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SABINE �REITAG joined the GHIL as a Research �ellow in 1997. She<br />

studied history, philosophy, and <strong>German</strong> literature in �rankfurt/Main<br />

and Rome. Her main fields of interest are nineteenth and<br />

early twentieth-century <strong>German</strong>, British, and American history. She<br />

is co-editer of British Envoys to <strong>German</strong>y, 1816–1866, vol. 1: 1816–1829<br />

(2000). She is currently working on a history of criminal law, culture,<br />

and policy in England, 1880–1930. She is the author of �riedrich<br />

Hecker: Biographie eines Republikaners (1998), and has edited, with<br />

Andreas �ahrmeir, Mord und andere Kleinigkeiten: Ungewöhnliche Kriminalfälle<br />

aus sechs Jahrhunderten (2001).<br />

DOMINIK GEPPERT, who joined the GHIL in 2000, studied history,<br />

philosophy, and law in �reiburg and Berlin, where he also worked as<br />

a research assistant for four years. His main fields of interest are<br />

British and <strong>German</strong> contemporary history, international history, and<br />

the history of the press. He is currently working on British–<strong>German</strong><br />

press relations, 1890–1914. He is the author of Störmanöver: Das<br />

‘Manifest der Opposition’ und die Schließung des Spiegel-Büros in Ost-<br />

Berlin im Januar 1978 (1996) and Konflikt statt Konsens: Die Entstehung<br />

des Thatcherismus aus dem Geist der Opposition 1975 bis 1979 (forthcoming,<br />

2002).<br />

LOTHAR KETTENACKER is Deputy Director of the <strong>Institute</strong> and apl<br />

Professor at the University of �rankfurt/Main. �rom 1973 he ran the<br />

<strong>London</strong> office of the Deutsch–Britischer Historikerkreis, which was<br />

later to develop into the GHIL. His Ph.D. (�rankfurt, 1986) was on<br />

Nazi occupation policies in Alsace (1940–44), and he also completed<br />

a B.Litt. at Oxford in 1971 on Lord Acton and Döllinger. He has written<br />

a major study of British post-war planning for <strong>German</strong>y during<br />

the Second World War, as well as various articles on National<br />

Socialism and on British history in the 1930s and 1940s. He is currently<br />

working on a study of <strong>German</strong> unification for the Longmans<br />

series, Turning Points in History. His most recent publication is<br />

<strong>German</strong>y since 1945 (1997).<br />

MARKUS MÖSSLANG, who came to the GHIL in 1999, studied modern<br />

and social history at the University of Munich. After completing<br />

his M.A. in 1995 he was a research assistant in the history department.<br />

His Ph.D. thesis on the integration of refugee scholars and<br />

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