Feliks Gross Award
Assistant Professor of Philosophy Matthew Lindauer was awarded the Feliks Gross Award, which is given for outstanding research by CUNY assistant professors.
Lindauer鈥檚 main areas of research are moral and political philosophy, moral psychology, and experimental philosophy. He was previously a postdoctoral fellow at The Australian National University and received his Ph.D. from Yale in 2015.

Matthew Lindauer
He has published several journal articles and books, including 鈥淩ighting Domestic Wrongs with Refugee Policy,鈥 for Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, and Advances in Experimental Political Philosophy (Bloomsbury Publishing).
Henry Wasser Award
Assistant Professor of Psychology Ana Gantman was awarded the Henry Wasser Award, which is given for outstanding research by CUNY assistant professors.

Ana Gantman
After receiving her Ph.D. from New York University in 2016, Gantman completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Princeton University jointly in the Psychology Department and the School for Public Policy and International Affairs. Her research program investigates moral psychology as it pertains to social issues and public policy and affects behavior, cognition, and perception.
Gantman鈥檚 most recent journal articles include 鈥淧reventing Sexual Violence: A Behavioral Problem Without a Behaviorally Informed Solution鈥 (Psychological Science in the Public Interest) and 鈥淚s feminized labor antithetical to profitable labor?鈥 (Psychology of Women Quarterly).
Jerome Krase/Sandi Cooper Awards
Associate professors Yoon-Joo Lee and Dena Shottenkirk have been selected as recipients of the inaugural Jerome Krase/Sandi Cooper Awards for Outstanding Research for Associate Professors in CUNY for 2025.
Named in honor of distinguished CUNY scholars and longtime CUNY Academy board members Jerome Krase and Sandi Cooper, the awards recognize exceptional research contributions by associate professors across the university system.

Yoon-Joo Lee
Lee, of the Department of Childhood, Bilingual, and Special Education, is a leader in inclusive education and disability studies. She mentors master鈥檚 students in the graduate program in Early Childhood Special Education and is widely respected for her commitment to amplifying marginalized voices. Her recent book, Stories on Disability Through Our Voices: Born This Way, explores the lived experiences of Korean and Korean American women with visible disabilities. The book was recently featured at a special event hosted by 可乐视频鈥檚 Ethyle R. Wolfe Institute for the Humanities.

Dena Shottenkirk
Shottenkirk, Department of Philosophy, specializes in aesthetics and epistemology. She is also a practicing artist and founder of talkPOPc, a public philosophy and art nonprofit. Her work bridges theory and practice, including her book Cover Up the Dirty Parts!鈥攁 critique of 1980s censorship and a philosophical examination of the role of art in society. Her academic contributions also include the co-edited volume Perception, Cognition and Aesthetics and the monograph Nominalism and Its Aftermath: The Philosophy of Nelson Goodman (Springer). Her monograph, 鈥Art as Cognition:聽How Gist Reframes the Aesthetic Experience聽as Conversation, is forthcoming in 2025 (Springer). She is currently on a fellowship at the Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg in Germany at the .听
Awardees will present their research in a panel during the 2025 academic year, where the awards will be formally conferred. Each honoree will also receive a stipend.