Warren Dean (historian)

Warren Dean (1932, Passaic, New Jersey – 21 May 1994, Santiago de Chile) was a prize-winning historian of modern Latin America, specializing in Brazil as well as environmental history.

Following his accidental death by asphyxiation due to a defective gas line in his rented apartment,[1][2] the Warren Dean Prize was established by the Conference on Latin American History in 1995.

[4] Following military service, he entered the program in Latin American history at University of Florida, completing his dissertation in 1964 entitled "São Paulo's industrial élite, 1890–1960."

His first monograph, The Industrialization of São Paulo (1969), was based on his dissertation work; his second monograph Rio Claro: A Brazilian Plantation System, 1820–1920 (1976) received Honorable Mention for the Conference on Latin American History's Bolton Prize, "awarded for the best book in English on any significant aspect of Latin American History that is published anywhere during the imprint year previous to the year of the award.".

His final monograph on environmental history With Broadax and Firebrand: The Destruction of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest (1995) won the Bolton-Johnson Prize posthumously.