Skip to content

27 April 2021 | 1 minute read


27 April 2021 | 1 minute read


Latest News

Share this

This is an archived news story which is over 12 months old and may contain out of date information

AWE success at Women in Defence Awards

AWE scientists have been recently recognised not once, but twice, at the prestigious Women in Defence Awards which saw more than 500 entries this year. Set up as a LinkedIn group in 2011, Women in Defence has become a strong community of women and men focused on the achievements of individuals, teams and organisations working in the defence industry.

At the virtual event AWE Radiochemist, Alanna Downing was crowned winner of the Emerging Talent category for consistently championing the importance of quality, as well as helping to promote equality for those who are neurodivergent and disabled. Alanna has presented on AWE’s behalf at national conferences and is the Vice Chair of its N-Able-D Working Group that focuses on the needs of the disabled and neurodiverse communities.

In addition, AWE Physicist, Paula Rosen, was a finalist in the Most Collaborative category for the work she has done to foster, develop and strengthen strategic collaborations in the defence industry. Paula’s networking skills were praised by the judges, along with being an inspiration to female colleagues in STEM for some time.

Commenting on her win, Alanna said: “To not only be considered alongside such inspiring women in such a tough competition, but to win it, is amazing. I will continue the hard work that got me nominated, particularly in breaking down taboos around hidden disabilities and mental health.”

Andrew Randewich, Executive Director of Engineering and Science, adds, “I’m delighted to have two outstanding members of our Engineering and Science function recognised in this way. I know how well-respected Paula and Alanna are, so I’m not surprised that they’ve done so well. I’m very proud of them both.”

The Emerging Talent award presented to Alanna (award partner the Army) recognises early career professionals, including apprentices and graduates demonstrating high performance, who are within their first five years of work following the end of formal training or schemes. Alanna originally did a placement year at AWE whilst studying at university, and after graduating, was invited back to the graduate training programme. You can read more about Alanna’s career path at: Alanna – AWE

Image: Alanna Downing with her Women in Defence Award

More news

Latest News

AWE physicists celebrated at STEM for Britain 2025

Two aspiring physicists from AWE were recently honoured as finalists at the prestigious STEM for Britain 2025 event, an annual competition which provides a unique platform for early career research scientists, engineers and mathematicians to present ground-breaking work to policymakers, industry leaders and academics. This is the third year AWE has sponsored the event, demonstrating […]

Mark Whiting

Latest News

William Penney Fellow appointed to full professor

We are delighted to announce that Mark Whiting, one of our esteemed William Penney Fellows, has been promoted to full professor at the University of Surrey – a key strategic partner for AWE.

Latest News

Connect – Spring 2025

Welcome to the extended version of Connect As we shared in the paper leaflet we posted to you, we’ve slimmed Connect down and introduced a QR code to bring you to this extended update online. Thanks to this change, we’ve been able to reduce the printing associated with Connect by more than half. If you’ve […]

Search Sitemap