Donnelley Family Fellowship | National Humanities Center

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Donnelley Family Fellowship

Dr. Strachan Donnelley, NHC emeritus trustee, was a philosopher who made a lifelong study of the intricate relationships between humans and nature in pursuit of a conservation-centered concept he called “democratic ecological citizenship.” Dr. Donnelley was director of education and president at the Hastings Center in Garrison, N.Y., a bioethics think tank. In 2003, he founded the Center for Humans and Nature to bring together thinkers from many fields to look at the long-term implications of how humans live on this planet. Dr. Donnelley passed away in July 2008.

Dr. Donnelley’s wife, Vivian, served on the Center for Humans and Nature’s board of directors from 2008 until her death in 2019. Vivian was also a board member and Senior Admissions Associate at the Dalton School, an independent, co-educational day school (K–12) in New York City.

The couple endowed the Donnelley Family fellowship in 2006. It is awarded annually to humanities scholars whose work focuses on humans’ relationship to the environment.

2006–2007 David G. Christian San Diego State University Inner Eurasian History
2007–2008 Stephen Salkever Bryn Mawr College The Ethics and Politics of Natural Questions
2008–2009 Richard W. Unger University of British Columbia Energy, Economy, Environment in Early Modern Europe
2009–2010 Jared Farmer State University of New York, Stony Brook Trees in Paradise: A California History
2010–2011 Cynthia Radding University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Bountiful Deserts and Imperial Shadows: Corridors of Knowledge and Migration in Northern New Spain (1680–1820)
2011–2012 David Neale Bunn University of Johannesburg An Unnatural State: Boundary Identities in South Africa’s Kruger National Park
2012–2013 Emese Mogyoródi University of Szeged, Hungary Revelation and Reason: Mysticism and Metaphysics in Parmenides
2013–2014 Marixo Lasso Case Western Reserve University Building La Zona: Landscaping Urban Development at the Panama Canal, 1904–1914
2014–2015 Christopher Witmore Texas Tech University Old Lands: A Chorography of the Eastern Morea, Greece
2015–2016 Judith Walkowitz Johns Hopkins University Feminism and Urban Space in London in the 1970s and 1980s
2016–2017 Matthew Booker North Carolina State University The Oyster and the City: The Rise and Fall of the Edible City, 1870–1930
2017–2018 Stephanie Foote West Virginia University The Art of Waste: Narrative, Trash, and Contemporary Culture
2018–2019 Claudia Leal Universidad de los Andes, Colombia National Parks in Colombia: A History of Territorial State Building, 1940–2010
2019–2020 John Levi Barnard University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign The Edible and the Endangered: Food, Empire, and the Biopolitics of Extinction
2020–2021 Ryan E. Emanuel North Carolina State University Water in the Lumbee World: Environmental Justice, Indigenous Rights, and the Transformation of Home
2021–2022 Victoria McAlister Southeast Missouri State University The Insular Globe: Environmental Change and Landscapes of Colonization‚ Ireland, 1000–1700
2022–2023 Thomas M. Lekan University of South Carolina “Conservation by Slaughter”: Wildlife Utilization and the African Origins of Sustainable Development, 1959–1980
2023–2024 Marguerite Nguyen Wesleyan University Refugee Ecologies: Forced Displacement and American Literature
2024–2025 Ashley Carse Vanderbilt University The Age of Mitigation: Global Shipping and a River on Life Support