home     about us     what we do     initiatives     essay competition     news & views


logo

International Organization for Chemical Sciences in Development

About Us


Leaders Present and Past – Some Personal Profiles


Presidents

Glenn T. Seaborg

Seaborg

Glenn T. Seaborg (USA: 1912-1999) was IOCD's founding President, serving from 1981 until 1992. He won the 1951 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for discoveries in the chemistry of the trans-uranium elements. He contributed to the discovery and isolation of ten elements and developed the actinide concept, which led to the current arrangement of the actinoid series in the periodic table of the elements. Element 106 — seaborgium — was named after him.

Despite his very busy career, Seaborg remained a staunch supporter of IOCD, helping to raise its profile and solicit funds.

Jean-Marie Lehn

Lehn

Jean-Marie Lehn (France) served as President of IOCD 1992-2021. He won the 1987 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the development and application of molecules with highly selective structure-specific interactions. His work has focused on supramolecular chemistry — see, for example, his book on this subject.

Lehn provided inspiration and encouragement for the work of IOCD, heading its governing body and chairing its annual board meetings as well as promoting IOCD around the world.

Vivian Wing-Wah Yam

Yam

Vivian Wing-Wah Yam (Hong Kong, China) became IOCD’s third President in January 2022. Working at the University of Hong Kong where she is Chair Professor and Interim Dean of Science, her research work focuses on inorganic/organometallic syntheses, supramolecular chemistry, photophysics and photochemistry, and metal-based molecular functional materials. Her career has been marked by many major awards for her highly distinguished scientific contributions, among which she is a Laureate of the UNESCO-L’Oréal Award for Women in Science (2011). In 2020 she was awarded the Porter Medal by the European Photochemistry Association, the Inter-American Photochemistry Society and the Asian and Oceanian Photochemistry Association, for her contributions to photochemistry; and in 2021, she was honoured with designation as the inaugural Pioneer in Energy Research by ACS Energy and Fuels, with a Special Issue of this journal dedicated to her.

Professor Yam is working with the members of IOCD to further promote the central role of the chemical sciences in meeting the great challenges that the world faces in the 21st Century in particular, in achieving a sustainable and equitable future for all.

Executive directors

Pierre Crabbé

Crabbe

Pierre Crabbé (Belgium: 1928-1987) founded IOCD, which was launched in 1981. He served as Executive Director until his death in 1987.

Crabbé trained as a chemist in Belgium, France and the USA before joining the research laboratories of Syntex S.A. in Mexico City in 1960, where he worked in the newly developing steroid industry and also undertook research and teaching at the university in Mexico City. In the early 1970s, Crabbé returned to academia (University of Grenoble 1973-79; University of Missouri 1979-83) before devoting himself full-time to directing IOCD. He worked extensively as a consultant with UNESCO and WHO. His large body of published works includes papers and books on the chemistry of steroids and prostaglandins and on physical methods of structure elucidation, including optical rotatory dispersion and circular dichroism.

Robert H. Maybury

Maybury

Robert H. Maybury (USA: 1923-2021) served as Executive Director of IOCD from 1988 to 2008, developing the work of its founder. In recognition of his outstanding service, Robert Maybury was granted Emeritus status in 2010.

Maybury received a PhD in Chemistry (Boston University 1952) and held a postdoctorate in protein chemistry (Harvard University 1951-53). From 1954 to 1963, he taught chemistry and carried on research in protein chemistry at University of Redlands, California USA. In 1963 he joined the science sector of UNESCO, Paris, France, serving in Nairobi, Kenya, as Deputy Head, UNESCO Regional Office for Science and Technology from 1973 to 1980. Retiring from UNESCO in 1983, he was invited to serve as Consultant to the Science Advisor of the World Bank in Washington, DC, USA. On Pierre Crabbé's tragic death in 1987, Dr. Seaborg asked Maybury to be Executive Director of IOCD, citing his experience in developing countries and wide contacts among scientists.

