In conclusion, I would like to mention the All-Siberian Congress of Women Mathematicians that is held biannually, in January, in Krasnoyarsk. Delegates come from Siberia, Ural, and Far East. The first such conference was sponsored by the “Women in Science and Education”, and was devoted it to the celebration of 150th birthday of Sofia Kovalevsky. Despite the severe weather in Krasnoyarsk (occasionally it gets down to -40 degrees Celsius), it is becoming more and more popular among women mathematicians. In addition, it is becoming popular among professional mathematicians as well. Among the delegates of the 4th Conference held in 2006, there were many foreign participants. The total number of the delegates reached 160, and they came from 42 towns and cities. One of the delegates, Lyudmila Demidova Lopuhina, came from Sweden. Her presentation was devoted to the Stockholm period in life of Sofia Kovalevsky. The next conference of All-Siberian Congress of women mathematicians will be held from January 15th to January 18th, 2008 in Krasnoyarsk. For more information please visit our website http://www.kongress.a109.ru

October 9, 2007

Do you know numb3rs?

Filed under: Portraits of living women mathematicians — Dusanka Perisic @ 12:59 pm

Lisbeth Fajstrup lisbeth-portraet.jpg, an Associate Professor at the Department of Mathematical Sciences of Aalborg University , Denmark, certainly does! She is a fine mathematician and an editor of a hugely popular Danish blog about mathematics. I met Lisbeth at the 13th general meeting of European Women in Mathematics and today you have the opportunity to do so.

Here is Lisbeth contribution

I am very proud to have been asked to contribute to the EMS Committee “Women and Mathematics: blog as one of the “next door mathematicians.”

My first EWM-meeting was in Warszaw in 1993, and I was at the meeting in Trieste in 1997, in Loccum, Germany 1999 and then this year, 2007 in Cambridge. I enjoyed these meetings very much, the friendly atmosphere, the really serious mathematics introduced to the general audience, these wonderful women who all do mathematics and love the subject - I always leave with new energy. So, right now I am wondering why on earth I did not go to more of these meetings, but then again, there were other things asking for my attention.

I was born March 8, 1960 (On the International Women’s Day) in Denmark.
I am married and have two daughters born
in September 91, and December 94.
My parents are not academics, but we have always been a family that read books, and I did well at school, in fact in most of the subjects. In high school, I met a wonderful Math teacher and realized that Mathematics was a very different thing from what I had seen in primary school, and I enjoyed it and did well.
I studied at the University of Aarhus, Denmark. Luckily for me, the university or the Math department could not afford to hire students as instructors, which meant that Ib Madsen, who was by then an associate professor, was my Linear Algebra instructor and he followed our “class” as Algebra instructor the following year, and Curves and Surfaces instructor after that. He supervised my master thesis (on Gauge theory and group actions) and persuaded me to apply for a PhD scholarship, which to my enormous surprise, I actually got.
Ib Madsen supervised my thesis as well, and I worked in the area of equivariant stable homotopy and homology theory for some years. In 1995, I went together with my colleague at the University of Aalborg , Martin Raussen, to a conference “New connections between Mathematics and Computer Science” at the Newton Institute in Cambridge, and there I met Eric Goubault, a French computer scientist, whom I and Martin Raussen have been working with ever since in the area of applying geometric and topological methods to problems in concurrency. It is very fascinating to be developing a new area, and also quite a challenge to be working between fields.

Numb3rs:
These days I am very involved in a project related to the TV-series, Numb3rs. It is a CBS-production, which is now on its fourth season in the US. The main characters are two brothers - one is a mathematician and the other is an FBI-agent. And they apply mathematics to solving crime. The mathematics is quite serious and the crime solving part plus the relationship between the characters is so fascinating, that people actually watch the show enough to keep it on the air now for the fourth season. Hence, lots of people hear words like the Riemann hypothesis, Markov Chains, partial differential equation etc., and they do not switch to another channel! It is really well done. And mathematicians are hired as consultants to give ideas and make sure that what they say is correct.

When this was coming to a Danish TV-channel last fall, we decided at my department, that we wanted to give people a chance to learn more about the math from the show. There is already a blog http://www.atsweb.neu.edu/math/cp/blog/
doing this in English, but we find it important to give Danish viewers information in Danish.
So, every Wednesday night at 8 pm I am ready in front of my TV, and when the show stops at 9, I post an entrance on the blog http://numb3rs.math.aau.dk about the math in that days episode. This takes quite a lot of preparation, since the mathematics will often be something I don’t know very much about; and even when I do know it, it is not easy to communicate it to the general audience at high school level, which is the target audience for the blog. So, I have to think about it.

In April and May we had 18000 visits on the blog each month, and this is after we subtracted a lot of web-crawlers. Our visitors come from more than 7500 sites each month, so we are quite happy with it. In May, I got money from the Danish National Science Foundation to buy me off some of my teaching in order to give me time to do this. And actually it does take time to do this. But on the other hand, I am learning so much - and I really do enjoy that. Last week, it was Benfords Law, which you can look up in Wikipedia, if you do not understand Danish…
By the way: Searching for Numb3rs in Google gives relevant results because number 3 in there.

October 4, 2007

European Women in Mathematics, early years

Filed under: Uncategorized — Dusanka Perisic @ 9:46 am

On September 28, 2007, we presented Caroline Series, one of the pioneers of the EWM Association and promised to continue the story about European Women in Mathematics. Today we want to refresh the memory of the early years of Association.

With the courtesy of the Standing Committee of EWM, during the following two weeks, the blog community will have a chance to see the first part of video “Women and Mathematics Across Cultures“.

To view it, please click on the following link: Women and Mathematics Across Cultures

 

Once again, we would like to turn your attention to A brief and personal history of EWM written by Caroline Series in 1992.

The story about the EWM will continue.

Since we plan to regularly publish new posts, we invite you to visit the blog as often as you can.

October 2, 2007

The 13th general meeting of European Women in Mathematics

Filed under: Uncategorized — Dusanka Perisic @ 7:47 am

The 13th general meeting of European Women in Mathematics, EWM 2007, took place during 3-6 September at the Centre for Mathematical Sciences at the University of Cambridge, England. The short report about the meeting and Minutes of the General Assembly are available at EWM web site.

With permision of the Standing Committee of EMW we give here  a part of a short report:
An impressive number of 85 women from 25 countries attended the meeting.

To see the participants, please click on the small picture on the right An impressive number of 85 women from 25 countries attended the meeting .
Talks at EWM07 covered a wide range of mathematical areas, and all the speakers were encouraged to spend a few minutes introducing themselves and their background. We could hear some enthusiastic presentations on, for example, sympletic geometry and algebraic number theory.

The invited speakers included:

Ana Achucarro, Lorenz Institute, Leiden: Theoretical Physics;
Toni Beardon, OBE Cambridge, UK: Mathematics Education;
Natalia Berloff, DAMTP, Cambridge UK: Quantum Fluids;
Lenore Blum, Carnegie Mellon University, USA: Theoretical Computer Science;
Simone Gutt Univ. Libre de Bruxelles: Symplectic Geometry;
Eleny Ionel, Stanford, USA: Symplectic Geometry;
Dusa McDuff, Stonybrook, USA: Symplectic Geometry;
Cheryl Praeger, University of Western Australia: Group Theory;
Vera Sos, Budapest: Combinatorics;
Ramdorai Sujatha, Tata Institute, Mumbai: Number Theory.


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