Norman Borlaug Field Award is presented every October, with $10,000 endowed by the Rockefeller Foundation, during the symposium by the
World Food Prize Foundation to recognise "researchers under 40 who emulate the scientific innovation and dedication to food security of Dr. Norman Borlaug".
Recipients: Source: World Food Prize • 2024: Dr. Dennis Beesigamukama (Uganda) • 2023: Dr. Swati Nayak (India) • 2022: Dr. Mahalingam Govindaraj (India) • 2021: Dr. Elliott Dossou-Yovo (Benin) • 2020: Dr.
Salma Sultana (Bangladesh) • 2019: Dr. Hale Ann Tufan,
for championing the incorporation of gender-supportive activities within the global agricultural research community, working across disciplines to ensure women farmers and scientists are fairly represented in the lab, in the field and at the table • 2018: Dr. Matthew Rouse,
for his essential leadership efforts to contain and reduce the impact of Ug99, a devastating new race of the stem rust pathogen that poses a serious threat to the world’s wheat crops and global food security • 2017: Dr. Zhenling Cui,
for his scientific and extension work in improving soil health and increasing crop production through the implementation of innovative on-farm fertilizer management strategies • 2016: Andrew Mude,
for his persistence in his science-based, community mediated, and innovative approach to providing financial protection, through insurance, to millions of poor herders and their families who care for and depend upon their livestock as they move across the vast rangelands of East Africa • 2015: Eric Pohlman,
for his work in developing highly innovative programs that are transforming subsistence agriculture in rural Rwanda. • 2014: Dr. Bram Govaerts,
for his work developing leading-edge, sustainable programs that are transforming subsistence agriculture and unsustainable farming systems in Mexico and other regions of the world into productive and sustainable production operations. • 2013: Dr. Charity Kawira Mutegi, ''for her efforts to identify the cause of, and solution to, a deadly outbreak of aflatoxicosis in 2004-05. Her diligent research led to innovative solutions to avert future outbreaks and safeguard Kenya's staple crop of maize''. • 2012: Dr. Aditi Mukherji,
for her research on groundwater resources in agriculture, which led to major policy changes benefiting thousands of farmers in West Bengal. ==References==