Sander Govaerts obtained a BA degree in History at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel in 2012, and a Research MA (MPhil) in History at the University of Amsterdam in 2014. He is currently employed as a PhD Candidate at the University of Amsterdam, and works on a thesis titled ‘Mosasaurs. Interactions Between Armies and Ecosystems in the Meuse Region, 1250–1850’.
Mark Askew is an active duty Army officer and Assistant Professor at the United States Military Academy.
Claus Bundgård Christensen is associate professor of History at Roskilde University, Denmark. His 2003 PhD degree from Rosklide University was based on a dissertation about the black market in Denmark during the Second World War. He is the author of a number of scholarly books and articles about the German occupation 1940–45 and the First World War.
Ari Şekeryan is a PhD candidate at the University of Oxford. His research focuses on the Muslimnon Muslim relations in the Ottoman Empire. He edited The Adana Massacre 1909: Three Reports and An Anthology of Armenian Literature 1913. His latest articles appeared in the British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies and the Journal of the Ottoman and Turkish Studies Association.
Marc R. DeVore is a Lecturer at the University of St. Andrews’ School of International Relations. Dr. DeVore holds a Ph.D. in political science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Previously Dr. DeVore was a Jean Monnet Post-Doctoral Fellow at the European University Institute, Lecturer/Senior Research Fellow at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, and National Security Advisor to the President of the Central African Republic. He has received Fulbright, Truman and Chateaubriand Scholarships, as well as grants from Harvard’s Center of European Studies and MIT’s Department of Political Science. His research focuses on the historic institutional dimensions of contemporary security issues and, most particularly, on foreign military interventions in civil wars.