In honour of International Women’s Day 2023, Cosmos is showcasing the exceptional and interesting female researchers and scientists in Australia.
We’re not highlighting the work of one or two who have made important scientific breakthroughs, or brought new understanding to our community, although we could do that every day. We’re deliberately showcasing the vast number of women in a variety of fields who we can celebrate together.
Share this list with your daughters, sons, and school students. Let them be inspired and excited. Let them understand the full range of fascinating and important areas of science these women are working in.
Cosmos is grateful for the support of the Australian Council of Learned Academies (ACOLA) and Australia’s five Learned Academies who helped us to create this list.
Enjoy International Women’s Day!
Anthropology – the scientific study of humanity
Distinguished Professor Marcia Langton AO is a descendant of the Iman people of Central and Southwestern Queensland. As an anthropologist and geographer, she is recognised internationally for her ground-breaking work modernising the mining industry’s engagement with Indigenous people.
Professor Emma Kowal is a cultural and medical anthropologist, with a background as a medical doctor and public health researcher in Indigenous health settings in Australia.
Professor Andrea Whittaker is a medical anthropologist whose research spans anthropology, international public health, Asian studies, and gender studies, with current projects including the study of global medical trade and mobility.
Associate Professor Kalpana Ram is an anthropologist with a background in philosophy and sociology. Her research focusses on class, gender and women’s movements in India, caste, and popular religion.
Professor Sarah Pink is a world-leading design anthropologist. Her research focuses on emerging intelligent technologies, automation, data, digital futures, safety, and design for wellbeing.
Professor Megan Warin’s research investigates gender and class differences in obesity, public understandings of obesity science, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander views on health, and eating and intergenerational transmission.
Dr Julie Finlayson is an anthropologist whose work has included claim/heritage work under the Northern Territory Aboriginal Land Rights Act, and across the native title system.
Archaeology – study of the ancient and recent human past through material remains
Professor Jo McDonald is an archaeologist interested in the ways people use rock art to communicate their identity through time and is known for her collaborative research with Australian Aboriginal communities.
Scientia Professor Alison Bashford is Director of the Laureate Centre for History & Population at UNSW. Her work connects the history of science, global history, and environmental history into new assessments of the modern world.
Distinguished Professor Lynnette Russell AM is an historian who combines anthropology and archaeology in her research, which ranges from the 16th to the 20th centuries, Aboriginal people in the maritime industry, to the last 1000 years of encounter history.
Distinguished Professor Sue O’Connor is an archaeologist whose research focuses on modern human migration, settlement and adaptations within the Indo-Pacific region.
Zoe Rimmer is a proud Pakana woman currently competing her PhD on Tasmanian Aboriginal activism in cultural institutions. Her research follows on from her work in the museum sector associated with repatriation, cultural revival and developing First Peoples museology.
Professor Ronika Power is an archaeologist whose research uses ancient human remains to better understand human health and migration.
Associate Professor Alice Gorman is an expert in Indigenous stone tool analysis, and is an internationally recognised leader in the field of space archaeology.
Physics – the study of matter, energy, and force
Professor Nicole Bell is a theoretical physicist and new President of the Australian Institute of Physics, who works on dark matter, neutrinos, and other areas of particle and astroparticle physics at the University of Melbourne.
Dr Sarah Pearce is an astronomer and space technologist who played a leading role in the creation of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) – the world’s largest radio telescope – and is now the Director of the SKA-Low Telescope.
Professor Lan Fu is Head of Electronic Materials Engineering at ANU. Her main research interests include design, fabrication, and integration of optoelectronic devices (LEDs, lasers, and photodetectors) and high efficiency solar cells.
Professor Naomi McClure-Griffiths, astrophysicist and radio astronomer, is an expert on the atomic hydrogen gas distribution and evolution the Milky Way and its neighbours, the Magellanic Clouds.
Professor Halina Rubinsztein-Dunlop AO is recognised internationally for her achievements in laser physics, linear and nonlinear high-resolution spectroscopy, laser micromanipulation, atom cooling, and trapping and nano optics.
Dr Susan Pond AM is a distinguished physician, scientist, and company director recognised for her contributions to medicine, biotechnology, renewable energy, and sustainability.
Professor Elanor Huntington is Executive Director of Digital, National Facilities & Collections at CSIRO. Her research is in quantum computation.
