Building a New Germany: Denazification and Political Re-education, 1944–1948
Editorial Board
As part of our editorial process, every new collection is subjected to review by leading academics and experts. We would like to thank the following people for their advice and support:
Andrew Beattie is a historian of Germany, with particular expertise on Germany's transitions from Nazism after 1945 and East German communism after 1989. He is an Associate Professor in German and European Studies in the School of Humanities and Languages at the University of New South Wales, Sydney.
Dr Alan Malpass joined Bishop Grosseteste University as Lecturer in Military History in 2020. Prior to joining he taught history at Sheffield Hallam University where he completed his doctorate in 2016. Alan teaches the history of war and warfare as well as the ethics of conflict. His interests include the history of civilian and military captivity during war, the British home front and civilian experience of the Second World War, and representations of conflicts and combat in films and board/video games.
Mikkel Dack is a historian of Germany and modern Europe, with a particular interest in political violence, de-radicalization, and democracy. He teaches on topics such as global Europe, World War II, Nazi Germany and the Holocaust, radicalism and dictatorships, comparative fascism, and historical methods. His book, Everyday Denazification in Postwar Germany: The Fragebogen and Political Screening During the Allied Occupation, appeared with Cambridge University Press in 2023.
Dr Charlie Hall is a Senior Curator at BOA and a Senior Lecturer in Modern European History at the University of Kent. His research interests lie in conflict, technology and society in the twentieth century, with a particular emphasis on Britain, Europe and North America.