Joan W. Bennett
Joan Wennstrom Bennett (born September 15, 1942) is a fungal geneticist who also is active in issues concerning women in science. Educated at Upsala College (B.S. 1963) and the University of Chicago (M. S. 1964, Ph.D.1967), she was on the faculty of Tulane University for 35 years. She is a past president of the American Society for Microbiology (1990-91) and of the Society for Industrial Microbiology and Biotechnology (2001-2002), and past Editor in Chief of Mycologia (2000-2004). She was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 2005.
While at Tulane University Joan W. Bennett was on the committee that established the first women’s center at Newcomb College (the women’s college at Tulane) and taught a popular course on the biology of women beginning in 1976. After Professor Bennett joined the Rutgers faculty [1] , she was appointed Associate Vice President to establish a new office for the Promotion of Women in Science, Engineering and Mathematics [2] [3] which promotes gender and racial equity in the sciences, mathematics, and engineering.
Professor Bennett was the first tenure track woman hired on the faculty of the Biology Department at Tulane University. While there, Dr. Bennett and her laboratory established a research program on the genetics and biosynthesis of aflatoxin in collaboration with scientists at the Southern Regional Research Laboratory, a branch of the United States Department of Agriculture in New Orleans, Louisiana. This research provided a useful model for other polyketide secondary metabolites and expanded the possibilities for reducing these poisons in foods and the environment. After Hurricane Katrina, Professor Bennett moved to Rutgers University where she currently is a Professor II in the Department of Plant Biology and Pathology. Her Rutgers laboratory has pioneered the use of genetic model systems for elucidating the physiological effects of fungal volatile organic compounds in hopes of establishing support for the hypotheses that certain mold volatiles contribute to “sick building syndrome,” affect plant growth, or otherwise mediate interspecific signaling responses.
Bennett is married to David Lorenz Peterson, a computer systems consultant. She is the mother of three sons: John Frank Bennett, Daniel Edgerton Bennett and Mark Bradford Bennett.
Awards
- 2003 - Charles Porter Award from the Society for Industrial Microbiology.
- 2005 - Induction into the National Academy of Sciences.
- 2006 - Alice Evans Award from the American Society for Microbiology.
References
- ^ "Faculty Profile - Joan W. Bennett". Rutgers: Department of Plant Biology & Pathology.
- ^ "Advancing Women in Science". Rutgers: Focus.
- ^ "Message from Associate Vice President Joan W. Bennett". Rutgers: Office for Promotion of Women in Science, Engineering & Mathematics.