The Bader Award is a prize for organic chemistry awarded annually by the Royal Society of Chemistry since 1989. The winner, who receives £2,000 and a medal, gives a lecture tour in the UK.[1]
Source: [2]
2023 | Marc Vendrell[3] |
2022 | Ross Denton[4] |
2021 | Alison Hulme |
2020 | Ed Anderson |
2019 | Jason Micklefield |
2018 | Joseph Harrity [Wikidata][5] |
2017 | Michael Greaney [Wikidata] |
2016 | Thomas Wirth [Wikidata] |
2015 | Stephen Clark [Wikidata] |
2014 | David Procter |
2013 | Jonathan Goodman [Wikidata] |
2012 | John Murphy [Wikidata] |
2011 | Karl J. Hale [Wikidata] |
2010 | Kevin Booker-Milburn [Wikidata][6] |
2009 | Douglas Philp |
2008 | Veronique Gouverneur |
2007 | Jonathan B. Spencer [Wikidata][7] |
2006 | David Hodgson |
2005 | no award |
2004 | Robert S. Ward [Wikidata][8] |
2003 | Hamish McNab [Wikidata] |
2002 | Stuart Warren |
2001 | David R. M. Walton [Wikidata][9] |
2000 | Thomas L. Gilchrist [Wikidata] |
1999 | Richard J. Whitby [Wikidata] |
1998 | Donald A. Whiting [Wikidata] |
1997 | David A. Widdowson [Wikidata] |
1996 | Ian Paterson [de] |
1995 | George W. J. Fleet [Wikidata] |
1994 | Andrew Bruce Holmes |
1993 | Roger Alder |
1992 | Martin R. Bryce [Wikidata] |
1991 | William B. Motherwell [Wikidata] |
1990 | Dudley Howard Williams |
1989 | Stephen G. Davies |