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  • Press Release – 2026 Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellows Named

    Contact Information:

    Charlotte W. Newcombe Foundation

    Susan Billmaier, PhD

    susan.billmaier@outlook.com

    Release Date:

    May 11, 2026

    charlotte w. newcombe foundation

    2026 Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellows Named

    PRINCETON, NJ—The Charlotte W. Newcombe Foundation has named 20 outstanding PhD candidates as this year’s Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellows. The Doctoral work supported by this Fellowship demonstrates moral or ethical or theological/religious relevance with nuance, depth, and intellectual sophistication.

    Started in 1981, the Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship has funded over 1,400 Fellows and is the nation’s largest and most prestigious award for PhD candidates in the humanities and social sciences addressing questions of religion, ethics, morals, or values.

    This year’s Fellows are completing dissertations with such rigorous questions as:

    • How can marginalized women ethically and creatively transform traditions that have historically limited their visibility, authority, and belonging?
    • How do practices of ascetic detachment shape ethical relationships, boundaries, and forms of belonging within and beyond religious communities?
    • Can science ever be truly apolitical, or are its claims to neutrality always shaped by underlying political and ethical commitments?
    • To what extent should citizenship be understood as a fixed legal status versus a flexible, lived practice shaped by social relationships and institutions?
    • Can ethical values remain authentic forms of life when they must be translated into—and potentially distorted by—market systems of consumption?
    • Who gets to define a child’s best interest, and how have marginalized caregivers reshaped that standard through their struggles for recognition and rights?

    See the full list of Fellows, institutions, and dissertation titles below.

    2026 Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellows

    Abbottsmith, Jane

    Yale University, Religious Studies / School of Medicine

    Dissertation Title: The ethics of grief and despair in Theology and Medicine

    Description: Grief isn’t just suffering—it can be a source of hope, care, and moral responsibility.

    Alon, Leigh

    Johns Hopkins University, History of Medicine

    Dissertation Title: Jewish Healthcare Workers and the Rise of Jewish American Hereditarian Thought from the Late Nineteenth into the Twenty-First Century

    Description: When identity is defined by biology, medicine can unintentionally reinforce the very prejudices it seeks to overcome.

    Appleton, Kasha

    Indiana University Bloomington, History

    Dissertation Title: “Deserving of Having the Charge Care and Custody of Her Said Child”: Habeas Corpus and Black Maternal Authority and  Best Interest of the Child Doctrine in the 19th Century

    Description: The “best interest of the child” wasn’t just a legal idea—it was shaped by Black mothers fighting to keep their children.

    Bentsman, Michelle

    Harvard University, Committee on the Study of Religion

    Dissertation Title: Singing the Soul Whole: Hindu, Jewish and Shipibo Song Traditions for Dying, Death, and Healing

    Description: In moments of death and healing, song becomes a bridge between broken bodies and restored meaning.

    Bernard-Herman, Benjamin

    University of Illinois, Chicago, Anthropology

    Dissertation Title: Beyond the Ethics of Ethical Consumption: Small-scale Biodynamic Farmers and the Paradoxes of Moral Markets in Wisconsin’s Driftless Region

    Description: When ethics becomes a marketing label, farmers must decide whether to sell their values—or redefine them.

    Diamond, Peter Emanuel

    University of Pennsylvania, English

    Dissertation Title: Separatists among Separatists: Protestant Dissent and the Exile Narrative in Early America

    Description: Ideas of equality helped build colonial America—but they also exposed its deepest contradictions.

    Edwards, Ross, Robert M. Adams – Charlotte W. Newcombe Fellowship in Philosophy

    The New School, Philosophy

    Dissertation Title: The Horror in Evil: Moral Philosophy in the Shadow of Holocaust Literature

    Description: If philosophy cannot face horror, it cannot truly understand evil.

    Ferguson, Zach

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Philosophy

    Dissertation Title: Moral Character Across Species

    Description: Animal ethics isn’t just about rules—it’s about the kind of moral character we cultivate, and recognize, in ourselves and other animals.

    Flores, Stacy Delicia

    University of California Riverside, History

    Dissertation Title: Intermarriage and Citizenship in Ancient Athens: Reframing Normative Constructs and Exploring Lived Realities

    Description: In ancient Athens, who counted as a citizen was far less fixed—and far more negotiable—than we thought.

    Ganau, Roberto

    New York University, History

    Dissertation Title: Commerce, Morality, and the Law: An Intellectual History of Bankruptcy in Early Modern Europe

    Description: In early modern Europe, financial failure didn’t just shape economies—it reshaped how people understood sin, grace, and salvation.

    Han, Dongho

    Princeton Theological Seminary, Practical Theology

    Dissertation Title: The Transgressive Self: A Pastoral Theological Path to Healthy Narcissism among Young Korean Men

    Description: The crisis of masculinity isn’t just about anger—it’s about wounded identity and the possibility of healing.

    Jamkar, Vishal

    University of Minnesota, Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs

    Dissertation Title: Moral Stamina: Caste, Land, and State-making in Western India

    Description: For Dalit communities, reclaiming land is not just economic—it is a moral act of justice and dignity.

    Kim-Yu, Naomi

    Washington University in St. Louis, English

    Dissertation Title: Salvation By the Book: Race, Religion, and Reading Practices in Asian American Literature

    Description: Christianity doesn’t just shape belief—it shapes how Korean American writers understand history, trauma, and community.

    Luo, Anin

    Princeton University, History

    Dissertation Title: Immunity, Vulnerability, and the Right to Health in International Politics, 1952–1994

    Description: The idea that science is “apolitical” didn’t just happen—it was built through Cold War struggles over politics, health, and knowledge.

    mcwaid, bridge

    University of California, Santa Barbara, History

    Dissertation Title: The Sea and Its Fish: A History of Palestine

    Description: In Palestine, even fishing becomes a struggle over survival, justice, and belonging.

    Melas, Paul

    University of California, Los Angeles, Anthropology

    Dissertation Title: Exiled: Monastic Asceticism in Contemporary Greece

    Description: Monastic life isn’t just about withdrawal—it’s a way of organizing relationships, boundaries, and meaning in everyday life.

    Osejo-Varona, Alejandra

    Rice University, Anthropology

    Dissertation Title: Hippos in the Afterlives of the Drug Trafficking in Colombia: Enduring Marks on the Magdalena River

    Description: Colombia’s hippos raise a difficult question: when animals don’t belong, who decides whether they should live or die?

    Parkin, Justine

    University of California, Santa Cruz, History of Consciousness

    Dissertation Title: Oceanic Coordinations: Arts of Reading from an Island at the Bottom of the World

    Description: Conservation isn’t neutral—it can protect ecosystems while displacing the people who have long cared for them.

    Stom, Joshua

    University of California, Irvine, Political Science

    Dissertation Title: Realism and Defending Democracy in Times of Crisis

    Description: Democracy can’t survive on conflict management alone—it needs moral ideals people can believe in.

    Yepes-Rossel, Gabriela

    University of Wisconsin-Madison, Interdisciplinary Theater Studies Program, English Department

    Dissertation Title: Negotiating Tradition, Performing Disruption:  Tensions and Strategies behind Women’s Participation in Andean Fiestas

    Description: Through dance and ritual, Andean women are reshaping traditions that once excluded them.

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