Rana Dajani

رنا الدجاني

Born: Amman, Jordan

Domain: Science & Medicine

Recognition: GLOBAL

Biography

Rana Dajani is a molecular biologist of Palestinian heritage and one of the most internationally recognized Arab women scientists of her generation. Of Palestinian and Syrian descent and holding a Jordanian passport, she describes herself as half-Palestinian, with her father's family rooted in Palestine. She earned her doctorate in molecular and cellular biology and became a tenured professor of biology and biotechnology at the Hashemite University in Jordan. Dajani's research focuses on the genetics of populations in the region, including genome-wide association studies of diabetes and cancer, and on stem-cell biology. Her work establishing the genetic profiles of Circassian and Chechen communities in Jordan, and her studies of the biological effects of trauma on refugees, have made significant contributions to understanding both regional human genetics and the embodied consequences of displacement and stress. A notable institution-builder, Dajani led the development of Jordan's stem cell research ethics law and its regulatory framework, helping create one of the most progressive legal environments for stem cell science in the Muslim world. She has held visiting appointments and fellowships at Yale, Harvard's Radcliffe Institute, and Cambridge, and has been repeatedly named among the world's most influential Muslim and Arab women scientists. Beyond the laboratory, she is a passionate advocate for women and minorities in science and for science education, and is the founder of 'We Love Reading,' an internationally replicated grassroots literacy program that has trained tens of thousands of volunteers to foster reading among children across dozens of countries. Dajani exemplifies a modern Palestinian-Arab scientist whose impact spans cutting-edge genetics, science policy, and social entrepreneurship, and who has used her global platform to expand opportunity for the next generation of researchers in the Arab world.

Why This Person Matters

One of the Arab world's most recognized women scientists, Dajani advanced regional human genetics, wrote Jordan's stem-cell ethics law, and built a global literacy movement.