New leaders elected for the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Christina Moberg to be the new President
The new President, the foremost representative of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, will be Christina Moberg. She is a member of the Academy’s class for chemistry and will take over the position from Barbara Cannon.
Christina Moberg, born in 1947, is professor in organic chemistry at KTH Royal Institute of Technology. She earned her doctorate in 1975 and ever since then, except for periods as a visiting researcher at universities in France, she has worked at KTH, where she now leads a research group. Previous positions have included vice president and vice dean of faculty at KTH.
Christina Moberg’s research deals with asymmetric catalysis, focusing on new selection methods for producing molecules with specific qualities, which are of great significance in the production of pharmaceuticals, for example.
In 1998 she was awarded the Göran Gustafsson Prize in Chemistry for her achievements in synthetic organic chemistry, particularly for the methods with which she succeeded in solving the problem of dangerous mirror forms of molecules. She has also received an honorary doctorate from the Faculty of Science at Lund University.
Between 2008 and 2011 she was the Second Vice-President of the Academy.
Göran K. Hansson new Permanent Secretary
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has elected a new Permanent Secretary. Göran K. Hansson, professor at Karolinska Institutet, will take over this position.
Göran K. Hansson, who was born in Lysekil in 1951, is a member of the Academy’s class for medical sciences and Secretary of the Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet.
He will take over from the current Permanent Secretary, Staffan Normark. The Permanent Secretary leads the Academy’s activities, is the head of the Academy’s secretariat and is responsible for ensuring that the decisions of the Academy Board are enacted.
Hansson received his doctorate in histology, the study of biological tissue, from the University of Gothenburg in 1980. In 1994 he was appointed Professor of Experimental Cardiovascular Research at Karolinska Institutet and now works with research into the immune system’s role in cardiovascular disease. His discoveries include how cholesterol build-ups in the blood vessels can activate the immune system, leading to inflammation and the formation of blood clots.
In 1981 and 1982, Göran K. Hansson was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Washington, Seattle, USA. In 1981 he was made associate professor in histology at the University of Gothenburg and, in 1989, in clinical chemistry at the same university. He was Professor of Cell Biology at the University of Gothenburg in 1994-95, visiting professor at the Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA, in 2008, and became a Distinguished Professor at Karolinska Institutet in 2010. He has led the Linnaeus Centre for research into inflammation and cardiovascular disease since 2009.
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