(Alday) Dr Luis Fernando Alday

Fellow and Tutor in Mathematics
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Lic Bariloche, PhD Trieste, MA Oxf
Fernando Alday works on theoretical high energy physics and string theory. In particular, his research deals with the so called AdS/CFT correspondence, a duality between gauge theories and theories of gravity.
(Anderson) Dr Christina Anderson

Drapers' Company Research Fellow
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BA Yale, CAS Leuven, DPhil Oxf
Christina Anderson is currently researching the Flemish (Southern Netherlandish) merchant diaspora in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. This will highlight the long-term impact of the cosmopolitan commercial culture of Antwerp, the economic powerhouse of sixteenth-century northern Europe. This project was inspired by her doctoral work on Daniel Nijs. A Flemish merchant in Venice, Nijs sold the Gonzaga art collection of Mantua to Charles I of England beginning in 1627. Studying these merchants also fulfils her childhood ambition of becoming an explorer. She is in the process of publishing her work on Nijs.
(Barnard) Dr Toby Barnard

Armstrong-Macintyre-Markham Fellow and Tutor in History, Fellow Librarian, Archivist
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MA DPhil Oxf
Toby Barnard teaches an extensive range of options on the sixteenth to the eighteenth century, and supervises graduate students working on Ireland and Britain over that period.
His main research and writing currently focus on his Leverhulme project: ‘The cultures of print in Ireland between 1680 and 1800’. This looks likely to yield two book-length studies: the first provisionally titled ‘Authorship and Readership in eighteenth-century Ireland’, and the other, ‘The Cultures of Print in Ireland, c.1680-1800’. Dr Barnard is also co-editing one of the volumes in the new Cambridge edition of the collected works of Jonathan Swift, and plans to write on popular and unpopular art in England, c.1920-1950.
(Barton) Professor Nick Barton

Professor of Palaeolithic Archaeology, Fellow and Tutor in Palaeolithic Archaeology, Dean of Degrees
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BA Birm, MA DPhil Oxf, DEA Bordeaux
Nick Barton's main research interests cover Palaeolithic archaeology of Europe and North Africa, specialising in the study of prehistoric lithic technologies. Taught subjects include ‘modern human origins' which considers behavioural and cultural transitions in Homo sapiens from mainly archaeological and palaeoenvironmental perspectives.
He is Director of the Institute of Archaeology at Oxford and is currently a co-principal investigator of a major NERC project: RESET (Response of Humans to Abrupt Environmental Transitions). For more details about his research, see http://www.rlaha.ox.ac.uk/ and http://www.archinst.ox.ac.uk/.
(Bayley) Professor Hagan Bayley

Fellow and Professor of Chemical Biology
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MA Oxf, PhD Harvard, FRS
Hagan Bayley is the Professor of Chemical Biology at the University of Oxford. He enjoys working at the interface of chemistry and biology by, for example, developing techniques for protein modification that have applications in both basic science and biotechnology. Recently, the development of engineered pores for stochastic sensing and the study of covalent chemistry at the single molecule level have become major interests of his laboratory.
(Bogg) Dr Alan Bogg

Fellow and Tutor in Law , Senior Tutor
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BCL MA DPhil Oxf
Alan Bogg received his undergraduate and graduate education in Oxford, being awarded his BA in Law in 1997. Thereafter, he was awarded the degrees of BCL and DPhil. His DPhil focused on theoretical issues in collective labour law. Dr Bogg was then a lecturer in law at Birmingham University for three years, returning to Oxford to take up his law fellowship in 2003.
(Brewer) Professor Charlotte Brewer

Professor of English Language and Literature, Fellow and Tutor in English
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MA Oxf, MA Toronto, DPhil Oxf
Charlotte Brewer teaches Old and Middle English and History of the Language for the college, and gives lectures and seminars on these subjects for the university. For more information see her English Faculty staff profile at http://www.english.ox.ac.uk/about-faculty/faculty-members/medieval/brewer-professor-charlotte
Her OED research website, 'Examining the OED', is at http://oed.hertford.ox.ac.uk/main/
(Brewster) Mr Simon Brewster
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Senior Research Fellow and Co-ordinator for Clinical Medicine
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BSc MBBS Lond, MD Brist, FRCS
Simon Brewster studied at Charing Cross Hospital Medical School in 1986, and completed his higher surgical training in Bristol. In 1998, he was appointed as Consultant Urological Surgeon in Oxford with a clinical and research interest in prostate cancer and prostatic disease. He has been involved with teaching clinical medicine and surgery at Hertford since 2002.
(Bull) Dr Peter Bull

