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Carol Ressler Lockman
Business History Conference
Hagley Center
The Business History Conference announces the following awards presented in 2002:
BUSINESS HISTORY CONFERENCE LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Awarded for the first time in 2002. It recognizes senior scholars who have contributed the most to the work of the Business History Conference and to scholarship in business history. Presented to Alfred D. Chandler, Jr.
HERMAN E. KROOSS PRIZE IN BUSINESS HISTORY
Awarded annually for the best dissertation in Business History completed in the three calendar years prior to the award. Presented in 2002 to Jeffrey Hornstein for A Nation of Realtors: The Professionalization of Real Estate Brokerage and the Construction of a New Middle Class=94 (University of Maryland).
HAROLD F. WILLIAMSON PRIZE IN BUSINESS HISTORY
Awarded every two to three years to a midcareer scholar who has made significant contributions to the field of business history, this prize memorializes the contributions to business history of the late Harold F. Williamson. Presented in 2002 to: Angel Kwolek-Folland, Center for Women's Studies and Gender Research, University of Florida, and Richard R. John,Department of History, University of Illinois, Chicago.
HAGLEY PRIZE IN BUSINESS HISTORY
This prize is for the best book in business history (broadly defined)published in the two calendar years prior to the award date. It is awarded in association with the Hagley Museum and Library. In 2002 the prize went to two books: Gerald Feldman, Allianz and the German Insurance Business,(Cambridge University Press), and S. Jonathan Wiesen, West German Industry & The Challenge of the Nazi Past, 1945-1955 (University of North Carolina Press).
NEWCOMEN ARTICLE AWARD IN BUSINESS HISTORY
This prize recognizes the best article published in Enterprise & Society: The International Journal of Business History in volume previous to the year of the award. It is awarded in association with the Newcomen Society of North America. Presented to Daryl M. Hafter (Eastern Michigan University) for Women in the Underground Business of Eighteenth-Century Lyon,Enterprise & Society 2, 1 (March 2001), 11-40.
ALFRED D. CHANDLER TRAVEL GRANTS IN BUSINESS HISTORY
These grants defray the expenses of graduate students who presented papers at the 2002 BHC annual meeting. Awarded to:
Carlo S. Brambilla, Universit di Pisa
Sverre Christensen, Norwegian School of Management
Martin Iverson, Copenhagen Business School
Teresa da Silva Lopes, University of Reading
Meng Li, Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
Tuija Mikkonen, University of Helsinki
Susan Morris, Johns Hopkins University
Gabriela Recio, El Colegio de Mexico
NEWCOMEN TRAVEL GRANTS IN BUSINESS HISTORY
These grants defray the expenses of graduate students who presented papers at the 2002 BHC annual meeting. They are funded by the Newcomen Society of North America. Awarded to:
Jari Eloranta, European University Institute
Laura Kim Lee, University of California, Los Angeles
Felix Lowinski, Witten/Herdecke University
Chad Pearson, State University of New York, Albany
Thomas Petersman, Witten/Herdecke University
Steven Sheehan, Indiana University
Christopher Tassava, Northwestern University
Hannes Toivanen, Georgia Institute of Technology
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