Ribenboim Prize

The Ribenboim Prize, named in honour of Paulo Ribenboim, is awarded by the Canadian Number Theory Association for distinguished research in number theory by a mathematician who is Canadian or has close connections to Canadian mathematics[1]. Normally the winner will have received their Ph.D. in the last 12 years. The winner is expected to give a plenary talk at the award ceremony.[2]

Winners

YearNameUniversity
1999Andrew Granville[3] University of Georgia
2002Henri Darmon[4]McGill University
2004Michael A. Bennett[4]University of British Columbia
2006Vinayak Vatsal[4]University of British Columbia
2008Adrian Iovita[4]Concordia University
2010Valentin Blomer[5]University of Toronto, Universität Göttingen
2012Dragos Ghioca[2]University of British Columbia
2014Florian Herzig[6]University of Toronto
2016Jacob Tsimerman [7]University of Toronto
2018Maksym Radziwill [2][8]McGill University
gollark: As I said, according to that Wikipedia article, even just relatively small-scale surveillance has *already been abused* to harm activists.
gollark: And besides, I don't care if it's constitutional, I care if it's actually ethical.
gollark: Er, how lack of privacy could be used against you, that is.
gollark: I mean, it is, given that privacy is just kind of important *anyway* regardless of how it could be used against you.
gollark: And "If you have nothing to hide you have nothing to fear" is, well, a complete and total lie.

See also

References

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