History graduate students present at America in the World Consortium organized by OHIO alumnus
帝王会所 history doctoral candidates James Bohland and Cameron Dunbar presented their research at the in February at the University of Texas at Austin.
The conference, 鈥淲hat Now? Updating Great Power Competition After the Russian Invasion of Ukraine,鈥 focused on recent challenges to U.S. security in great power competition.
The conference was organized by recent OHIO graduate Kyle Balzer with his colleague Ayumi Teraoka. They are both .
Balzer earned a Ph.D. in history from the College of Arts and Sciences in 2022. His dissertation, 鈥淭he Revivalists: James R. Schlesinger, the Nuclear Warfighting Strategists, and Competitive Strategies for Long-Term Competition,鈥 explained the logic and benefits of strategic arms competition. In 2021, the Contemporary History Institute awarded Balzer the Baker Peace Fellowship to support his research on grand strategy and the maturation of net assessment during the Cold War.
In the panel on 鈥淚nterdependence: Historical Lessons,鈥 Dunbar presented his paper, 鈥淭he Historical Antecedents of Brexit,鈥 which examines the United Kingdom鈥檚 entry into the European Economic Community (EEC) during in the early 1970s.
鈥淢y paper attempted to place the 2016 鈥楤rexit鈥 vote in historical perspective, as well as to give an insight into how British leaders and policymakers conceptualized their role in the world at different periods of its post-World War II history," Dunbar said.
Dunbar鈥檚 paper argued that the government of Prime Minister Ted Heath (Britain鈥檚 leader from 1970鈥1974) failed to demonstrate any tangible benefits of EEC membership, which set the course for the UK鈥檚 extended psychodrama with European institutions and ultimately culminated in the Brexit vote of 2016. His paper also examined how the UK鈥檚 external and foreign policies were affected by the Brexit vote, particularly within the framework of the ongoing war in Ukraine.
Bohland, who presented on the 鈥淪ecurity and Intelligence鈥 panel, discussed his analysis on the origins of western Europe鈥檚 dependence on Russian energy in the early 1980s. Drawing upon archival research he conducted in the UK this past summer, Bohland placed contemporary debates about European energy security in historical context.
鈥淭he conference was a highly rewarding experience,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd it was a terrific opportunity to network with other young scholars in my field.鈥