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Microbiology Society

Microbiology Society
Microbiology Society.png
Microbiology Society
Abbreviation MicroSoc
Motto A world in which the science of microbiology provides maximum benefit to society
Formation 1945
Legal status Not-for-profit organisation
Purpose Microbiology
Location
  • Charles Darwin House, 12 Roger Street, London, WC1N 2JL
Region served
Worldwide
Membership
4000 microbiologists
Chief Executive
Peter Cotgreave
Main organ
Microbiology Society
Website Microbiology Society

The Microbiology Society (previously the Society for General Microbiology) is a learned society based in the United Kingdom with a worldwide membership based in universities, industry, hospitals, research institutes and schools. It is the largest learned microbiological society in Europe. Interests of its members include basic and applied aspects of viruses, prions, bacteria, rickettsiae, mycoplasma, fungi, algae and protozoa, and all other aspects of microbiology. Its headquarters in Charles Darwin House, London. The society's current president is Prof. Neil Gow. The Society is a member of the Science Council.

The society was founded on 16 February 1945 as the Society for General Microbiology. Its first president was Alexander Fleming. The Society's first academic meeting was in July 1945 and its first journal, the Journal of General Microbiology (later renamed Microbiology), was published in 1947. A symposium series followed in 1949, and a sister journal, the Journal of General Virology, in 1967. The society purchased its own headquarters in Reading in 1971, after initially sharing accommodation with the Biochemical Society in London. In 2014 the Society moved to Charles Darwin House, London, sharing the premises with several other learned societies. In 2015, the Society changed its name to the Microbiology Society, after its members voted in favour of the change.

The Society currently organises a large Annual Conference and a number of smaller Focused Meetings, which cover a specific microbiology discipline. It publishes a magazine, Microbiology Today (formerly SGM Quarterly), and academic journals in virology and microbiology:

The Microbiology Society awards a range of prizes in recognition of significant contributions to microbiology.


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