
Special Collections and Archives invites interested scholars to apply for a William R. Eadington Fellowship. The Eadington Fellowships are intended to facilitate on-site research into any aspect of gaming, gambling, or Las Vegas using collections at the University Libraries.
Two types of fellowship are awarded:
- four-week resident fellowships with a $3,000 stipend
- two-week visiting fellowships with a $1,500 stipend.
The application cycle for the Eadington Fellows Program opens in mid-May and closes on July 1. We are not currently receiving applications.
Eligibility
The Eadington Fellowships Program is open to anyone currently enrolled in a graduate program (with a preference for Ph.D. candidates with in-progress doctoral dissertations) or employed as a university faculty member. Independent scholars will also be considered.
Eadington Fellowships are meant to support a wide array of research interests, and the selection committee welcomes applicants from any discipline. Scholars in the fields of history, history of science, economics, English, comparative literature, law, media studies, sociology, urban studies, and criminology are especially encouraged to apply.
Suggested fields of research include the history of the gaming industry, Las Vegas history, gaming law and regulation, the history of gambling disorders and their treatment, the criminalization of gambling and associated vices, disciplinary histories of gaming studies, tribal gaming, the cultural and material histories of specific gambling games, the mathematics of gambling, gambling technology, casino architecture and design, non-gaming casino entertainment, casino marketing and the branding of Las Vegas, and comparative studies of gambling and gamblers in literature.
Before applying, please review the scope of our collections. Priority is given to applicants who specify collections they plan to use in their research statement.
Application process
Applicants should email their Application Packet to Kristian Taketomo, Curator for Gaming Collections at Special Collections and Archives, at kristian.taketomo@unlv.edu. The deadline for submission is July 1.
The application packet must be sent as a single PDF and should include the following documents:
- Application form, which includes your contact information, the title of your research project, the type of fellowship you are applying for, and a short list of the sources you intend to view while in residence at SCA.
- Cover letter introducing yourself and indicating clearly whether you are applying for the resident or visiting fellowship and when you would prefer to schedule your residency.
- Statement (up to 750 words) summarizing your project and research agenda, including secondary research already conducted, and describing, in detail, which of SCA’s materials you hope to use in your project.
- C.V. (up to 5 pages).
- Letters of recommendation are NOT required.
Selection process
Applications will be reviewed by the selection committee in late July, and applicants will be notified of the committee’s decision by email in early August.
Requirements
Eadington Fellows are required to complete a residency in Las Vegas at Special Collections and Archives and to deliver a public talk, which is live streamed and recorded for the University Libraries YouTube channel.
About the Eadington Fellowship
Awarded since 2007, and renamed in honor of William R. Eadington in 2013, Eadington Fellowships have supported dozens of researchers and brought attention to the rare and unique archival collections at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Dr. Eadington (1946–2013) pioneered the academic study of gambling, both in Nevada and worldwide. He was the first holder of the Philip J. Satre chair in Gaming Studies, a professor of economics, and founding director of the Institute for the Study of Gambling and Commercial Gaming at the University of Nevada, Reno (UNR).
2024–2025
- Paul V. Khiata, Morris ‘Moe’ Dalitz and the Development of Las Vegas, 1950s-1980s.
- Ryan Fajardo,The Price of Play?: Digital Sports Betting in the US and the Struggle for Legitimacy. [NOT RECORDED}
- Isobel Harbison, Welcome to Las Vegas: A Story of Night, Light, Women and Power. [NOT RECORDED]
2023–2024
- Michael Brown, Game: The Social Metaphor that Ran the Table
- Susan Nance, Chimp Shows in Vegas: On Finding Animals in the Archives
2022–2023
- Rob Csernyik, Canada's Losing Gamble on American-style Casinos.
- Ashley Allen, What's For Dinner? How Las Vegas Casino Menus Have Evolved Due to Climate Change.
2021–2022
- Samantha Smith, Family-Style Burlesque and Women as Spectators.
- Gary Ettari, Menus, Theater, and The Marketplace: The History and Aesthetics of Food in Las Vegas.
2020–2021
- Fred Woods, Bright Lights in the Desert: The Latter-day Saints of Las Vegas.
- John Elgin, In the Shade of the Royal Oak: Commercial Gaming by Royal Patent in Restoration England.
2019–2020
- Scott Boylan, Charles J. Hirsch and His Role in Advancing the Use of Statistical Sampling and Analysis in the Accounting Profession. [NOT RECORDED]
- Alasdair Brown, Gamblers’ Perceptions of Probability. [NOT HELD]
- Isobel Harbison, "The “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” Sign, and the Question of How It Has So Successfully Signposted and Elicited Pleasure Over the Past Sixty Years. [NOT HELD]
- Lisa Bratton, A Re-examination of the History and Legacy of the Moulin Rouge. [NOT HELD]
2018–2019
- Martin Harris, Poker in Popular Culture.
