Contact
Those interested in being considered, or those wishing to suggest a possible recipient for the C.E.W. Bean Prize should contact:
Professor Bruce Scates
Director of the National Centre for Australian Studies
Building B
Caulfield Campus
Monash University
VIC 3800
Email: bruce.scates@adm.monash.edu.au
Prize
The Prize consists of:
- $500 in cash;
- a suitably inscribed medallion;
- return airfares for the winner and partner to attend the Army History Unit conference where the Prize will be presented by the Chief of Army
- two years complimentary attendance at the Chief of Army's History Conference and Dinner
Past Recipients
| 2005 |
Dr Rosaline Hearder |
| 2006 |
Dr Garth Pratten |
| 2007 |
Dr Craig Stockings |
The annual C.E.W. Bean Prize for Military History is awarded to the best honours or postgraduate thesis submitted in any Australian university focusing on Australian Army's experience of war. The Prize was established in 2004 to mark the 10th anniversary of the Army History Unit and its aim is to foster and encourage the study of military history and heritage at a tertiary level.
It is an annual Prize, in honour of the first prominent Australian military historian, C.E.W. Bean, the official war correspondent to the AIF, who joined the troops on Gallipoli and at the Western Front and was appointed to write the official history after the war.
More about C.E.W. Bean
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2007 Recipient
The 2007 C.E.W. Bean Prize has been awarded to
Dr Craig Stockings, for his PhD thesis:
The Torch and the Sword. A History of the Army Cadet Movement in Australia, 1866-2004
NSW@ADFA, 2006.
The citation reads as follows:
Since the 1860s hundreds of thousands of young Australians have undergone military training in the Army Cadets. Many of Australia's most famous officers, Blamey, Morshead, Allen, Stevens, Potts and Berryman amongst them, began their military careers in what was then called the ‘cadet corps'. From humble beginnings, when cadets trained often without weapons and without uniforms, the cadet movement has developed into a well-resourced and highly motivated organisation of some 17,000 members. Its professionalism, dedication and esprit de corps is highly prized by the Australian Army.
Craig Stockings' PhD thesis charts the history of the Australian Cadet Movement from its origins in Victoria's elite private schools, through the era of compulsory military training in the early twentieth century, past the interwar period and into the nervous conservatism that characterised the cold war. A study of enormous span, it considers the modern history of the cadet movement, charting its chequered fortunes through the troubled era of the 1960s and 70s and its reinvigoration in recent years. The thesis is meticulously researched, carefully argued and extremely well written. Its stated purpose is to ‘provide a general history of the army cadet movement from 1866 to 2004 by tracing the interactions between four fundamental forces that have stood as its foundation for almost 140 years'. In a well-informed and engaging analysis, Craig Stockings shows how military, educational, social and financial factors shaped the character and culture of the cadet movement. In the process, he demonstrates how changes to cadet training reflect changing social attitudes. The cadet movement now focuses on character development rather than imparting specific military skills: the rigid discipline of the nineteenth century drill hall has given way to adventure training that fosters qualities of leadership, self-reliance and self-esteem.
This thesis fills a significant hiatus in Australian military history. It throws new light on an important and largely overlooked cultural institution. It is a worthy recipient of the C.E.W. Bean Prize.

