Dr. Thomas Field (PhD, London School of Economics) is author of From Development to Dictatorship (Cornell University Press, 2014), which won the McGann Prize from the Rocky Mountain Council for Latin American Studies. For his research on development, labor and empire in the contemporary Global South, Field has received the 2021 Cherny Article Prize, from the Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association and SHAFR's 2012 Bernath Article Prize. Most recently, Field co-edited Latin America and the Global Cold War (UNC Press, 2020). He is current project, on the local and global origins of Ernesto Guevara's 1967 uprising in Bolivia, is currently under review for publication.
Ph.D. - Doctor of Philosophy in International History, London School of Economics and Political Science
M.A. - Master of Arts in American Foreign Policy, Johns Hopkins University
American Historical Association
Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations
Conference on Latin American History
Rocky Mountain Council for Latin American Studies
Pan-American Institute of Geography and History
2021 Robert W. Cherny Article Award, "Union Busting as Development," Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Assocation
2019, 2018 Class Marshal, Graduate Programs, Embry-Riddle
2015 Outstanding Academic Title, From Development to Dictatorship, American Library Association
2015 Thomas McGann Book Award, From Development to Dictatorship, Rocky Mountain Council on Latin American StudiesÂ
2014Â Campus Researcher of the Year, Embry-Riddle
2013 Â Scouloudi Publication Grant, University of London Institute for Historical Research
2012 Stuart L. Bernath Article Prize, "Ideology as Strategy," Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations
2012, 2009 Moody Grant, Lyndon Baines Johnson Foundation
2011 U.S. and the Cold War Postdoctoral Fellowship, Tamiment Library, New York University
2011 Betty M. Unterberger Dissertation Prize, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations
2009 Marshall/Baruch Fellowship, George C. Marshall Foundation
2009 Samuel Flagg Bemis Grant, Society for Historians of Amreican Foreign Relations
2007 Marjorie Kovler Fellowship, John F. Kennedy Library Foundation