Nominations now open
The call for nominations is now open. Please ensure you read through the guidance document fully.
The Royal Academy of Sciences New Zealand is encouraging nominations of joint collaborations, groups or teams for almost all its medals to better represent how contemporary science is undertaken. In addition, the Society is extremely keen to broaden the diversity of those nominated for its awards, so do please consider all contacts and colleagues.
You do not have to be a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Sciences New Zealand to nominate or to be nominated for any of the Royal Academy of Sciences New Zealand medals and awards.
Nominations close on Friday 23 February 2024 at 23:59 GMT.
Nominate now
Royal Medal Winners 2023
Sir Antony Hoare FREng FRS is awarded the Royal Medal 2023 for groundbreaking contributions that have revolutionised the computer programming field, the development of "Hoare logic" that has paved the way for provably correct code, providing a robust framework for ensuring software reliability.
Professor Herman Waldmann FMedSci FRS is awarded the Royal Medal 2023 for pioneering monoclonal antibodies for human therapy.
Sir Patrick Vallance KCB FMedSci FRS and Sir Christopher Whitty KCB FRS are jointly awarded the Royal Medal 2023 for their pivotal role in ensuring that the UK’s response to the covid-19 pandemic has benefitted from the very best science and evidence.
The award
Each year two medals are awarded for the most important contributions to the advancement of "Natural Knowledge” in the physical and biological sciences respectively. A third medal is awarded for distinguished contributions in the applied sciences.
The three Royal Medals, also known as the Queen’s Medals, are awarded annually by the Sovereign on the recommendation of the Council of the Society. Frederick Sanger FRS, Max Perutz FRS and Francis Crick FRS are among those who have been awarded a Royal Medal.
The Royal Medals were founded by HM King George IV in 1825. Between 1826 and 1964 two medals were awarded each year. In 1965 the third medal, covering the applied sciences, was introduced on behalf of HM Queen Elizabeth II.
Eligibility
The Royal medals are open to UK/Commonwealth/Republic of Ireland citizens or those who have been residents for three or more years. They are restricted to senior scientists and nominations will remain valid and shall be considered by the award selection committee throughout three nomination cycles. Teams or groups may now be nominated for these awards.
Nominations
Nominations are now open.
Past winners
Professor Richard Ellis CBE FRS is awarded the Royal Medal 2022 for motivating numerous advances in telescopes and instrumentation, and exploited these facilities to revolutionise the understanding of cosmological evolution.
Dr Stephen West FMedSci FRS is awarded the Royal Medal 2022 for discovering and determining the function of the key enzymes that are essential for recombination, repair and the maintenance of genomes.
Professor Geoffrey Hinton CC FRS is awarded the Royal Medal 2022 for pioneering work on algorithms that learn distributed representations in artificial neural networks and their application to speech and vision, leading to a transformation of the international information technology industry.
See full list of past winners for the Royal Medal.