- Yale Belanger, Evaluating Cultural vs. Economic Investments of Tribal Casinos in Historical Perspective: An Initial Assessment.
- Dorothy Barenscott, Steve Wynn's Cultural Revolution.
2017–2018
- Kim Manh, The Determinants of Gaming Policy Diffusion and Expansion.
- Colleen O'Neill, Jobs and American Indian Sovereignty: The Challenge of Gaming.
2016–2017
- Massimo Leone, Praying and Gambling.
- Kelli Wood, A History of Play in Print: Paper Games from Cards to Candyland.
2015–2016
- Alex Kupfer, The Biggest Game on TV: Benny Binion, the WSOP, and the Nostalgic Construction of Poker’s Past.
- Jonathan Cohen, This Could Be Your Ticket Out: Social Mobility in the Age of Jackpot Capitalism.
- Danielle Seid, Forgotten Femmes, Forgotten War: The Kim Sisters’ Dis-Appearance from American Screen and Scene.
- Scott Boylan, The Evolution of Gaming Revenue in Nevada.
- Paul Franke, The Making of the Las Vegas Consumption Experience in a Historical Perspective.
2014–2015
- Catherine Borg, Scouted: An Inadvertent Archive from the Search for a Cinematic Vegas.
- Laurie Arnold, Indian Gaming, American Anxiety.
- John Hunt, Betting on the Triple Crown: Wagering on Papal Elections in Renaissance Rome.
- Celeste Chamberland, An Enchanting Witchcraft: Masculinity, Melancholy, and the Pathology of Gaming in Early Modern London.
- Monica Steinberg, Engagements with Chance and Risk: Los Angeles-based artists looking to Las Vegas in the Post-War Era.
2013–2014
- Robert W. Miller, Paradise of Spectacle: Imagining and Representing Casino Resorts as Spaces of Luxury and Leisure in the Twentieth Century.
- Lee Scrivner, Las Vegas, An Atemporal History.
- Richard Williams, Erle Stanley Gardner in Las Vegas.
- Michelle Robinson, Billy Graham Comes to Las Vegas: Faith at Work on the Strip.
- Matias Karekallas, The Ambivalent Images of Las Vegas in Popular Music.
- Stefan Al, Casino Architecture Wars: A History of How Las Vegas Developers Compete with Architectural Design.
2012–2013
- Beverly Geesin, Surveillance and the Marketing of Vice.
- David J. Hart, An Illegitimate Child: Epilepsy, Gambling, and the Birth of Probability.
- Diana Tracy Cohen, Advertising Parenting in Las Vegas: An Analysis of Time and Space.
- Stephen Andrade, Visual Metaphor in Games of Chance - What You See is What You Play.
- David Courtwright, Learning from Las Vegas: Addiction, Limbic Capitalism, and Pleasure Meccas.
- Brian Beaton, Drawing Crowds to Citizen Science: Data Collection and Analysis as Everyday Gaming.
2011–2012
- Kah-Wee Lee, Taming Vice: How Machines and Architecture Changed the Culture of Gambling.
- Thomas Norman. Gambling & Economic Behavior: Game Theory and Poker: The Effect of Variable Bet Sizes.
- Jessalynn Strauss, From the Last Frontier to the New Cosmopolitan: A History of Casino Public Relations in Las Vegas.
- Lynn Gidluck, Halos, Alibis and Community Development: A Cross National Comparison of How Governments Spend Revenue from Gambling.
- Christopher Wetzel, Moral Markets and the Problematic Proprietor: How Neoliberal Values Shape Lottery Debates in Nevada.
2010–2011
- Pauliina Raento, The Naming of Gaming in Nevada.
- RJ Rowley, Neon Beyond the Neon: The Geography of Locals Casinos.
- Darryl Smith, “Dark with Excessive Bright”: Gambling Tells and the Naming Taboo.
- Benjamin Min Han, “We’re Right Next Door”: Televisual Las Vegas in Cold War America.
2009–2010
- Pascale Nedelec, Urban Dynamics in the Las Vegas Valley: Neighborhood Casinos and Sprawl.
- Theodor Gordon, Nation, Corporation, or Family? Tribal Casino Employment and the Transformation of Tribes.
- Laura Cook Kenna, The Promise of Gangster Glamour: Sinatra, Vegas, and Alluring, Ethnicized, Excess.
2008–2009
- Jacob Avery, The Social Worlds of Everyday Poker Players.
- Nicholas Tonsney, Commercialization, Crime, and Casinos: Legacies of 18th Century Gambling.
- Cristina Turdean, Betting on Computers: Digital Technologies and the Rise of the Gaming Industry in the U.S.
2007–2008
- Stewart Ethier, N/A.
- Jane Haigh, N/A
- Larry Gragg, The Powerful Mythology Surrounding Bugsy Siegel.
- Matt Johnson, N/A.
- Jessica Cattelino, N/A.

