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Graduate Student Programs
No matter what stage of graduate school you are in, IHS provides the connections and community to hone your research and accelerate your career.
Upcoming Events
December Graduate Conference
Zoom · Event date: December 5–6, 2025
Overview
Present your research online and get feedback from faculty at the IHS December Graduate Conference. This is one of a series of online graduate research conferences where students from across the humanities can present their most recent work to esteemed faculty and peers. The program is free to attend online. IHS offers a $100 honorarium to help students attend the conference. Students will each have 15–20 minutes to present and 10–15 minutes for discussion.
Authoritarian Institutions and State Dynamics: A Graduate Papers Workshop
Tempe, AZ · Event date: January 23–24, 2026
Overview
Join the Institute for Humane Studies for a two-day, in-person graduate papers workshop on “Authoritarian Institutions and State Dynamics,” hosted in partnership with Dr. Henry Thomson, Dr. Susan Hyde, Dr. David Samuels, and Dr. Jose Kaire. Held in Tempe, Arizona, on January 23–24, this workshop offers PhD students and postdoctoral researchers the opportunity to present works in progress and receive detailed, constructive feedback from peers and faculty discussants.
We welcome research examining how authoritarian regimes structure, maintain, and contest political power, including work on the political economy of autocracy, institutional design in non-democratic systems, coercive and administrative state capacity, regime durability and breakdown, elite dynamics, mass mobilization, and other inquiries at the intersection of comparative politics, political economy, and state governance. Projects ranging from abstracts to full paper drafts are encouraged.
Participants will deepen their research, engage in substantive discussions, and connect with a community of scholars investigating the logic, institutions, and consequences of governance under authoritarian rule. IHS will provide all participants a travel stipend to offset the costs of travel, hotel lodging, meals, and a $200 honorarium.
Expert Panelists
- Henry Thomson, Arizona State University
- Jose Kaire, Arizona State University
- Susan Hyde, University of California-Berkeley
- David Samuels, University of Minnesota
Schedule
Friday, January 23
6:30 PM | Welcome Dinner
Saturday, January 24
9:00 AM | Breakfast and Opening Remarks
9:15 AM | Paper Sessions
12:15 PM | Lunch Break
1:15 PM | Paper Sessions / Coffee Breaks
5:00 PM | Closing Remarks
6:00 PM | Closing Dinner
Non-Governmental Actors Shaping Technology: A Graduate Papers Workshop
Manchester, NH · Event date: February 6–7, 2026
Overview
Join the Institute for Humane Studies for a two-day, in-person graduate papers workshop on “Non-Governmental Actors Shaping Technology,” hosted in partnership with Dr. Chris Whyte and Dr. Karl Grindal. Held in Manchester, New Hampshire, on February 6–7, this workshop offers PhD students and postdoctoral researchers the opportunity to present works in progress and receive detailed, constructive feedback from peers and faculty discussants.
We welcome research examining how actors outside the formal state apparatus—such as private firms, civil society organizations, open-source networks, criminal groups, and other non-state institutions—shape the development, governance, security, and societal implications of emerging technologies. Relevant topics include cybersecurity and digital threat ecosystems, AI governance, platform and infrastructure regulation, decentralized technology communities, information operations, and other inquiries at the intersection of technology, institutions, and global security.
Participants will deepen their research, engage in rich discussion, and connect with a community of scholars working on similar topics. IHS will provide all participants a travel stipend to offset the costs of travel, hotel lodging, meals, and a $200 honorarium.
Expert Panelists
- Karl Grindal, University of New Hampshire
- Christopher Whyte, Virginia Commonwealth University
Schedule
Friday, February 6
7:00 PM | Welcome Dinner
Saturday, February 7
9:00 AM | Breakfast and Opening Remarks
9:15 AM | Paper Sessions
12:15 PM | Lunch Break
1:15 PM | Paper Sessions / Coffee Breaks
5:00 PM | Closing Remarks
6:00 PM | Closing Dinner
New Directions in Classical Liberal Thought: A Graduate Papers Workshop
San Diego, CA · Event date: February 20–21, 2026
Overview
Join the Institute for Humane Studies for a two-day, in-person graduate papers workshop on “New Directions in Classical Liberal Thought,” hosted in partnership with Dr. Matt Zwolinski, Dr. Kobi Finestone, Dr. Emily Skarbek, and Dr. Mikayla Novak. Held at the University of San Diego on February 20–21, 2026, this workshop offers PhD students and postdoctoral researchers the opportunity to present works in progress and receive detailed, constructive feedback from peers and faculty discussants.
We especially welcome interdisciplinary research that intersects with the liberal tradition in novel and innovative ways. This workshop invites scholars who are developing bold ideas that illuminate new directions for liberal thought—whether by reexamining foundational concepts, exploring emerging institutional challenges, or analyzing the cultural, social, technological, and historical dynamics shaping liberal societies today. Projects at any stage, from abstract to full paper draft, are encouraged.
Participants will refine their research, engage in substantive cross-disciplinary dialogue, and join a community of scholars examining how liberal ideas can evolve and respond to contemporary questions. IHS will provide all participants a travel stipend to offset the costs of travel, hotel lodging, meals, and a $200 honorarium.
Expert Panelists
- Matt Zwolinski, University of San Diego
- Kobi Finestone, University of San Diego
- Emily Skarbek, Brown University
- Mikayla Novak, George Mason University
Schedule
Friday, February 20
7:00 PM | Welcome Dinner
Saturday, February 21
9:00 AM | Breakfast and Opening Remarks
9:15 AM | Paper Sessions
12:15 PM | Lunch Break
1:15 PM | Paper Sessions / Coffee Breaks
5:00 PM | Closing Remarks
6:00 PM | Closing Dinner
Junior Fellowship
Junior Fellowships are invitation-only awards that help leading graduate students commit their summer to discipline-defining research.
The Junior Fellowship Experience
01.
Engaging Events
Enjoy two weekends of collaboration and conversation with other scholars passionate about the liberal tradition.
02.
Faculty Mentorship
Faculty provide fellows with feedback on research and personalized advice for their careers.
03.
Research Funding
Fellowships include a generous stipend to help students dedicate the summer to scholarship.
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