Reminder: ICOHTEC PhD School 2026 — Applications still open

This is a friendly reminder that applications are still open for the ICOHTEC PhD School 2026, which will take place in hybrid format at UNAM, Mexico City, on 24–25 November 2026. Open to PhD students and postdocs, this year’s School focuses on “Engaging the History of Technology: Bridging Disciplines and Perspectives for Global Challenges” and offers an excellent opportunity to discuss research in an international and stimulating environment.

With free registration and the possibility to participate in person or online, the School is an especially valuable opportunity for emerging scholars in the history of technology and related fields. We warmly encourage interested colleagues to apply before the deadline.

Application deadline: Friday, 20 March 2026, 18:00 UTC.

More information and application details:
https://www.icohtec.org/icohtec-phd-school-2026-escuela-doctoral-icohtec-2026/

Original announcement:
https://www.icohtec.org/2026/01/13/call-for-applications-icohtec-phd-school-2026-mexico-city/

ICOHTEC Newsletter No. 228 (February 2026) is now online

We are pleased to announce the publication of ICOHTEC Newsletter 228 (February 2026), a new issue that continues the Newsletter’s richer and more dynamic format, now fully aligned with the renewed structure of the ICOHTEC website. This issue brings together a wide range of content for our community, including an interview with ICOHTEC Treasurer Florian Bettel, updates on the 53rd Annual Meeting in Alexandroupolis, the ICOHTEC PhD School 2026 in Mexico City, calls for the Maurice Daumas Prize and the Turriano ICOHTEC Prize, as well as recent publications, featured events, calls, funding opportunities, and job announcements.

With its expanded and better-integrated structure, the Newsletter is designed to make it easier for readers to move between news, opportunities, publications, and dedicated sections of the website. The new issue is now available through the ICOHTEC Publications page: https://www.icohtec.org/w-publications/

Final Reminder: ICOHTEC 2026 Annual Meeting — Submission Deadline Approaching (No Further Extensions)

This is a final reminder for colleagues planning to submit to the ICOHTEC 2026 Annual Meeting: the submission deadline (28 February 2026) is now only a few days away, and no further extensions will be granted. If you are considering submitting a paper or panel proposal, we strongly encourage you to complete and send your proposal as soon as possible. Please check the updated Call for Papers and conference information on the ICOHTEC Annual Meeting page and the official conference website.

More information: https://www.icohtec.org/w-annual-meeting/
Conference website: https://icohtec2026.hs.duth.gr/

Call for Submissions: Turriano ICOHTEC Prize 2026 (Early-Career Book Prize)

ICOHTEC invites submissions for the Turriano ICOHTEC Prize 2026, an early-career award for book-length works in the history of technology (broadly defined), sponsored by the Juanelo Turriano Foundation and worth €2,500, with an additional €500 travel support for the winner to attend the award session at the next ICOHTEC symposium. Eligible submissions include monographs or PhD dissertations (published or unpublished) in one of ICOHTEC’s official languages; edited volumes and articles are not eligible. Submissions require an electronic copy of the work plus a short abstract and CV (and, for works in Spanish or Russian, an additional summary in English/French/German as specified). Full eligibility rules, current deadline, and complete submission instructions (including prize committee contacts) are available here: https://www.icohtec.org/prizes/prizes-turriano-icohtec/. (icohtec.org)

Icohtec Newsletter 227 January 2026

ICOHTEC Newsletter No. 227 (January 2026) is out!

We are happy to announce the release of ICOHTEC Newsletter 227 (January 2026). This issue inaugurates a richer and more navigable structure, designed to make it easier to follow what matters most to our community—new opportunities, calls, events, publications, and key updates from ICOHTEC. Importantly, the newsletter’s new format is fully aligned with the renewed, more user-friendly ICOHTEC website, so that readers can move seamlessly between newsletter items and the corresponding sections online.

You can read and access the newsletter via our Publications page: https://www.icohtec.org/w-publications/.

Maurice Daumas Prize – ICOHTEC’s Article Prize

ICOHTEC is pleased to announce the 2026 Maurice Daumas Prize (ICOHTEC’s Article Prize), which recognizes outstanding and innovative scholarship in the history of technology and its relations to science, society, economy, culture, and the environment. The prize is open to scholars currently in graduate school or who received their PhD within the last seven years, for an original article published between 2024 and 2026 (in a journal or edited volume) in one of ICOHTEC’s official languages. Submissions (article + a brief CV) are due 22 March 2026 and should be sent to the Prize Committee Chair, Antoni Roca-Rosell (antonirocarosell@gmail.com). The winner will be contacted in late June 2026 and will receive a €500 prize, awarded at ICOHTEC’s 53rd Annual Meeting in Alexandroupolis, Greece (8–11 October 2026). Full call and details: https://www.icohtec.org/prizes/maurice-daumas-prize/

 

New publication: Quaderns d’Història de l’Enginyeria — Vol. XXIII (2025), In Memoriam Dmitri Gouzevitch

ICOHTEC is pleased to share the publication of Volume XXIII (2025) of Quaderns d’Història de l’Enginyeria. This issue is published in memoriam our colleague, friend, and ICOHTEC member Dr. Dmitri Gouzevitch (1955–2025), and stands as a tribute to his scholarship and contribution to the field. We thank ICOHTEC President Nelson Arellano-Escudero for bringing this publication to the attention of our community.

