Bowe’s dissertation is titled, “Invading the Home: The Child, the Rise of the Liberal State and the Gendered Origins of Modern Conservatism, 1852-1933.” Julia will be assistant professor
Trang 1Jefferson National Fellowship Spring Conference
May 10-11, 2018
The highlight of the National Fellowship is the annual spring conference that brings together Fellows and their “dream mentors” for two days of dialogue and commentary built around the Fellows’
dissertation presentations For the first time this year, the conference was held at the Jefferson Scholars Foundation in Foundation Hall The conference drew not only the Fellows and mentors, but also U.Va faculty from the Departments of History and Political Science, as well as the Curry School of Education
Julia Bowes
Julia Bowes is a Ph.D candidate in 19th and 20th century U.S history at Rutgers University Bowe’s dissertation is titled, “Invading the Home: The Child, the Rise of the Liberal State and the Gendered Origins of Modern Conservatism, 1852-1933.” Julia will be assistant professor of history at Hong
Kong University beginning in the fall of 2018 Michael Willrich, Professor of History at Brandeis University,
served as Bowe’s dream mentor
Michael Benjamin de Groot
Michael de Groot is a Ph.D candidate in international history at the University of Virginia De Groot’s dissertation is titled, “Disruption: Economic Globalization and the End of the Cold War Order in the 1970s.” In the fall, Michael will be a postdoctoral fellow with Perry World House at the University of
Pennsylvania Daniel Sargent, Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley, served as de
Groot’s dream mentor
Catherine B aylin Duryea
Catherine Baylin Duryea is a Ph.D candidate in history at Stanford University Catherine is the recipient of
the Charles W McCurdy Fellowship in Legal History Her dissertation is titled, “Human Rights in the Arab
World: International Law in 20th Century Advocacy.” While at UVA, she also worked on projects on Afghan constitutional history and judicial review in the United States during World War II Her current research interests include comparative constitutional law, human rights movements, and American
administrative legal history Daniel Ernst, Professor of Law at Georgetown University, served as Catherine’s dream
mentor
Erik Moss Erlandson
Erik Erlandson is a Ph.D candidate in 20th century U.S history at the University of Virginia Erik’s dissertation is titled, “Confronting Leviathan: The Struggle to Control the Administrative State in Twentieth-Century America.” Erik Erlandson is a Ph.D candidate in history and lecturer on the
“History of Modern American Law” at the University of Virginia Reuel Schiller, Professor of Law at
University of California, Hastings College of Law, served as Erlandson’s dream mentor
Lauren Foley
Lauren Foley is a Ph.D candidate in political science at Johns Hopkins University Foley’s dissertation
is titled, “Limiting Legal Impact: Universities, Affirmative Action, and the Politics of Policymaking.” Lauren will join the faculty at Western Michigan University in the fall of 2018 as an assistant professor
Trang 2of political science Rogers Smith, Christoper H Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science at the
University of Pennsylvania, served as Lauren’s dream mentor
Jessica Ann Levy
Jessica Ann Levy is a Ph.D candidate in history at Johns Hopkins University Levy is the recipient of the
Jefferson Scholars/Hagley Library Dissertation Fellowship in Business and Politics She recently successfully
defended her dissertation “From Black Power to Black Empowerment: American Business and the Return of Racial Uplift in the United States and Africa, 1964-1994.” In September 2018, Levy will join the Department of African American Studies at Princeton University as a Postdoctoral Research
Associate Bethany Moreton, Professor of History at Dartmouth College, served as Levy’s dream mentor
Evan Taparata
Evan Taparata earned his doctorate in history from the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities in May
2018 Evan’s dissertation is titled, “No Asylum for Mankind: The Creation of Refugee Law and Policy
in the United States, 1776-1951.” In Fall 2018, Evan will begin a postdoctoral fellowship at the
University of Pennsylvania’s Andrea Mitchell Center for the Study of Democracy Kelly Lytle Hernandez,
Associate Professor of History at UCLA, served as Evan’s dream mentor
Danielle Lee Wiggins
Danielle Wiggins is a Ph.D candidate in history at Emory University Danielle’s dissertation is titled,
“Crime Capital: Economic Development, Public Safety, and the Origins of Post-Civil Rights Politics in Atlanta.” After graduating from Emory in May 2018, Wiggins will take a post doc year funded by California Institute of Technology In the fall of 2019, Danielle will join the CalTech faculty as an
assistant professor of U.S history Elizabeth Hinton, Assistant Professor of History at Harvard University,
served as Wiggins’ dream mentor