Gregory J.W. Urwin is a Professor of history at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and a former president of the Society for Military History. The author of nine books and many articles and reviews, Urwin is currently working on a social history of the 1781 British invasions of Virginia.
Deborah Y. Bachrach earned her bachelor’s in history from Queens College, her master’s from the City University of New York and her doctorate from the University of Minnesota. Her dissertation was entitled “British Reaction to the Dreyfus Affair.” She has been an instructor at several Midwestern universities, has published numerous history books for young adults, and currently is working on a biography of Rabbi Samuel N. Deinard.
Francisco J. Romero Salvadó is a Reader in Modern Spanish History at the Department of Hispanic, Portuguese and Latin American Studies in the University of Bristol. His research focuses mainly on the period between late 19th century and the 1930s. His publications include Between War and Revolution (London: Routledge, 1999); Foundations of the Civil War (London: Routledge, 2008); and La Larga Guerra Civil Española del Siglo XX (Granada: Comares, 2011).
Peter Anderson is Associate Professor of Twentieth-Century European History in the School of History, University of Leeds. His most recent book is Friend or Foe? Occupation, Collaboration and Selective Violence in the Spanish Civil War, (Brighton: Sussex Academic Press/Cañada Blanch Centre for Contemporary Spanish Studies, 2016).
Javier Rodrigo is Associate Professor, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (Spain). PhD in History from the European University Institute and postdoctoral researcher at the London School of Economics and the University of Zaragoza. His last book is La guerra fascista. Italia en la Guerra Civil española (1936-1939) (Madrid, 2016).
Bastian Matteo Scianna is a Lecturer at the Chair of War Studies (University of Potsdam). He has recently finished his PhD entitled `Myths and Memories: The Italian Operations on the Eastern Front (1941-1943) and Their Contested Legacies during the Cold War’.