Undergraduate Student Summer Fellowship Award
The Dick Thornburgh Forum for Law and Public Policy and the University Honors College founded the Dick Thornburgh Summer Fellowships in 2011 to support undergraduate research into issues of governance addressed in Governor Dick Thornburgh’s long and eminent service in national and international leadership. Fellows will receive a stipend of $4,000 to provide their freedom from employment to perform their independent research and to assure their commitment to seminar responsibilities described below.
Central to the Thornburgh Fellowship is the Dick Thornburgh Archive Collection in the University’s Archive Service Center. The Thornburgh Collection encompasses a comprehensive set of documents, thousands of photographs, and many hours of audio and video from Governor Thornburgh's career. Student research under the fellowship must make substantial use of this archive. An excellent archive website enumerates the documents and issues from each of his public service positions and includes topics such as the Three Mile Island nuclear disaster, multiple Pennsylvania issues from his two terms as Governor, and legal topics such as the Savings and Loan crisis from his years as Attorney General.
Students with special interests in the following broad topics may well find a worthy and winning project to undertake under this fellowship:
• Pennsylvania history
• US history
• International affairs
• Rule of Law
• State economic development
• Standards of ethics and integrity
• Political science/politics
• Disability law and issues
• Public service
• Law enforcement
• Nuclear power and energy policy
• TMI and crisis management (i.e. Three Mile Island)
• State system of higher education
• Human services and welfare reform
Thornburgh fellows participate in the academic community of the renowned Honors College Brackenridge Summer Research Fellowship Program. The centerpiece is a weekly roundtable seminar. Students are also encouraged to participate in informal workshops initiated by the fellows themselves. The Dick Thornburgh Fellowship is open to undergraduates from any field and any class, including freshmen as well as seniors. Fellows are selected on the basis of their academic record, the originality and promise of their proposed projects, as well as their aspiration to create and participate in an interdisciplinary community of students in the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, and applied disciplines.