Monday 1 February 2016

Prigogine Award 2016 Ceremony

The Prigogine Gold Medal 2016 Award Ceremony will take place on Wednesday 13th July 2016 in Alicante.  This prestigious event is sponsored by the University of Alicante, on the occasion of the 11th International Conference on Urban Regeneration and Sustainability (The Sustainable City).
The Prigogine Medal was established in 2004 by the University of Siena and the Wessex Institute of Technology to honour the memory of Professor Ilya Prigogine, Nobel Prize Winner for Chemistry.
 The 2016 Medal is to be awarded to Brian Fath, Professor at Towson University, USA.
Prigogine 2016 Brian Fath photo
Prof Brian D. Fath
BRIAN FATH
Brian D. Fath is Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Towson University (Maryland, USA) and Research Scholar within the Advanced Systems Analysis Program at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (Laxenburg, Austria).  His research is in the area of systems ecology and network analysis applied to the sustainability and resilience of socio-ecological systems.  His interests range from network analysis to ecosystem theory to urban metabolism to systems thinking and environmental philosophy. Dr. Fath has taught courses on ecological networks and modeling in many different locations around the world. He holds visiting faculty appointments at the School of Environment, Beijing Normal University and at the State Key Laboratory of Urban and Regional Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences both in Beijing, China.  He was also Fulbright Distinguished Chair at Parthenope University of Naples, Italy.

He has published numerous research papers, reports, and book chapters. He co-authored three books: He is Editor-in-Chief for the journal Ecological Modelling; President of the North American Chapter of International Society for Ecological Modelling and, among other appointments, he is a member and present Chair of Baltimore County Commission in Environmental Quality.
ILYA PRIGOGINE
Ilya Prigogine was born in Moscow in 1917, and obtained his undergraduate and graduate education in chemistry at the Free University in Brussels.  He was awarded the Nobel Prize for his contribution to non-equilibrium thermodynamics, particularly the theory of dissipative structures.  The main theme of his scientific work was the role of time in the physical sciences and biology.  He contributed significantly to the understanding of irreversible processes, particularly in systems far from equilibrium.  The results of his work have had profound consequences for understanding biological and ecological systems.
Prigogine’s ideas established the basis for ecological systems research.  The Prigogine Medal to honour his memory is awarded annually to a leading scientist in the field of ecological systems.  All recipients have been deeply influenced by the work of Prigogine.
Previous Prigogine Laureates were:
2004   Sven Jorgensen, Denmark                        
2005   Enzo Tiezzi, Italy                                     
2006   Bernard Patten, USA                                 
2007   Robert Ulanowicz, USA                             
2008   Ioannis Antoniou, Greece                          
2009   Emilio del Giudice, Italy                            
2010   Felix Müller, Germany
2011   Larissa Brizhik, Ukraine
2012   Gerald Pollack, USA
2013   Vladimir Voeikov, Russia
2014   Mae-wan Ho, UK
2015   Bai-Lian Larry Li, USA