For
the third year in a row, The Future Awards, referred to by the World
Bank as ‘The Nobel Prize for Young Africans’, is searching for the most
brilliant young minds in Science, in addition to its yearly search for
the brightest minds in Technology.
“For
many years, what we have done is try to mirror the breakthroughs that
young people have made in different fields and to sustain them,” said
Chude Jideonwo, who is Executive Director of The Future Project. “In
keeping with our ‘Tear down these walls!’
campaign this year, we are looking for the brightest young minds
driving innovation and impact in science and/or technology with
innovation or invention – through the category Innovator of the Year –
Science and Technology.
The
awards website explains the broad criteria for this category: We are
searching for young people across science and technology (especially
Information Technology) who have furthered the boundaries in these
fields in terms of research or activity. There are a critical number of
young Nigerians who are advancing impressive, practical innovations
that can compare with the best around the world. It will help if there
is some kind of recognition or institutional buy-in for that work, and
the work should be available for inspection.
“We are also beaming the search light on service,” Jideonwo said in explaining the Excellence in Service categories. “We are looking for young people in governance and the corporate sector whose work shines bright in driving effective, professionalism and impact, with integrity and productivity.”
It will be recalled that, in 2010, Ify Aniebo
won the Best Use of Science (also the biggest prize, Young Person of
the Year) award for her ground-breaking work in malaria research, and
in 2011, Debo Olaosebikan won the award for his work on
developing the world’s first electrically operated Silicon Laser, a
project supported by a $6 million grant from the United States
Department of Defense.
In the same year, Tolulope Iroye won the Best Use of Technology award
for the ‘Magic box’; a device built to allow you control your
electronic gadgets, for example, your TV from anywhere with your mobile
phone as well as control electricity or mobilise/immobilise cars from
anywhere in the world.
Nominations for the 2012 awards kicked off on the 29th
of May and will continue until this Saturday, June 30. Town Hall
Meetings have been holding across the country, including in Lagos,
Rivers, Anambra, Adamawa and Abuja. Nominees must be Nigerian citizens
and must be aged 18 – 31. To nominate for this category, please go to www.thefuturenigeria.com.
Other
categories for the Awards this year include Best Use of Advocacy,
Actor of the Year, Best Use of New Media, Entrepreneur of the Year in
Media/Communication, Entertainment, Technology and Fashion; Designer of
the Year, Innovator of the Year - Education, Creative Artist of the
Year, Journalist of the Year, Magazine of the Year, Musician of the
Year, Music Producer of the Year, On-Air Personality of the Year
(Radio), On-Air Personality of the Year (TV), Excellence in Service –
Journalism, Corporate and Government, Screen Producer of the Year, and
the biggest for Young Person of the Year.
Nominations end at midnight on June 30
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