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Women Nobel Prize Winners 2023-11-10
  • Only 6% of the 1,000 Nobel Prizes awarded since 1901 have been to women
  • Just over half of the 65 prizes awarded to women have been given in the past 20 years
  • Three African women have won the peace prize and one the literature prize

Four women won Nobel Prizes this year – Claudia Goldin (economics), Narges Mohammadi (peace) and Anne L'Huillier (physics) – which brings the total number of prizes awarded to women to 65. That’s a mere 6% of the 1,000 prizes awarded since 1901.

Just over half of those, 35 prizes, have been since 2003. Nineteen women have won the peace prize, three of them Africans: Wangari Maathai, a Kenyan, and Helen Johnson Sirleaf and Leymah Gbowee from Liberia. South African Nadine Gordimer was one of 17 female literature prize winners.

The first woman to win a Nobel prize in 1903, for physics was Marie Curie, for her research into radioactivity. She won it again in 1911. Her daughter, Irène Joliot-Curie, won the chemistry prize in 1935, also for work in radioactivity.

— 10 November, 2023

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