Pesquisa FAPESP wins Brazil's most prestigious science journalism award

Every article, photograph, video sits freely available online
Pesquisa FAPESP has made all its 27 years of content open to the public in four languages.

Por quase três décadas, a Pesquisa FAPESP tem construído uma ponte silenciosa entre o laboratório e o leitor comum — e o Brasil, em maio de 2026, reconheceu esse esforço ao conceder à revista o 46º Prêmio José Reis, a mais alta honraria nacional em comunicação científica. Administrado pelo CNPq e disputado por vinte outras candidatas na categoria institucional, o prêmio chega como validação de uma aposta simples, porém rara: que o jornalismo científico merece rigor, continuidade e talento. A cerimônia de entrega, prevista para julho em Niterói, durante o encontro anual da SBPC, transforma um ato editorial em afirmação coletiva sobre o valor público do conhecimento.

  • A Pesquisa FAPESP venceu o Prêmio José Reis 2026 na categoria institucional, superando vinte concorrentes e acumulando agora 37 prêmios nacionais e internacionais ao longo de 27 anos.
  • O jornalista Bernardo Esteves, da revista piauí, também foi premiado na categoria individual, vencendo 24 candidatos — sinalizando um momento de reconhecimento amplo para o jornalismo científico brasileiro.
  • A revista, que nasceu em 1999 com apenas 44 páginas e tiragem de 22 mil exemplares, cresceu para 100 páginas e circulação de 28 mil, expandindo sua cobertura para além dos projetos da própria FAPESP.
  • Todo o acervo da publicação — artigos, fotos, vídeos e podcasts — está disponível gratuitamente online em português, inglês, espanhol e francês, tornando a ciência brasileira acessível globalmente.
  • A cerimônia de premiação ocorrerá em julho, na 78ª reunião anual da SBPC em Niterói, consolidando o evento como marco institucional para a comunicação científica no país.

Em maio de 2026, a Pesquisa FAPESP recebeu o 46º Prêmio José Reis de Comunicação Científica e Tecnológica, a mais prestigiosa distinção brasileira na área, concedida pelo CNPq. A revista competiu contra vinte outras candidatas na categoria institucional e foi reconhecida por quase três décadas de jornalismo científico rigoroso e consistente. Na categoria individual, o jornalista Bernardo Esteves, repórter da piauí e autor de livros e estudos sobre comunicação científica, venceu entre vinte e quatro concorrentes. A cerimônia de entrega está marcada para julho, durante a 78ª reunião anual da Sociedade Brasileira para o Progresso da Ciência, em Niterói.

Não é a primeira vez que a publicação é honrada com esse prêmio: em 2000, venceu a 20ª edição, e em 2020, Carlos Fioravanti, editor de ciências da Terra, levou o prêmio individual. Ao longo de 27 anos, a revista acumulou quatro prêmios internacionais e trinta e três nacionais, incluindo distinções da Organização Mundial da Saúde e da Conservation International — esta última premiou a publicação onze vezes em sua categoria nacional.

Fundada em outubro de 1999 com 44 páginas e tiragem de 22 mil exemplares, a Pesquisa FAPESP cresceu para 100 páginas e 28 mil exemplares, ampliando sua cobertura da pesquisa financiada pela FAPESP para a ciência produzida em todo o Brasil. Hoje, todo o seu acervo — artigos, fotos, vídeos e podcasts — está disponível gratuitamente no site da revista em português, inglês, espanhol e francês, tornando a ciência brasileira visível além das fronteiras nacionais. O prêmio em Niterói será mais um marco para uma publicação que se tornou, discretamente, uma das mais importantes pontes entre o laboratório e o cidadão no Brasil.

In May, Pesquisa FAPESP claimed the 46th José Reis Prize for Science and Technology Communication, Brazil's most prestigious award in the field. The magazine competed against twenty other candidates in the institutional category, winning recognition for nearly three decades of consistent, rigorous reporting on scientific research. The prize, administered by Brazil's National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, carries with it a diploma, a medal, and for individual winners, twenty thousand reais.

