In 1998, Cederman received the
Edgar S. Furniss Award for his monograph “Emergent Actors in World Politics: How States and Nations Develop and Dissolve”. This book is based on his dissertation work, for which he received the Horace H. Rackham Distinguished Dissertation Award from the University of Michigan in 1995. The book “Inequality, Grievances, and Civil War”, which was published by Cederman together with
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch and
Halvard Buhaug in 2013 with Cambridge University Press, won four prizes, including the International Studies Association Best Book Award, the American Political Science Association Conflict Processes Best Book Award, the Conflict Research Society Book of the Year Award (co-winner) and the Network of European Peace Scientists Medal for the best publication in peace sciences. Cederman was twice granted the Heinz Eulau Award for the best article in the
American Political Science Review in 2011 for the co-authored article “Horizontal Inequalities and Ethno-Nationalist Civil War: A Global Comparison”, and in 2001 for the article “Back to Kant: Reinterpreting the Democratic Peace as a Collective Learning Process.” The GROWup Project, which serves as the main outlet for data generated by Cederman's research group, was honoured as the “best data contribution to the study of any and all forms of political conflict” by the American Political Science Association, which awarded it with the J. David Singer Data Innovation Award in 2015. In 2019 he became a member of the
German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. ==Grants==