He has over 610 journal papers,[2] Authored, co-authored, edited, or co-edited 32 books [3][4] and has given over 200 national and international talks at conferences and seminars.
[5] His selected lectures on (a) Elastic Stability, (b) Vibration Syntheses and Analysis and (c) Intermediate Strength of Materials are available on the internet.
The Kármán Fellowship is an award established in 2005 by the Aachen University of Technology (RWTH Aachen) in Federal Republic of Germany to honor the work of the physicist and engineer Prof. Theodore Von Karman (1881-1963) world renowned aeronautics expert and first director of the Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology.
Prof. Elishakoff gave two presentations : (1) "Resolution of the 20th century conundrum in Elastic Stability", and a public lecture (2) "Scientific and Personal Stories about Theodore Von Kármán, Stephen Timoshenko, Paul Ehrenfest, and Walter Vincenti."
At the award ceremony he lectured on “Uncertainty Analysis in Engineering: From Blaise Pascal and Pierre Fermat to Modern Times.” Elishakoff was the Frank M. Freimann Visiting Chair Professor,[7][8] at the University of Notre Dame, United States in 1985/86 and Henry J. Massman Jr.
He became a Fellow of American Academy of Mechanics,[10] in 1991 ("For outstanding achievements and pioneering contributions in random vibrations”.)
In recent years he published several articles[33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43] about Stephen P. Timoshenko (1878-1972), author of numerous textbooks In applied mechanics.