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New Montonna Professor
Azra Hromadžić, associate professor of anthropology, was recently awarded the Dr. Ralph E. Montonna Endowed Professorship for the Teaching and Education of Undergraduates. She will hold the professorship for the 2022-23 academic year.

Hromadžić’s research interests include political anthropology, youth and education, aging and care and the Balkans. Her book, Citizens of an Empty Nation: Youth and State-Making in Postwar Bosnia and Herzegovina (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), is an ethnographic investigation of the internationally directed postwar intervention policies in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the response of local people, especially youth, to these policy efforts.
Hromadžić spent the spring semester of 2017 as a Fulbright Scholar in Bosnia and Herzegovina where she conducted research and taught at the University of Bihać. The experience inspired a new research project on riverine citizenship, war ecologies, love and politics, ecotourism, and water infrastructure in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 2017, she received the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Award for Teaching and Research and the Excellence in Graduate Education Faculty Recognition Award. In 2014 she received the Meredith Teaching Recognition Award.
Her articles have been published in numerous scholarly journals, and she is the recipient of several research grants from institutions such as the Social Science Research Council, the American Council of Learned Societies, the U.S. Institute of Peace, the Spencer Foundation, and the Josephine de Karman Foundation, among others. She received a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 2009.
The Dr. Ralph E. Montonna Endowed Professorship for the Teaching and Education of Undergraduates was established with a gift from the honoree’s daughter, the late Mary Lou Williams ’50 B.A. (AmSt).
Montonna earned a B.S. in chemistry from Syracuse University in 1916 followed by a Ph.D. from Yale University. In 1946, he was named director of research at Syracuse University. He died in 1952.