Fellow and Tutor in Geography, Tutor for Admissions
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BSc MSc PhD Wales, MA Oxf
Peter Bull is a University Lecturer in physical geography, Fellow and Tutor in Geography at Hertford College and currently Tutor for Admissions. He was originally trained as a karst sedimentologist and has special interest in China. For over thirty years he has been studying sediments using a scanning electron microscope as a tool for reconstructing ancient environments (particularly the Quaternary). Dr Bull is presently concerned with forensic sedimentology relating to murders, rapes, smuggling, arson etc.
(Burrough) Dr Sallie Burrough

Junior Research Fellow, Geography
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MSc Lond, BA DPhil Oxf
Sallie Burrough is a Junior Research Fellow carrying out research in Quaternary Science and Dryland Environments. She is involved with several research projects in central southern Africa, in particular in Botswana and Zambia, focusing on long term climate change, environmental dynamics and human dispersal.
(Coones) Dr Paul Coones

Supernumerary Fellow and Tutor in Geography
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MA DPhil Oxf
(Cui) Professor Zhanfeng Cui

Donald Pollock Professor of Chemical Engineering, Fellow
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BSc Inner Mongolia Institute of Technology, MSc PhD Dalian University of Technology, MA Oxf, DSc
Zhanfeng Cui's research interests includes enabling technologies for stem cell and tissue engineering, processing of therapeutic proteins and water treatment. For more information, check his personal website: http://www.eng.ox.ac.uk/chemeng/Cui/index.htm
(Davies) Professor Dame Kay Davies CBE DBE FRS FMedSci

Dr Lee's Professor of Anatomy, Fellow
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MA DPhil Oxf
Kay Davies’ research concerns the understanding of muscular dystrophy, particularly Duchenne muscular dystrophy and neurodegenerative diseases such as motor neuron disease and ataxia. Her group are working on the development of treatments for these diseases as well as understanding the molecular pathology. She is Director of the MRC Functional Genetics Unit (www.mrcfgu.ox.ac.uk), and Head of Department, Department of Physiology Anatomy and Genetics (www.dpag.ox.ac.uk). She is also a Delegate to Oxford University Press and a Governor of the Wellcome Trust.
(Dryden) Mr Paul Dryden

Director of Development
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MA Oxf
Paul Dryden was appointed Director of Development and Fellow of Hertford College in September 2008. Before coming to Hertford, he spent the last three years as Appeal Director for a Charity for severely autistic children, successfully running a £4m capital campaign. Previously, he was Head of Development at Southampton University, following six years in the Oxford University Development Office, managing the University’s relationships with Trusts and Foundations. Before then, for seven years after graduating in Modern History from Exeter College, he was fund manager for a number of well-known City firms.
(Dunne) Professor Fionn Dunne

Professor of Engineering Science, Fellow and Tutor in Engineering
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BSc Brist, MEngSc NUI, MA Oxf, PhD Sheff, FREng
Fionn Dunne has been a Fellow of Hertford since 1996 and was appointed Professor of Engineering Science in 2006. His research is in the mechanics of materials and is funded by EPSRC, The Royal Society and industry both in this country and abroad, and has resulted in many published papers, the majority of which have appeared in international journals. He is a member of the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Plasticity and of the Journal of Strain Analysis, and is a consultant to Rolls-Royce and NPL.
(Foster) Professor Roy Foster

Carroll Professor of Irish History, Fellow
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MA PhD LittD(Hon) Dub, MA Oxf, DLitt(Hon) Aberd, Belf, DLaws (Hon) Queen's, Ontario, FRSL, FRHistS, FBA
Roy Foster is Carroll Professor of Irish History, an endowed Chair founded in 1991 and attached to Hertford. He is the author of many books on the political, social, cultural and literary history of Ireland, and the two-volume authorized biography of W.B.Yeats. His most recent work concerns social and political change in Ireland in the late twentieth century.
(Frellesvig) Professor Bjarke Frellesvig

