Lechartre Awarded Top Dissertation Prize for Innovative Study of Transitional Justice in Guatemala
Joséphine Lechartre, a former Kellogg Institute Doctoral Affiliate who earned a PhD in political science and peace studies in 2024, has been awarded the 2025 Gabriel A. Almond Award by the American Political Science Association (APSA) for the best dissertation in the field of comparative politics.
Lechartre, whose groundbreaking research focuses on transitional justice policies, civilian victimization in wars, and post-conflict political behavior, has made significant contributions to understanding the impact of wartime violence on indigenous identity formation and political mobilization in post-war Guatemala. During her time at the Kellogg Institute, she was a research affiliate with the Notre Dame Violence and Transitional Justice Lab (V-TJLab) and received support from several prestigious fellowships and grants.
The Gabriel A. Almond Award, established in recognition of Gabriel Almond’s foundational contributions to comparative politics, is among the most distinguished honors for early-career scholars in the discipline. Lechartre’s dissertation stood out for its innovative use of both qualitative and quantitative methods, including interviews, surveys, archival research, and community-based workshops.
Currently, Lechartre is a postdoctoral fellow at Tulane University’s Center for Interamerican Policy and Research, where she is developing her book project on the long-term political legacies of genocide in Guatemala. She remains actively engaged in research and teaching on issues of political violence, migration, and peacebuilding across Latin America.
Latest Research
- In Memoriam: Sriram SomanchiSomanchi was a widely respected teacher and scholar whose research broke new ground in the academic landscape by drawing on social science and statistical machine learning to develop and deploy methods that bridge these related but distinct disciplines.
- Notre Dame business professor ranked No. 1 in published researchDean Shepherd, Ray and Milann Siegfried Professor of Entrepreneurship at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business,…
- Airborne disease detection made easier with new, low-cost deviceAirborne hazardous chemicals can be dilute, mobile, and hard to trap. Yet accurately measuring these chemicals is critical in protecting human health and the environment. Now, a new, small, low-cost device, nicknamed ABLE, could make the collection and detection of airborne hazards much easier and faster. The device, just four by eight inches across, was devised by Jingcheng Ma, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Notre Dame, and researchers at the University of Chicago. The results of their work were published in Nature Chemical Engineering.
- University of Notre Dame and Dublin City University set to collaborate on new Precision Biomedical Technologies…
- When Byzantium Met Islam: Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellow Explores Remarkable Religious Exchanges in the Medieval Eastern Mediterranean WorldSince fall 2023, the Medieval Institute has been honored to host Dr. Manolis Ulbricht, who holds a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Global Postdoctoral Fellowship. This prestigious multi-year fellowship supports…
- Notre Dame announces next step for emerging tech and talent district in downtown South BendThe Tech and Talent District, a keystone of the city of South Bend’s Downtown South Bend 2045 plan, has advanced a step closer to implementation via a partnership between the University of Notre Dame and Ancora to pursue the development of the first phase of the district.