Doctoral Colloquium 2025: Atlanta, Georgia

The 2025 BHC Doctoral Colloquium (DC) in Business History will be held in Atlanta, Georgia on March 13th. The participants will be invited to a welcome dinner on March 12th in Atlanta. Typically limited to ten students, the colloquium is open to doctoral candidates who are pursuing dissertation research within the broad field of business history from any relevant discipline (e.g., from economic sociology, political science, cultural anthropology, or management, as well as history). Most participants are in year 3 or 4 or their degree program, though in some instances applicants at a later stage make a compelling case that their thesis research had evolved in ways that led them to see the advantages of an intensive engagement with business history. We welcome proposals from students working within any thematic area of business history.  Topics may range from the early modern era to the present, and explore societies across the globe. Participants work intensively with a distinguished group of BHC-affiliated scholars (including the incoming BHC president), discussing dissertation proposals, relevant literatures and research strategies, and career trajectories. 

Applications (a statement of interest; CV; and a letter of support from the dissertation supervisor (or prospective supervisor)), and a three to five page presentation of the PhD project are due by December 9th, 2024, via email to Carol Lockman (clockman@Hagley.org). Questions about the colloquium should be sent to its director, Prof. Eric Godelier (eric.godelier@polytechnique.edu). Applicants will receive notification of the selection committee decisions by mid-January 2025. If they travel to Atlanta, all participants will receive a stipend that partially defrays travel costs to the annual meeting. If accepted, Colloquium participants have a choice of pre-circulating one of the following: 

  • a 15-page dissertation prospectus or updated overview of the dissertation research plan; 

or 

  • a draft dissertation chapter, along with a one-page dissertation outline/description. Participants should choose the option they feel will most assist them at this stage in their research and writing. We will need to send the prospectus/overview or a chapter draft and outline by February 26th. Those will then be posted on a Colloquium webpage on the BHC website and shared with all participants to read in advance. A photo will be needed for the DC webpage.

Colloquium Start Date
March 13th, 2025
Colloquium End Date
March 13th, 2025
Colloquium Participants

Student Liaison


Minseok Jang

University at Albany

Presenter


François-Valentin Clerc

University of Geneva

Threading Japanese Silk into Global Capitalism: French and American Silk Manufacturers Changing Relationships with Japanese Silk Suppliers, 1859-1913

Presenter


Chris Abdul Hakim Martinez

University of California, Los Angeles

Contesting the Capitalist World Economy: Bauxite and the Challenge of Guinean Decolonization (1945-1984)

Presenter


Christian Robles-Baez

Stanford University

The Making of an Improbable Global Market: Coffee 1808-1850

Presenter


Jeffrey Rubel

New York University

The Dating Trade: A History of the Dating Industry in America

Presenter


Felicitas Santurio

Argentine Catholic University

Women, Work, and Family. Female Workers at the Bunge and Born Group (1884-1943)

Presenter


Anne Schaller

Vanderbilt University

Procompetitive Effects of State Antitrust Laws: Evidence from the Progressive Era

Presenter


Ella Stensdotter

Umea University

The Swedish Employers' Confederation's Interactions with the Anglo-Saxon World, 1950-1990

Presenter


Sudarat Sukloet

University of York

Foreign Direct Investment and Environmental Impact of Multinational Enterprises

Presenter


Sally Yi

Princeton

Capital Citizenship: Japanese Investment, Identity, and Property in Seattle, 1930-2000

Presenter


Hideki Yoshikawa

Kyoto University

US Healthcare Industry During the AIDS Crisis in the 1980s and 1990s

Faculty


Edward Balleisen

Duke University

Faculty


Teresa da Silva Lopes

The University of York

Faculty


Eric Godelier

l'École Polytechnique

Faculty


Takafumi Kurosawa

Kyoto University

Faculty


Rowena Olegario

University of Oxford

Student Liaison


Minseok Jang

University at Albany

Presenter


François-Valentin Clerc

University of Geneva

Threading Japanese Silk into Global Capitalism: French and American Silk Manufacturers Changing Relationships with Japanese Silk Suppliers, 1859-1913

Presenter


Chris Abdul Hakim Martinez

University of California, Los Angeles

Contesting the Capitalist World Economy: Bauxite and the Challenge of Guinean Decolonization (1945-1984)

Presenter


Christian Robles-Baez

Stanford University

The Making of an Improbable Global Market: Coffee 1808-1850

Presenter


Jeffrey Rubel

New York University

The Dating Trade: A History of the Dating Industry in America

Presenter


Felicitas Santurio

Argentine Catholic University

Women, Work, and Family. Female Workers at the Bunge and Born Group (1884-1943)

Presenter


Anne Schaller

Vanderbilt University

Procompetitive Effects of State Antitrust Laws: Evidence from the Progressive Era

Presenter


Ella Stensdotter

Umea University

The Swedish Employers' Confederation's Interactions with the Anglo-Saxon World, 1950-1990

Presenter


Sudarat Sukloet

University of York

Foreign Direct Investment and Environmental Impact of Multinational Enterprises

Presenter


Sally Yi

Princeton

Capital Citizenship: Japanese Investment, Identity, and Property in Seattle, 1930-2000

Presenter


Hideki Yoshikawa

Kyoto University

US Healthcare Industry During the AIDS Crisis in the 1980s and 1990s

Faculty


Edward Balleisen

Duke University

Faculty


Teresa da Silva Lopes

The University of York

Faculty


Eric Godelier

l'École Polytechnique

Faculty


Takafumi Kurosawa

Kyoto University

Faculty


Rowena Olegario

University of Oxford