Fellow and Professor of Japanese Linguistics
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MA PhD Copenhagen, MA Oxf
Bjarke Frellesvig has been a Fellow in Hertford since 1999. He mainly teaches Japanese linguistics and language, including Old and Classical Japanese. Most of his research is on the history and pre-history of Japanese. For details about his teaching and publications, click here. He also directs a large research project funded by the AHRC, on Verb semantics and argument realization in pre-modern Japanese.
You Tube video: 'A History of Japanese Language' http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_DiXCXihDRM.
(Gill) Dr David Gill
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Fellow and Tutor in Economics
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MA MPhil DPhil Oxf
David Gill is a Fellow in Economics at Hertford and a University Lecturer in the Economics Department. David's research focuses on behavioural economics, using both theoretical and experimental methods.
Behavioural economics seeks to move towards a more realistic representation of how people choose and behave; in particular David studies the role of social preferences, emotions and bounded rationality in decision-making. David's teaching specialisms include Microeconomics and Game Theory.
(Glickman) Dr Gabriel Glickman

British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow and Junior Research Fellow in History
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MA PhD Camb
Gabriel Glickman’s work concentrates on politics, culture and religion in Britain 1650-1750. His first book, a study of the English Catholic Community 1688-1745, was published in 2009. His next research project will assess the impact of growing imperial interests on the domestic political environment in England and Scotland 1660-1714.
(Greaves) Dr David R Greaves

Fellow in Medicine and Tutor in Cellular Pathology
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BSc Brist, PhD Lond, MA Oxf
David Greaves is interested in the cells and molecules that orchestrate the body's response to injury and infection, a process called inflammation. Many human diseases including rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and atherosclerosis are caused by chronic inflammation. The goal of research in my laboratory is to understand the regulation of inflammation and develop new classes of anti-inflammatory drugs.
(Henry) Dr Sam Henry

Fellow and Tutor in Physics
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MSc Durham, MA DPhil Oxf
Sam Henry works on two experiments: EURECA http://www.eureca.ox.ac.uk/, which will search for the dark matter believed to make up the majority of the mass of the galaxy; and cryoEDM http://www.neutronedm.org/, which aims to measure the electric dipole moment of the neutron, and thereby explain why the Universe is made of matter, and not equal amounts of matter and antimatter.
His homepage is http://www.physics.ox.ac.uk/users/henry.
(Hopkin) Dr David Hopkin
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Fellow and Tutor in Modern History, (Acting Tutor for Admissions)
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MA PhD Camb, MA Oxf
David Hopkin’s teaching focuses on European and in particular French history from the Enlightenment to the First World War. By training he is an historical anthropologist and by inclination he is a folklorist. His research concentrates on the social and cultural life of rural communities, military and maritime institutions, popular and oral culture.
(Kiaer) Dr Jieun Kiaer

Senior Research Fellow and Tutor in Oriental Studies
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BA MA Seoul National University, PhD Lond, MA Oxf
Jieun Kiaer is a Young Bin Min-Korea Foundation Lecturer in Korean Language and Linguistics. Her research interests are Syntax, Phonology and their interface, Psycholinguisitcs and Korean-Japanese comparative/contrastive linguistics.
(Landers) Dr John Landers
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Senior Research Fellow
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MA DLitt Oxf, PhD Camb
From 1980 until 1990 John Landers was Lecturer in Biological Anthropology at University College London. Since 1991 he has been University Lecturer in Historical Demography at the University of Oxford. During the academic year 1994/95 he served as Assessor and he has formerly been a member of the Hebdomadal Council and the General Board. He was a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford until September 2005, when he was appointed Principal of Hertford College, Oxford until September 2011.
(Lauder) Dr Alan Lauder

