Prizes

 

The Bernath Memorial Awards and Prizes

The Stuart L. Bernath Prizes

The Stuart L. Bernath Book Prize, the Stuart L. Bernath Lecture Prize, the Stuart L. Bernath Scholarly Article Prize, and the Stuart L. Bernath Dissertation Grant were established through the generosity of Dr. Gerald J. and Myrna F. Bernath, in memory of their late son, Stuart L. Bernath, Ph.D.

The Myrna F. Bernath Awards

The Myrna F. Bernath Book Award and the Myrna F. Bernath Fellowship Award were originally established by the Bernath family and SHAFR Council in 1990 to promote scholarship in U.S. foreign relations history by women. The award committee now invites applications from women, nonbinary, and/or trans scholars.

The Stuart L. Bernath Book Prize

Book
DEADLINE: FEB 1

The purpose of the award is to recognize and encourage distinguished research and writing by scholars of American foreign relations. The prize of $2,500 is awarded annually to an author for his or her first book on any aspect of the history of American foreign relations.

Eligibility: The prize is to be awarded for a first book (including all previously authored or co-authored books but excluding edited volumes). The book must be a history of international relations. Biographies of statesmen and diplomats are eligible. General surveys, autobiographies, editions of essays and documents, and works that represent social science disciplines other than history are not eligible.

The Stuart L. Bernath Lecture Prize

Teaching
DEADLINE: FEB 1

The Stuart L. Bernath Lecture Prize recognizes and encourages excellence in teaching and research in the field of foreign relations by younger scholars. The prize of $1,000 is awarded annually.

Eligibility: The prize is open to any person under forty-one years of age or within ten years of the receipt of the PhD (measured at the time the awardee would deliver the lecture) whose scholarly achievements represent excellence in teaching and research. Nominations may be made by any member of SHAFR or of any other established history, political science, or journalism department or organization.

The Stuart L. Bernath Scholarly Article Prize

Article
DEADLINE: FEB 1

The purpose of the prize is to recognize and encourage distinguished research and writing by junior scholars in the field of diplomatic relations. The prize of $1,000 is awarded annually to the author of a distinguished article appearing in a scholarly journal or edited book, on any topic in United States foreign relations.

Eligibility: The author must be a graduate student or within ten years of receiving the Ph.D. at the time of the article's acceptance for publication. The article must be among the first six publications by the author. Previous winners of the Stuart L. Bernath Book Award or the Myrna F. Bernath Book Award are ineligible.

The Myrna F. Bernath Book Award

Book
DEADLINE: FEB 1 (Even Yrs)

The purpose of this award is to encourage scholarship by women, non-binary, and/or trans scholars in U.S. foreign relations history. The prize of $2,500 is awarded biannually (even years) to the author of the best book written by a such a scholar and published during the preceding two calendar years.

Eligibility: Nominees should be women, non-binary, and/or trans scholars who have published distinguished books in U.S. foreign relations, transnational history, international history, peace studies, cultural interchange, and defense or strategic studies. Membership in SHAFR is required.

Robert H. Ferrell Book Prize

Book
DEADLINE: FEB 1

This prize is designed to reward distinguished scholarship in the history of American foreign relations, broadly defined. The prize of $1,000 is awarded annually. The Ferrell Prize was established to honor Robert H. Ferrell, professor of diplomatic history at Indiana University from 1953 to 1990, by his former students.

The Norman and Laura Graebner Award

Service & CareerTeaching
DEADLINE: FEB 1 (Even Yrs)

The Graebner Award is a lifetime achievement award intended to recognize a senior historian of United States foreign relations who has significantly contributed to the development of the field, through scholarship, teaching, and/or service, over his or her career. The award of $2,000 is awarded biannually. The Graebner Award was established by the former students of Norman A. Graebner, professor of diplomatic history at the University of Illinois and the University of Virginia, to honor Norman and his wife Laura for their years of devotion to teaching and research in the field.

Eligibility: The Graebner prize will be awarded to a distinguished scholar of diplomatic or international affairs. The recipient's career must demonstrate excellence in scholarship, teaching, and/or service to the profession. Although the prize is not restricted to academic historians, the recipient must have distinguished himself or herself through the study of international affairs from a historical perspective.

SHAFR Dissertation Prize

Dissertation
DEADLINE: FEB 1

SHAFR's dissertation award alternates annually between the Betty M. Unterberger Dissertation Prize (awarded in odd years) and the Oxford University Press USA Dissertation Prize in International History (awarded in even years). Each award carries a $1,000 stipend, and recognizes any qualifying dissertation completed within the previous two years.


Applicants are strongly encouraged to carefully review the eligibility criteria for both prizes, as they are awarded in nonconsecutive years and have distinct requirements. Individuals who submit their dissertation for one award and are not selected may resubmit it for consideration for the other prize, provided their work meets that award's criteria. All applicants must be current members of SHAFR at the time of submission.

The William Burr Prize in Nuclear History

Dissertation
DEADLINE: APR 1

The William Burr Prize in Nuclear History is a dissertation prize run jointly by the Society for the History of American Foreign Relations (SHAFR) and McGill-Queen’s University Press (MQUP). This annual prize will be awarded for the best PhD dissertation (or PhD thesis) in the field of nuclear history, broadly defined.

The Peter L. Hahn Distinguished Service Award

Service & Career
DEADLINE: FEB 1

The Peter L. Hahn Distinguished Service Award is intended to recognize a senior historian who has provided significant contributions to the growth and development of our organization over the course of their career. The award was established by Council in 2017—marking the organization’s fiftieth anniversary—to recognize those who have contributed to the growth of the organization and the development of its members.

The Michael H. Hunt Prize for International History

Book
DEADLINE: FEB 1

The purpose of the award is to recognize historians whose scholarship produces fresh perspectives on international or global history. The prize of $1,500 is awarded annually to an author of any nationality for their first book on any aspect of international or global history since the mid-19th century that makes substantial use of historical records in more than one language.

Eligibility: The prize is to be awarded for a first book (including all previously authored or co-authored books but excluding edited volumes). The book must be an international or global history that contributes to scholarship in the field based on substantial use of historical records in more than one language. General surveys, autobiographies, editions of essays and documents, and works that represent social science disciplines other than history are not eligible.

Anna K. Nelson Prize

Service and Archival
DEADLINE: FEB 1 (Odd Yrs)

The Anna K. Nelson Award for Archival Excellence honors an archivist who has demonstrated both exemplary expertise as well as outstanding and dedicated service over time to the community of scholars of the history of U.S. foreign relations and international history. This prize is awarded biannually (odd-numbered years) at the SHAFR conference. The Nelson Prize was established in 2020 to honor Anna Kasten Nelson, an outstanding scholar of U.S. foreign relations who also served as a tireless advocate for making governmental records available to the public and to the scholarly community.

Eligibility: The Nelson Award will be awarded to an archivist whose career, over time, has demonstrated both exemplary expertise as well as outstanding and dedicated service to the community of scholars of the history of U.S. foreign relations and international history.

The LaFeber-Wood Prize for Distinguished Teaching

Teaching
DEADLINE: FEB 1

The LaFeber-Wood Prize for Distinguished Teaching recognizes and encourages excellence in teaching in the field of foreign relations. The prize of $1,000 is awarded annually at the summer conference.