Award Recipients

2024 Jacquet Award Recipients:

  • Nicole Fox, “Rescue During War and Genocide in the Balkans: The Role of Religion”
    • Abstract: Croatian Catholics and Bosnian Muslims felt threatening to the creation of a “greater Serbia” by Serbian Orthodox President Milošević and his followers who were creating an ethnically homogenous Serbian state that included Kosovo and Bosnia-Herzegovina. The quest for a “Greater Serbia” unfolded in genocide, genocidal rape, massacres, and forced removals, as well as the destruction of infrastructure. The primary victims were Bosnian Muslims, with perpetrators and victims primarily falling along religious lines. While many Orthodox Serbs and some Catholic Croats participated in genocidal violence, some choose not to, and instead rescued those who were being persecuted. Previous scholarship has found that religiosity shaped social networks, opportunity and resources in ways that impacted the form and success of rescue during mass violence. In line with past scholarship, this project asks: How did religion impact decisions and abilities to rescue in the Balkans, and how do present-day narratives of rescue actions evoke religion?
  • Lucas Sharma, “Negotiating LGBTQ+ Catholic Identities”
    • Abstract: Sociologists of religion document how most LGBTQ+ religious individuals must negotiate their religious and sexual identities especially if they come from a tradition that rejects homosexuality. Unexamined is whether childhood religious messages about gender and sexuality remain internalized as adults. Previously, I conducted 31 interviews with former Catholic gay men and identified a continuum of lingering internalized shame. This proposal is for an additional 30 interviews with practicing Catholic gay men to identify whether those who continue to practice their faith also have lingering internalized shame from childhood religious socialization as well as their continued relationship with the Catholic Church. This study has implications for how Catholic clergy and lay leaders in parishes, schools, and universities work to be inclusive to LGBTQ+ Catholics given Pope Francis’ call to be a Church of mercy, accompaniment, and embrace.
  • Jill Thornton, “The Influence of Christian Geopolitical Imaginaries in Missionary Intercultural Training”
    • Abstract: Interculturalism has become a particularly salient topic in missionary training in a world increasingly focused on diversity and globalization. My proposed research project will examine the role of geopolitical imaginaries in intercultural training courses that equip evangelical Christian missionaries to conduct ministry practices in foreign settings. I will examine how geopolitical imaginaries—that is, ways of understanding the world that inevitably shape practices and behaviors—are infused in intercultural training for missionaries. I highlight three principle ways that evangelical Christians mentally construct the world: 1) an existent imaginary; 2) a scriptural imaginary; and 3) a spiritual imaginary. Based on data collected from participant observation, semi-structured interviews, and content analysis with two U.S.-based intercultural training courses for missionaries, I will learn how courses convey these imaginaries prior to their participants’ entry into foreign settings. Research results will introduce a developed tripartite Christian geopolitical imagination concept to missionary training instruction and curricula.

2023 Jacquet Award Recipients

2021 Jacquet Award Recipients

2020 Jacquet Award Recipients

2019 Jacquet Award Recipients

2018 Jacquet Award Recipients

2017 Jacquet Award Recipients

2016 Jacquet Award Recipients

2015 Jacquet Award Recipients

2014 Jacquet Award Recipients

2013 Jacquet Award Recipients

2012 Jacquet Award Recipients

2011 Jacquet Award Recipients

2010 Jacquet Award Recipients