Fellow and Tutor in Mathematics
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BSc Glas, MA Oxf, PhD Lond
Alan Lauder works in computational number theory, with an especial interest in the application of methods originating in topology to the study of computational problems lying on the interface between arithmetic and geometry. In college he tutors the pure mathematics syllabus to the first and second years, and oversees college teaching in mathematics. For more details, see www.maths.ox.ac.uk/~lauder/.
(Lloyd) Mr Simon Lloyd

Bursar
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MA Oxf
Simon Lloyd was appointed Bursar and Fellow of Hertford in September 2008. This followed a 28 year career with BP PLC, where he held a wide variety of roles in BP's sales and marketing businesses, based in the UK, USA and Belgium. His main areas of focus were strategy, planning and finance.
(Lunn-Rockliffe) Dr Katherine Lunn-Rockliffe

Fellow and Tutor in Modern Languages and Secretary to the Governing Body
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MA DPhil Oxf
Katherine Lunn-Rockliffe teaches modern French literature, and her main research interests are in the field of nineteenth-century poetry. She has worked on Symbolism and is the author of a book on Tristan Corbière (OUP, 2006). Currently she is working on Romantic verse and is writing a book on Victor Hugo. She lectures on subjects including Stendhal, Baudelaire, and Rimbaud.
(Maiden) Professor Martin Maiden

Professor of Molecular Epidemiology, Fellow and Tutor in Biology
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BSc R'dg, PhD Camb, FRCPath
Martin Maiden is also a Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellow and an Honorary Professor of Biology at the University of Cardiff. His teaching for the BA in Biological Sciences covers a broad area of microbiology, focussing especially on bacterial infectious disease of humans.
(Millican) Dr Peter Millican

Gilbert Ryle Fellow and Reader in Early Modern Philosophy
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MSc PhD Leeds, MA BPhil Oxf
Peter Millican has broad philosophical interests, having published in Epistemology, Ethics, History of Philosophy, Logic and Language, and Philosophy of Religion. Recently his research has focused mainly on David Hume (see http://www.davidhume.org/millican.htm), and he is currently Co-Editor of the journal Hume Studies.
(New) Dr Steve New
Fellow and Tutor in Management Studies
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BSc S'ton, MA Oxf, PhD Manc
Steve New's research focuses on buyer-seller interactions, supply chain management and operations management. His interests lie in developing a more rigorous appreciation of how individuals and organisations construct and interpret their environment and the systems in which they operate. For more details, see http://www.sbs.ox.ac.uk/research/people/Pages/SteveNew.aspx
(Noble Wood) Dr Oliver Noble Wood

Fellow and Tutor in Modern Languages
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MSt DPhil Oxf
Oliver Noble Wood teaches sixteenth and seventeenth-century Spanish literature. His research interests range from the poetry of Góngora and Quevedo to the history of the book in Golden Age Spain. He is currently the Co-Investigator on the AHRC-funded project “The Library of the Count-Duke of Olivares: A Mirror of Power, Patronage and Baroque Culture in Golden Age Spain”.
(Rao) Professor Zihe Rao
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Senior Research Fellow
PhD Melbourne, MSc CAS
Zihe Rao is mainly engaged in the study of the three-dimensional structures of significant proteins related to human disease or with important physiological functions, as well as in innovative drug discovery.
(Roche) Professor Pat Roche

Professor of Physics, Fellow and Tutor in Physics, Investment Bursar
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BSc PhD Lond, MA Oxf
Pat Roche is an astronomer with particular interests in astronomical instrumentation, telescopes and new observational techniques, and with research programmes studying the nature and composition of cosmic dust, the interstellar medium and star formation processes. For more details, see his departmental website at http://www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk/~pfr/
(Schofield) Professor Christopher J Schofield
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Professor of Organic Chemistry, Fellow and Tutor in Organic Chemistry
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BSc Manc, MA DPhil Oxf
Professor Schofield's group home pages are at http://www.chem.ox.ac.uk/oc/cjschofield/
(Smith) Dr Emma Smith
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Fellow and Tutor in English
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MA DPhil Oxf
Emma Smith teaches Shakespeare and early modern literature to undergraduates and graduates in Oxford. Her work is mainly on Shakespeare and Renaissance dramatists: most recently she has published 'The Cambridge Introduction to Shakespeare' (2007). An extract from this book, on Shakespeare and character is available from Cambridge University Press at:
http://www.cup.cam.ac.uk/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521671880&ss=exc.
(Stuart) Professor David Stuart

