Osman Balkan Wins 2024 Charles Taylor Book Award

Osman Balkan

Osman Balkan has won the 2024 Charles Taylor Book Award for his book Dying Abroad: The Political Afterlives of Migration in Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2023), which was published as part of the LSE International Studies Series.
 
Conferred by the American Political Science Association, the Charles Taylor Book Award commemorates the eminent political philosopher’s contributions to interpretive thought in the political and social sciences. The award is conferred annually on a book exploring an aspect of political life that addresses problems and topics in interpretive methodologies or reports the results of empirical research using interpretive methods.
 
Balkan is Associate Director and Program Director of Curriculum, Experiential Learning, and Innovation at the Huntsman Program in International Studies & Business. He is also an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and a Senior Fellow at the Lauder Institute of Management & International Studies.
 
Dying Abroad draws on multi-sited fieldwork conducted by Balkan in Berlin and Istanbul, where he worked as an undertaker. The book offers an ethnographic account of migrants’ end-of-life dilemmas, illustrating how they are connected to ongoing political struggles over the stakes of citizenship, belonging, and identity in contemporary Europe.
 
Balkan’s research and teaching focus on the politics of global migration, race and ethnicity, identity and inequality, political violence, and collective memory, with a transregional concentration on Western Europe and the Middle East. His writing has appeared in journals including Comparative Studies of South Asia, Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, Journal of Intercultural Studies, and Review of Middle East Studies, in edited volumes such as Muslims in the U.K. and Europe and The Democratic Arts of Mourning, and in public-facing outlets such as Project on Middle East Political Science. His research has been supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the German Academic Exchange Service.
 
Prior to his current appointment at Penn, Balkan held faculty positions at Cornell University and Swarthmore College and served as resident director of the U.S. State Department’s Critical Languages Scholarship Program in Istanbul and Izmir, Turkey.

Arts & Sciences News

Michael Jones-Correa and Sophia Rosenfeld Elected to American Academy of Arts & Sciences

They join three others from the University of Pennsylvania, selected as part of the Academy’s mission to convene leaders from “every field of human endeavor to examine new ideas, address issues of importance to the nation and the world, and work together.”

View Article >
Eva Del Soldato Awarded 2025-26 Rome Prize

She joins Sean Burkholder, of the Weitzman School of Design, and just 33 others in receiving the prestigious honor from the American Academy in Rome.

View Article >
Mark Trodden named Dean of Penn’s School of Arts & Sciences

A distinguished physicist and accomplished academic leader, Trodden will assume the role on June 1.

View Article >
Two Penn Arts & Sciences Faculty Named Guggenheim Fellows

Marcia Chatelain, Presidential Penn Compact Professor of Africana Studies, and Matthew Levendusky, Professor of Political Science, are among 198 in the U.S. and Canada selected for this 100th class of fellows.

View Article >
Penn ATLAS Shares 2025 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics

The team, which includes Joseph Kroll, Evelyn Thomson, Elliot Lipeles, Dylan Rankin, and Brig Williams from the Department of Physics and Astronomy, is part of an expansive collaboration studying high-energy collisions from the Large Hadron Collider.

View Article >
2025 School of Arts & Sciences Teaching Awards Announced

Penn Arts & Sciences annually recognizes faculty, lecturers, and graduate students for their exemplary teaching. This year’s honorees come from 10 departments and two programs.

View Article >