Bernardo Esteves, a reporter for the magazine piauí who has also authored books and academic studies on science communication, won in the individual journalist category, besting twenty-four competitors. The awards ceremony will take place in July during the 78th annual meeting of the Brazilian Society for the Advancement of Science, held this year in Niterói, in Rio de Janeiro state.

This is not Pesquisa FAPESP's first encounter with the José Reis Prize. In 2000, the magazine won the award's twentieth edition, when thirty-four candidates competed for recognition of its science communication work. Six years ago, in 2020, Carlos Fioravanti, the publication's earth sciences editor, took the individual prize. The pattern suggests a publication that has made science journalism not a side project but a sustained commitment.

Over its twenty-seven years of existence, Pesquisa FAPESP and its journalists have accumulated four international awards and thirty-three national ones. In 2009, the magazine's reporting on tuberculosis earned the Stop TB Partnership Award for Excellence in Reporting, presented by the World Health Organization. The following year, a story won first place in the Biodiversity Reporting Award's international category, given by Conservation International. That same organization has honored the magazine with its national prize eleven times.

The publication launched in October 1999 as a modest forty-four-page monthly with a print run of twenty-two thousand copies. Within a few years, it had expanded to one hundred pages per issue, with circulation climbing to twenty-eight thousand. What began as coverage of research projects funded by FAPESP itself gradually broadened to include scientific work happening across other Brazilian states, widening its scope and relevance.

Today, every article, photograph, video, and podcast the magazine has produced since its founding sits freely available online at revistapesquisa.fapesp.br. The archive exists not just in Portuguese but in English, Spanish, and French—a deliberate choice to make Brazilian science visible and accessible beyond national borders. Special supplements, regular monthly editions, multimedia content: all of it open to anyone with an internet connection.

The José Reis Prize recognizes not just the quality of individual stories but the institutional commitment to explaining science to the public with precision and care. For Pesquisa FAPESP, the award is a validation of a simple idea: that science journalism matters, that it deserves resources and talent, and that the public has a right to understand the research happening in their own country. The ceremony in Niterói in July will mark another milestone in a publication that has quietly become one of Brazil's most important bridges between the laboratory and the reader.

The magazine's reporting on tuberculosis earned the Stop TB Partnership Award for Excellence in Reporting from the World Health Organization in 2009
— Pesquisa FAPESP's award history
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why does a science magazine winning an award matter? Isn't this just institutional self-congratulation?

Model

It matters because it signals what a society values. The José Reis Prize is named after a Brazilian scientist and communicator who believed the public had a right to understand research. When a magazine wins it, the message is: this work is essential, not decorative.

Inventor

But Pesquisa FAPESP is funded by FAPESP itself—a research foundation. Isn't that a conflict? Are they just promoting their own grants?

Model

They cover their own projects, yes, but they also report on research from other states, other institutions. The breadth matters. And the international awards—tuberculosis reporting, biodiversity—those came from stories that went beyond institutional interest into public health and environmental questions.

Inventor

Twenty-seven years is a long time for a magazine to stay alive. What kept it going?

Model

Consistency. They didn't chase trends or try to be everything. They built a reputation for depth, then expanded slowly. And they made a choice early on to put everything online for free. That's not a revenue strategy—it's a public service strategy.

Inventor

Bernardo Esteves won the individual prize. What makes a science journalist stand out enough to beat twenty-four others?

Model

Usually it's the ability to take complex research and make it legible without simplifying it. To find the human stakes. To ask the questions a reader actually wants answered, not just report what a scientist says.

Inventor

The ceremony is in July. Does that change anything for the magazine?

Model

Not operationally. But it gives them credibility to keep doing what they do. Prizes like this are how institutions survive—they justify the investment, they attract talent, they remind readers that someone is still doing this work carefully.

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