Professor of Molecular Biophysics, Senior Research Fellow in Molecular Biophysics
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BSc Lond, MA Oxf, PhD Brist
(Suzuki) Dr Tomo Suzuki

Fellow and Reader in Accounting
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BSc MSc Lond, MA and DPhil Oxf
Tomo Suzuki is a University Reader in Accounting at SBS and Official Fellow of Hertford College, Oxford. He also serves as Tokunin Professor at Osaka University for Sustainability Management. He was previously a practicing CPA at Arthur Andersen and KPMG (Tokyo). He has an MSc (LSE) in the Philosophy of Social Sciences, and DPhil (Oxford) for his doctoral thesis: "Accounting and Economics: the Epistemology of Economic Reality" which has been highly regarded in the socio-economics community.
(Thomas) Professor David Thomas

Professor of Geography, Fellow
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MA DPhil Oxf
David Thomas is Honorary Professor at the University of Cape Town, and in 2005 was the first recipient of the Royal Geographical Society's Oman-Thesiger Fellowship. He is a geomorphologist by training and pursues research interests in arid environmental systems, Quaternary climate and environmental change, and contemporary and future climate change and development.
(Tyreman) Dr Christopher Tyerman

Senior Research Fellow and Tutor in History, Tutor for Graduates
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MA DPhil Oxf
Christopher Tyerman teaches widely across the Middle Ages from the sixth to sixteenth centuries. His research and publications are primarily concerned with aspects of the Crusades as a feature of western European politics, culture and society and its historiography, but he has also published on medieval England and France and the history of education.
(Vallance) Dr Claire Vallance

Fellow and Tutor in Chemistry
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BSc PhD Cant, MA Oxf
Claire Vallance teaches physical chemistry at Hertford College. She is involved in research projects in a number of areas of chemical physics, including chemical reaction dynamics and the development of new spectroscopic and chemical sensing techniques.
(Wilson) Professor Tony Wilson

Professor of Engineering Science, Fellow and Tutor in Engineering
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MA DPhil Oxf FRENG
Tony Wilson has been pursuing research into microscopy, imaging and applied optics for over twenty years. His interests are in the theory and implementation of scanning optical microscopes and, in particular, the development of confocal microscopes. This has led to the publication of three books and well over two hundred and fifty papers. He is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society and General Editor of the Journal of Microscopy.
(Woollard) Dr Alison Woollard

Fellow and Tutor in Biochemistry, Dean
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BSc Lond, MA DPhil Oxf
Alison Woollard is a geneticist working on the molecular basis of development. She uses the nematode worm Caenorhabdidtis elegans as a simple, multicellular model system to investigate how genes program the control of cell proliferation and cell fate determination during development.
(Young) Dr Alison Young

Fellow and Tutor in Jurisprudence and Tutor for Women
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LLB Birm, BCL MA DPhil Oxf
Alison Young studied Law and French at the University of Birmingham, before coming to Hertford College for BCL and DPhil. She was a tutor for three years at Balliol College, before returning to Hertford as a Fellow in 2000. Her DPhil examined defamation law and freedom of expression and she currently specialises in constitutional theory, public law and human rights, particularly freedom of expression. She has published widely in this field, most notably Parliamentary Sovereignty and the Human Rights Act (Hart, 2009). A full list of her publications can be found at:
http://denning.law.ox.ac.uk/members/profile.php?lecturer_code=younga&what=all&sort=Year
(Zubek) Dr Radoslaw Zubek

Fellow and Tutor in Politics
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MSc PhD Lond, MA Poznan, MA Oxf
Radoslaw Zubek is a University Lecturer in European Politics. Before joining Hertford College in 2009, he worked at the London School of Economics and the University of Potsdam in Germany. His main research interests include the comparative study of executives and parliaments in Western and East Central Europe, Europeanization of domestic political institutions and national compliance with EU law. For more details, see www.hertford.ox.ac.uk/zubek


