Zac Cowsert, “The Civil War in Indian Territory, 1861-1865.” (Jason Phillips, chair)
Francis Curran, “Dreams of Industrial Utopias: Leading Manufacturers of the Deep South and their Mill Town during the Civil War Era.” (Jason Phillips, chair)
Gift Kayira, “The State and War on Poverty: British Welfare Development and Its Legacies for Malawi, 1930s-1983.” (Joseph Hodge, chair)
Autumn Mayle, ““Respectable Women, Ambitious Men: Gender and Family Networks in Victorian Sheffield.” (Katherine Aaslestad, chair)
Paul Chiudza Banda, “State Counter-insurgency and Political Policing in Colonial and Post-colonial Malawi, 1891-1994.” (Joseph Hodge, chair)
Luke Gramith, “Liberation by Emigration: Italian Communists, the Cold War, and West-East Migration from Venezia Giulia, 1945-1949.” (Joshua Arthurs, chair)
Henry Himes, “"Bargaining for Security: The Rise of the Pension and Social Insurance Program of the United Steelworkers of America, 1941-1960." (Ken Fones-Wolf, chair)
Megan McGee, “Schmick's Frontier: Moravian and Native American Community Building in Pennsylvania, 1753-1765.” (Matthew Vester and Tyler Boulware, co-chairs)
Lindsey McNellis, “Vi et Armis: Londoners and Violent Trespass Before the Common Pleas in the Fifteenth Century.” (Kate Staples, chair)
Charles Welsko, “Breaking and Remaking the Mason-Dixon Line: Loyalty in Civil War America, 1850-1900.” (Jason Phillips, chair)
Nerissa Aksamit, “Training Friends and Overseas Relief: The Friends Ambulance Unit and the Friends Relief Service, 1939-1948.” (Katherine Aaslestad, chair)
Kenneth Kolander, “Walking out of Step: U. S.-Israeli Relations and the Peace Process, 1963-1975,” (James Siekmeier, chair)
Gregory Michna, “A Communion of Churches: Indian Christians, English Ministers, and Congregations in New England, 1600-1775,” (Tyler Boulware, chair)
Nilanjana Paul, “Muslim Education and Communal Conflict in Colonial Bengal: British Policies and Muslim Responses from 1854 to 1947,” (Joseph Hodge and Mark Tauger, co-chairs)
Alec Upward, “Ordinary Sailors: The French Navy, Vichy, and the Second World War,” (Robert Blobaum, chair)
Adam Zucconi, “Bound Together: Slavery and Democracy in Antebellum Northwestern Virginia,” (Jason Phillips, chair)
Joshua Esposito, “Institutional Decolonization: The Internationalization of the Conflict over Organized Labor in British Guiana, 1948-1961,” (James Siekmeier, chair)
William Feeney, “Manifestations of the Maimed: The Perception of Wounded Soldiers in the Civil War North,” (Jason Phillips, chair)
Joseph Rizzo, “What Shadows We Pursue: Death, Democracy, and Disunion in Antebellum America,” (Brian Luskey, chair)
James Smith, “Cultivating Intelligent Consumption: The United States Food Administration and Food Control during World War I,” (Elizabeth Fones-Wolf and James Siekmeier, co-chairs)
Brandon Williams, “The Cold Culture Wars: The Fight for Democratic Education in Postwar New York,” (Elizabeth Fones-Wolf, chair)
Nicholas Githuku, “Mau Mau Crucible of War: Statehood, National Identity, and Politics in Postcolonial Kenya,” (Robert Maxon, chair)
William Hal Gorby, “Saints, Sinners, and Socialists on the Southside: Catholic Immigrant Workers, Politics, and Culture in Wheeling, West Virginia, 1890-1930,” (Ken Fones-Wolf, chair)
Ashley Whitehead Luskey, “‘A Debt of Honor’: Elite Women’s Rituals of Cultural Authority in the Confederate Capital,” (Jason Phillips, chair)
James Blake Perkins, “Dynamics of Defiance: Government Power and Rural Resistance in the Arkansas Ozarks,” (Ken Fones-Wolf, chair)
Joseph Super, “The Rail and the Cross in West Virginia Timber Country: Rethinking Religion in the Appalachian Mountains,” (Ken Fones-Wolf, chair)
Bekeh Utietiang, “Planning Development: International Experts, Agricultural Policy, and the Modernization of Nigeria, 1945-1967,” (Joseph Hodge and Robert Maxon, co-chairs)