Professor Ewa Goldys is a renowned leader in the applications of light and fluorescence for biomedicine, nanotechnology and advanced materials.
Professor Celine Boehm is an astroparticle physicist who was the first to quantify the impact of dark matter interactions with the Standard Model particles on the cosmic microwave background and large-scale-structure formation.
Dr Cathy Foley AO PSM is a physicist who became Australia’s ninth Chief Scientist in January 2021 after a lengthy career at Australia’s national science agency, the CSIRO, where she was appointed as the agency’s Chief Scientist in August 2018.
Technology – the application of scientific knowledge for practical purposes
Professor Xiaojing Hao is a world expert in solar technology and has set five world records for solar cell efficiency using thin film kesterite materials.
Professor Shazia Sadiq is a computer scientist whose research focuses on developing innovative solutions for Business Information Systems.
Professor Neena Mitter is the founding Director of both the QAAFI Centre for Horticultural Science and the ARC Industrial Transformational Research HUB for Sustainable Crop Protection at UQ.
Professor Svetha Venkatesh is a computer scientist who has made fundamental and influential contributions to the field of activity and event recognition in multimedia data.
Professor Madhu Bhaskaran is an engineer who has developed stretchable skin-like electronic devices for better health care.
Professor Kylie Catchpole is a global expert in solar energy whose work demonstrates new approaches to increase the efficiency of solar cells and solar hydrogen technology.
Professor Elizabeth Croft is an expert in human-robot interaction. Her research seeks to advance the collaboration between people and robots in safe, predictable and helpful ways.
Scientia Professor Veena Sahajwalla is a materials scientist, engineer and innovator who is revolutionising recycling science.
Professor Sally McArthur is a materials scientist whose research is in the development of novel biomaterials for biomedical, nutritional, and environmental applications.
Professor Cordelia Selomulya has extensive experience in the area of spray drying and characterisation of functional dairy and food powders.
Health and Medical Sciences
Professor Ngiare Brown is a proud Yuin nation woman and senior Aboriginal medical practitioner. She has qualifications in medicine, public health and primary care, and has studied bioethics, medical law and human rights.
Dr Dimity Dornan AO is a speech pathologist who has devoted her career to helping deaf children to listen and speak by training their brains to use implantable bionic technologies.
Kylie Sproston is a chartered engineer and leader in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries with a strong focus on manufacturing.
Dr Alison Todd is an inventor, and co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer of SpeeDx – a biomedical company which develops and manufactures diagnostics tools.
Clinical Associate Professor Asha Bowen is a paediatric infectious diseases specialist whose research focusses on reducing the burden of infectious diseases in Australia’s Indigenous children.
Professor Ranjeny Thomas AM is a rheumatologist whose research focuses on the biology and clinical use of human dendritic cells in autoimmune disease.
Dr Anneline Padayachee is a food-based nutrition preventative health scientist, who helps consumers, healthcare professionals and industry improve their understanding of how food affects health.
Professor Maree Teesson AO is known nationally and internationally for her research on the comorbidity between mental health and substance use disorders.
Chemistry – the study of the properties and behaviour of matter
Professor Vicki Chen is a chemical engineer with research experience in membrane separation, gas separation, bio-catalytic systems, nanomaterials, and water treatment.
Professor Sally Gras is a biochemical engineer in the dairy manufacturing industry and an expert in translating laboratory research into industrial practice.
Scientia Professor Rose Amal is a chemical engineer and a world leader in photocatalysis – harnessing solar energy to purify water or generate hydrogen gas.
Emeritus Professor Mary Garson AM is an organic chemist whose research explores the chemistry and bioactivity of natural products from both the marine and terrestrial environment.
Professor Alison Rodger is a chemist who has invented four techniques that use polarised light to reveal the structures of complex biological molecules.
Professor Kate Jolliffe is a supramolecular and organic chemist whose research interests include the design and synthesis of molecular receptors, sensors and transporters for anionic (negatively charged) species.
Dr Sara Kyne is a chemist whose research focuses on discovery and design of sustainable catalytic reactions, and organometallic and free radical chemistry.
Dr Yvonne Mah has a PhD in chemistry and is the Business Development Manager, Plastic Additives Australia and New Zealand, at BASF.