Bővebb ismertető
Ian Kershaw is Professor of Modern History at the University of Sheffield, Sheffield, England. Author ofPopular Opinion and Political Dissent in the Third Reich (1983), The Nazi Dictatorship (1985), The Hitler Myth (1987) and Hitler: A Profilé in Power (1991), he is currently working on a major biography of Hitler. Radu Ioanid is Director of the Photographic Research Department of the United States Holocaust Memóriái Museum in Washington, DC. He is the author of Urbanizarea in Romania: Implicatii Sociale si Economice (1978) and The Sword of the Archangel: Fascist Ideology in Romania (1990), as well as of a number of articles. Györgi Péteri, who was born in Hungary, is Associate Professor at the Institute of Economic History, Uppsala University, Sweden. His speciality is twentieth-century Hungárián history. Author of Effects of World War I: War Communism in Hungary, 1919 (1983), he has alsó published on interwar financial history, and on post-1945 developments in Hungárián science. He is at present engaged on a research project on the history of economic thought in state-socialist Hungary. Carolinejackson has been the Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for the Wiltshire and Wantage constituency since June 1984. After taking her MA and DPhil at Oxford, where she wrote on nineteenth-century British politics, she worked with the European Parhament in Luxembourg and Brussels; she then became Head of the London office of the Conservative Group in the European Parliament. She is the author of Europe's Environment: A Conservative Approach (1989). Paul Johnson is Lecturer in Social History at the London School of Economics and Political Science, University of London. Author of Saving and Spending: The Working-Class Economy in Britain 1870-1939 (1985) and (with Jane Falkingham), Ageing and Economic Welfare (1992), he is currently working on living standards in the nineteenth century and on pension systems.