For Women in Science 2026 Call for Applications Opens, Offering Two $15,000 Awards to Caribbean Women Researchers

News Americas, SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, July 08, 2026: L’Oréal Caribe and the UNESCO Office for the Caribbean announce the opening of the 2026 call for applications for the L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science program, an initiative that recognizes and supports outstanding women researchers from the region by awarding two $15,000 USD grants to advance the development of their scientific research.

The call for applications will be open from May 19 through August 14, 2026, and is intended for women scientists from the Caribbean who are pursuing doctoral studies, conducting postdoctoral research, or are in the early stages of a scientific research career within the program’s eligible STEM disciplines.

The program is part of the renowned global L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science movement, created to promote women’s participation in scientific research and help reduce the gender gaps that continue to persist in STEM fields. In the Caribbean, the initiative is carried out in collaboration with the Caribbean Academy of Sciences and the Caribbean Division of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

“At L’Oréal Caribe, we firmly believe that science needs the talent, creativity, and leadership of women to address the challenges of today and the future. Through For Women in Science, we seek to increase the visibility of and support women researchers who are generating knowledge and innovation with an impact on our region and the world,” said Liana Camacho, Market Vice President of L’Oréal Caribe.

Eligible candidates must conduct research in areas such as formal sciences, life and environmental sciences, materials science, engineering, and technological sciences. The awards seek to provide financial support and recognition to women who contribute to scientific advancement across different fields of knowledge and whose research helps drive solutions to some of the main challenges facing the region.

“UNESCO works to recognize and promote the talent of women in science, foster diverse perspectives, and break down the barriers that limit their professional development,” said Audrey Azoulay, General Director of UNESCO.

In its 2025 edition, the program recognized Jamaican scientists Dr. Lori-Ann Fisher and Dr. Arianne Brown Jordan for research addressing important health and environmental challenges. Dr. Fisher conducts research on genetic factors associated with liver diseases, while Dr. Brown Jordan studies the presence of bacterial diseases in water systems serving vulnerable communities. Their research highlights the impact of Caribbean women scientists in generating knowledge and solutions for the region.

Globally, women continue to face significant challenges in the scientific field. According to UNESCO data, women represent approximately one-third of researchers worldwide. Although Latin America and the Caribbean have a higher representation of women in science than the global average, significant challenges remain regarding access to funding, visibility, and leadership opportunities in scientific research.

Interested applicants can review the complete eligibility requirements and submit their applications through the For Women in Science application platform https://www.forwomeninscience.com/challenge/show/167 . The deadline to apply is August 14, 2026.

About L’Oréal Caribe

L’Oréal is recognized as the world’s leading beauty company, with a broad portfolio of brands distributed across four main divisions: Consumer Products, Professional Products, L’Oréal Luxe, and Dermatological Beauty. From its offices in Puerto Rico, L’Oréal Caribe oversees operations across 25 Caribbean islands, with the mission to create the beauty that moves the world: beauty that is inclusive, ethical, generous, and committed to social and environmental sustainability. With a portfolio of 31 international brands and ambitious sustainability goals under our L’Oréal for the Future program, we strive to offer everyone, everywhere, the best in quality, efficacy, safety, transparency, and responsibility, while celebrating beauty in all its infinite forms.

For more information, visit L’Oréal Caribe’s official website: https://www.loreal.com/en/caribe/

The Mirror – America At 250

By Dr. Isaac Newton

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Weds. July 8, 2026: A mirror never raises its voice. It never takes sides. It never rewrites yesterday. It simply tells the truth. America at 250 does not need another celebration first. It needs a solitary moment before the mirror. Birthdays count years; mirrors reveal character.

The mirror shows a nation that declared human equality, shaped constitutional democracy, expanded scientific discovery, welcomed generations seeking freedom, and proved that ordinary people can build extraordinary lives. The same mirror also reveals slavery, the displacement of Indigenous peoples, racial injustice, exclusion, and moments when power moved faster than principle. Neither image cancels the other. Both remain in the same reflection. Wisdom begins when a people refuse to edit what they see.

The mirror shows every great nation leaving two footprints. One marks where it lifted humanity. The other marks where humanity stumbled. America carries both. Its highest moments have strengthened hope across the world. Its lowest moments remind us that freedom survives only when it is practiced, not proclaimed. A republic is not measured by the purity of its words, but by the persistence of its commitments.

The mirror shows that America was never written by one people alone. It was shaped by many hands across many shores. Caribbean immigrants stand among its unseen builders. They healed the sick, taught the young, defended communities, created businesses, served in uniform, enriched music, literature, science, sports, and public life, and strengthened neighborhoods through discipline, faith, and resilience. They did not simply arrive in America. They expanded it. Their presence reminds us that a nation grows stronger every time it makes room for another person’s contribution.

The mirror shows that families survive because they keep two records. One preserves joy. The other preserves pain and recovery. Families that honor both remain honest. Nations are no different. Celebration without truth becomes illusion. Truth without hope becomes exhaustion. Strength emerges where honesty and hope refuse to separate.

The mirror offers no verdict. It offers an invitation. It asks every generation one enduring question: what will your reflection add? Justice or division? Courage or fear? Compassion or indifference? A nation cannot change what it has been, but it can shape what it becomes. Every child inherits not only a country, but its reflection.

The mirror at 250 does not mark an ending. It marks the beginning of a harder honesty. The reflection is unfinished. So is the story The most faithful nations are not those that avoid looking. They are those that refuse to look away.

And this is the question the mirror never stops asking: the future will not ask how brightly America celebrated its 250th birthday. It will ask what America had the courage to see when it stood before the mirror.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Dr. Isaac Newton is an international leadership strategist, governance consultant, theologian, and author of Face Life Squarely, Fix It Preacher, and Intimate Intimacy. He is coauthor of Steps to Good Governance and Daring to Hope, and author of the forthcoming When Nations Kneel and The Belief Code. His work equips leaders to unite truth, integrity, and hope in service of stronger institutions and a more just world.

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