Access the volume here: https://upcommons.upc.edu/collections/d1a741d1-3a0e-469b-947c-53553501a984/search

For further information, you may contact Nelson Arellano-Escudero or Antoni Roca-Rosell (editor of the journal and President of the ICOHTEC Daumas Prize Jury).

Tensions of Europe 2026 — CfP Deadline Extended (now 1 February 2026)

The 12th Tensions of Europe Conference (Eindhoven University of Technology, 8–10 July 2026) has extended its Call for Papers deadline to 1 February 2026. The conference theme, “The meaning of the past in sustainable futures,” invites new perspectives on technology, material culture, and their roles in today’s inclusive and green transitions. Proposals are welcome for individual papers and panels, as well as special formats such as Micro-Workshops, Making & Doing History, and “My project in 10 minutes” (hybrid set-ups can be proposed).

More information and submission details: https://www.eindhovenhistorylab.nl/toe-2026/

Obituary Bart Hacker

We are deeply saddened to share the passing of our dear colleague and longtime ICOHTEC member Barton (Bart) Hacker (1935–2025). Bart was a leading scholar of military technology and a generous presence in our community, remembered especially for his sustained work in shaping ICOHTEC discussions on the social history of military technology. Below, we publish in full an obituary written by Yoel Bergman, in tribute to Bart’s life, scholarship, and service to the field.  This year we hope to dedicate a session in remembrance of Bart in Greece, depending on the participants

   Our dear and longtime ICOHTEC colleague, Barton (Bart) Hacker, passed away on June 7, 2025, in Annapolis, at age 89.  Bart was a friendly and noticeable erudite in ICOHTEC, where he skillfully organized sessions on military technology histories for many years with the annual symposia. The sessions brought together global participants, familiarizing with various researches and histories.

   Bart earned his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1968, widely researching and publicizing since on the histories of military technology, social dimensions of warfare, women and the military, war art, military museums, and non-Western military institutions. All was done while serving for years as a Military Historian and Senior Curator at the Smithsonian’s Museum of American History. Previously he held teaching and research positions at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Iowa State University, the University of Houston, University of Chicago, and Oregon State University. He recently edited an anthology named “Astride Two Worlds: Technology and the American Civil War”, and based on a conference that he organized at the Smithsonian. Bart was the recipient of the Leonardo da Vinci Medal from the Society for the History of Technology and of several writing prizes. With his partner, Margaret S. Vining (1933-2018) who was also active in ICOHTEC symposia, he co-authored numerous works and established the Vining Hacker Fellowship in Women’s Military History at the Smithsonian.

    In 1994 Bart called for changes in the scope and methods of researches performed on the history of military technology (Hacker, “Military Institutions, Weapons, and Social Change: Toward a New History of Military”, Technology and Culture, Vol. 35, No. 4 (Oct., 1994). He noted that in recent decades new approaches, new methods and evidence have allowed historians to reclaim a broader range of human experience than the older political-military history could encompass. The new history now interdisciplinary, can draw from the innovations in the social sciences and anthropology. His points materialized into the new field of Social History of Military Technology (SHMT), which examines the reciprocal relationships between warfare, military technology and institutions, and society. It was built under the new perspective that military-technology history touches much more aspects than realized before. As a method it was designed to depart from mil-tech historians internalist tradition that focused on weapons technical novelties, or “hardware” and the role in battles

Thus, within ICOHTEC symposia, Bart created and a primarily organized for years, “the Annual Symposium on the Social History of Military Technology”. The last symposium, number 14 was held in Katowice, Poland 2019, a year before the Corona. As usual with these meetings, the sessions first began with the earlier times as the Middle Ages progressing lastly to modernity. The annual meetings have gradually led to the creation of the related journal, Vulcan: The Journal of the Social History of Military Technology. Bart was the initial editor and later Steve Walton. It was published under Brill during 2013 to 2022 (10 volumes).

Photo by Sławomir Łotysz, 2103.

APS Library & Museum Long-Term Fellowships (2026–27) — Deadline 16 January 2026

The American Philosophical Society’s Library & Museum invites applications for several 2026–27 long-term fellowship opportunities supporting research in the APS collections. The deadline is 16 January 2026, so this is a time-sensitive opportunity—particularly relevant to advanced PhD candidates working in the history of science, technology, and medicine, as well as scholars in related fields.

  • Friends of the American Philosophical Society Predoctoral Fellowship (9 months; advanced PhD students in all fields; dissertation research based on APS collections)
    Apply: https://lnkd.in/ezK-uAQ3
  • David Center for the American Revolution Predoctoral Fellowship (9 months; advanced PhD students; American Revolution & Founding Era)
    Apply: https://lnkd.in/ebTkECNz
  • John C. Slater Predoctoral Fellowship in the History of Science (9 months; advanced PhD students; history of science, technology, and medicine)
    Apply: https://lnkd.in/eXKZ4P5J
  • Mellon Foundation Native American Scholars Initiative (NASI) Predoctoral Fellowship (9 months; advanced doctoral students in Native American & Indigenous Studies or related fields)
    Apply: https://lnkd.in/eSTXztSE
  • Mellon Foundation NASI Archives Training Fellowship (2 years; applicants with an MLIS or PhD at any career stage; professional training focused on Native American & Indigenous collections in archives/libraries/museums)
    Apply: https://lnkd.in/eNKyut3D