Maybury soon created several additional Working Groups to round out IOCD's attention to the needs and limited resources of low- and middle-income countries in the areas of environmental analytical chemistry, medicinal chemistry, plant chemistry and biotic exploration. He also worked with IOCD officers in obtaining generous grants for IOCD from public and private donors.

Alain Krief

...

Alain Krief (a French citizen born in Africa) studied in France, UK, and USA and has been a visiting professor at more than 15 universities worldwide. He was for many years director of the Laboratory of Organic Chemistry at the University Notre Dame de la Paix in Namur, Belgium.

Widely known in scientific and industrial circles for his contributions to organic synthesis, he has also been pursuing work in chemical informatics. Krief has been a member of numerous scientific committees, an expert for scientific associations, and a member of editorial boards of scientific journals.

Succeeding Robert Maybury as IOCD's Executive Director in 2009 to 2020, Krief oversaw major changes in the organization, bringing a new and forward-looking strategic focus to IOCD's work.

Federico Rosei

Rosei

Federico Rosei (dual citizen of Italy and Canada) has been a professor at INRS in Montreal since 2002. He is mostly known for his research on nanostructured materials, his efforts on professional development and his devotion to sustainability and capacity building in the South.

His work has been widely acclaimed through many instances of peer recognition, including election as Member/Fellow of about twenty national/international academies and learned societies as well as about forty national and international honours, distinctions, prizes and medals. He has been a visiting scientist / professor in about 20 organizations in Australia, China, Germany, Italy, Japan, Singapore and USA.

When Alain Krief retired at the end of 2020, Rosei was designated as IOCD's fourth Executive Director. In the midst of increasing global challenges, he brings a large network and enormous passion and energy for the role of IOCD in promoting sustainable development.

Other notable IOCD personalities

Elkan R. Blout

Blout

Elkan R. Blout (USA: 1919-2006) trained as a chemist and worked initially on pioneering developments in instant colour film photography. For many years he was a Professor of Biological Chemistry at Harvard University, where he served as Dean for Academic Affairs at Harvard School of Public Health (1978-1989). In 1991, Blout became the senior science advisor for the US Food and Drug Administration. Among many awards, Blout received the National Medal of Science in 1990 from President George H.W. Bush.

Blout's areas of expertise extended to financial management (as treasurer of the US National Academy of Sciences 1980-92, he oversaw a five-fold increase in the organization's endowment) and in his roles as a founding Vice President and Treasurer of IOCD (1982-2005) he ensured IOCD's continuing financial stability for more than two decades.

Norman Borlaug

Borlaug

Norman Borlaug (USA: 1914-2009) was an agronomist and humanitarian. He is credited as the father of the ‘Green Revolution’ in which improvements in agriculture enabled massive improvements in crop yields during the second half of the 20th century, helping to feed the world's burgeoning population. He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970.

Borlaug was an early advisor to IOCD and helped develop the thinking behind the IOCD Agrochemistry Programme, which later evolved into the Plant Chemistry Working Group. Borlaug continued to serve as a member of IOCD's Senior Advisory Council for many years.

Sune K. Bergström

Bergstrom

Sune K. Bergström (Sweden: 1916-2004) studied biochemistry and physiological chemistry and worked for much of his career at the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm. He shared the 1982 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discoveries concerning prostaglandins and related biologically active substances.

Bergström was involved with a number of important initiatives that aimed to direct medicinal chemistry to meet the needs of a people in low- and middle-income countries, including the WHO Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction and the Council on Health Research for Development. He was also a founding vice president and early advisor to IOCD, helping shape initial thinking about its work in the field of medicinal chemistry. He remained a member of IOCD's Senior Advisory Council for many years.

Top

Organisation Internationale des Sciences Chimiques pour le Développement
61 Rue de Bruxelles
B 5000 Namur
Belgium

Some images of this website were freely downloaded from pexels.com, the others are from IOCD collections except when otherwise stated

Website hosting graciously donated by Hurricane Electric

Quick links:
home
site map
support
contact us
legal notice

© 2024 www.iocd.org