Nominations for the 2009 Award will open in September 2008.
Nomination deadline: 4:00 p.m. United States Eastern Standard Time on Wednesday, October 15, 2008
The Award & Lecture
The AACR and the Rosenthal Family Foundation established this Award in 1977 to recognize research that has made, or promises to soon make, a notable contribution to improved clinical care in the field of cancer. In its desire to honor and provide incentive to investigators relatively early in their careers, the Foundation has stipulated that recipients not be more than 50 years of age at the time the Award is received.
The winner of the 33rd Annual AACR-Rosenthal Family Foundation Award will receive an honorarium of $10,000 and give a 50-minute lecture during the AACR 100th Annual Meeting in Denver, CO (April 18-22, 2009).
Eligibility
- Candidacy is open to cancer researchers who are affiliated with any institution involved in cancer research, cancer medicine, or cancer-related biomedical science. Such institutions include those in academia, industry, or government.
- The Award will be presented to an individual investigator.
- Institutions or organizations are not eligible for the Award.
- Candidates must not be more than 50 years of age at the time the Award is received. For the 2009 Award, a candidate's date of birth must be on or after April 18, 1958.
- Candidates must be engaged in the practice of medicine.
Nomination Process
Nominations may be made via letter from any scientist, whether an AACR member or nonmember, who is now or has been affiliated with any institution involved in cancer research, cancer medicine, or cancer-related biomedical science. Candidates may not nominate themselves.
Nomination letters must be sent electronically to the AACR by Wednesday, October 15, 2008 at 4:00 p.m., United States Eastern Time. Preferred file formats are *.doc, *.pdf. Your nomination is not considered fully submitted until you receive a confirmation e-mail from the AACR; confirmations will be sent within 2 business days
The nomination letter must be addressed to the Selection Committee; be written in English; and not exceed 1,000 words. The content should include the following:
- the name of the AACR Award for which the candidate is being nominated;
- a brief statement of no more than 50-words summarizing the candidate's cancer research accomplishment(s) for which he or she is being nominated;
- a concise description of the candidate's research that has made, or promises to soon make, a notable contribution to improved clinical care in the field of cancer, with the publications supporting these accomplishments directly referenced within the letter; and
- a concise description of the impact of these accomplishments on the field.
Nominators are asked to maintain the confidentiality of the nomination process and to refrain from informing the candidate about the nomination.
There is no restriction on the number of candidates that may be nominated by any individual scientist. There is no restriction on the number of nominators that may write nomination letters or that may sign a single nomination letter on behalf of a candidate.
Selection
Candidates will be considered by a Committee of international cancer leaders appointed by the President of the AACR. After careful deliberations by the Award Committee, its recommendations will be forwarded to the Executive Committee of the AACR for final consideration and decision. Selection of the Award winner will be made on the basis of the candidate's contribution to improved clinical care in the field of cancer. No regard will be given to race, gender, nationality, or religious or political views.
Supporter
Generously supported by the Rosenthal Family Foundation.
Questions?
Monique P. Eversley, Program Associate
+1 (267) 646-0576; monique.eversley@aacr.org
American Association for Cancer Research
17th Floor, 615 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106-4404