Xavier Bara is a Belgian historian, a PhD student at the universities of Liège and Osaka, and a reserve cavalry officer. His interests are in the military history and experimental archaeology of the military revolution between the Crimean and the Austro-Prussian wars, especially the Dutch army, the Prussian military reforms, the American Civil War, the military system of Bakumatsu Japan, and the cavalry.
Jan Willem Honig is Senior Lecturer in War Studies at King’s College, London, and Professor of Military Strategy at the Swedish National Defence College in Stockholm.
Nicholas A.Lambert completed his undergraduate and graduate degrees at Worcester College, Oxford. His latest book, Planning Armageddon: British Economic Warfare and the First World War, was published in January 2012 by Harvard University Press.
Tanfer Emin Tunc is Assistant Professor in the Department of American Culture and Literature at Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey. She holds a PhD in American History from the State University of New York at Stony Brook, and is the author of six books and over fifty book chapters, reference book entries, book reviews, and journal articles, most of which have appeared in internationally renowned publications such as Rethinking History, Women’s History Review, Historical Journal, and Journal of Women’s History. She is also Vice President of the American Studies Association of Turkey and a member of the executive board of Hacettepe University’s Women’s Research and Implementation Center.
Uğur Ümit Üngör is Lecturer at the Department of History, Utrecht University, and affiliated with the Centre for War Studies (Dublin) and the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies (Amsterdam). His research has focused on the historical sociology of mass violence in general, and the Armenian genocide in particular. He is the author of The Making of Modern Turkey: Nation and State in Eastern Anatolia, 1913–1950 (Oxford University Press, 2011).