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JÉRÔME AAN DE WIEL, MA, Ph.D (University of Caen, France), H-Dip (Hogeschool van Amsterdam, the Netherlands), is attached to the University of Rheims, France, and is currently teaching in the School of History, University College, Cork. He is a member of the Société Française d’Etudes Irlandaises (SOFEIR) and the Centre for Irish–German Studies in the University of Limerick (UL). He has published two monographs, The Catholic Church in Ireland, 1914–1918: War and Politics (Irish Academic Press, 2003), and The Irish Factor, 1899–1919: Ireland’s Strategic and Diplomatic Importance for Foreign Powers (Irish Academic Press, 2008). He is currently working on a project on Ireland and the Cold War to be published by Manchester University Press. CHRISTOPHE GILLISSEN studied at the University of Paris III – Sorbonne Nouvelle and obtained a doctorate in Anglo-Irish Studies at the University of Caen. He is a Senior Lecturer (maître de conférences) at the English Department of Paris-Sorbonne University. He is a member of AFIS (Association for Franco-Irish Studies), SOFEIR (Société française d’études irlandaises – French Society of Irish Studies) and EFACIS (European Federation of Associations and Centres of Irish Studies). He has edited, Ireland: Looking East (Brussels: P.I.E. Peter Lang, 2010). His other publications include: ‘From Phoenix to Tiger: French views of Ireland’, in Michael J. O’Sullivan and Rory Miller (eds.), What DidWe Do Right? Learning from Ireland’s ‘Miracle’ (Blackrock: Blackhall, 2010), pp. 41–53; ‘Les relations franco-irlandaises et la question algérienne aux Nations Unies’, in Syvlie Mikowski (ed.), Histoire et mémoire en France et en Irlande (Reims: Epure, 2011), pp. 261–87, and ‘Le référendum irlandais sur le pacte budgétaire européen’, Outre-terre, no. 32 : ‘L’euro sans l’Europe? (II)’ (printemps 2012), pp. 163–9. xxi Notes on Contributors DERMOT KEOGH, MA (NUI, UCD), Ph.D (EUI, Florence), is Emeritus Professor of History and Emeritus Professor of European Integration Studies at UCC. He is a member of the Royal Irish Academy and author of ten monographs, five edited books and 12 co-edited books. He has been twice a Fulbright Professor, twice a senior fellow, at Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, DC, Jean Monnet visiting Professor at EUI, Florence, and Burns Visiting Scholar at Boston College. His most recent publications are Jack Lynch – A Biography (Gill & Macmillan, Dublin, 2008); (with Ann Keogh) Sir Bertram Windle: The Honan Bequest and the Modernisation of University College Cork, 1904–1919 (Cork University Press, 2010) and ‘Ireland and France in the Twentieth Century – Contrasting and Conflictive Relationships’, Jane Conroy (ed.), Franco-Irish Connections: Essays, Memoirs and Poems in Honour of Pierre Joannon (Four Courts Press, Dublin, 2009), pp. 152–70. AOIFE KEOGH, M.Phil. (NUI, UCC), MA (EUI, Florence), is completing her doctorate at the European University Institute, Florence. She is the author (with Dermot Keogh) of ‘Ireland’s Application for Membership of the European Economic Community’, in Ariane Landuyt and Daniele Pasquinucci, Gli allargamenti della CEE/UE 1961–2004, vol. 1 (Il Mulino, Bologna, 2005), pp. 247–62; and (with Dermot Keogh) of ‘Ireland and European Integration: From the Treaty of Rome to Membership’, in Mark Callanan (ed.), Foundations of an Ever Closer Union: An Irish Perspective on the 50 Years since the Treaty of Rome (IPA, Dublin, 2007), pp. 6–50. MERVYN O’DRISCOLL, MA (NUI, UCC), Ph.D (Cambridge), Senior Lecturer in the School of History, University College Cork. He is a member of the Editorial Committee of the Dictionary of Irish Biography Project and the International Affairs Committee of the Royal Irish Academy. He is co-author of The European Parliament and the Euratom Treaty (Luxembourg, 2001), author of Ireland, Germany and the Nazis: Politics and Diplomacy (Dublin, 2004), co-editor of Ireland in World War Two (Cork, 2004) in addition to several articles and chapters on Irish foreign policy, international history and nuclear history. His most recent publication is ‘Multilateralism: From Plato’s Cave to the European Community, 1945–73’, in Ben Tonra et al (eds.), Irish Foreign Policy (Dublin, 2012). He is working on a monograph, The Republic of Ireland and West Germany 1949–1973, for Manchester University Press. xxii Contributors ...

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