curriculum vitae ERIK GRIMMER-SOLEM Wesleyan University Department of History 238 Church Street Middletown, Connecticut 06459-0002

Office: (860) 685-2397 Mobile: (860) 978-7771 Fax: (860) 685-2078 [email protected]

ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS 2007-present 2002-2007 1999-2002 1999

Associate Professor of History, Wesleyan University. Assistant Professor of History, Wesleyan University. Collegiate Assistant Professor and Harper Fellow, University of Chicago. Stipendiary Lecturer in Modern European History, Balliol College, Oxford.

EDUCATION 1999 1993 1992 1990

D.Phil. Economic and Social History, Nuffield College, Oxford. M.Phil. European Studies (High Performance), Darwin College, Cambridge. M.Sc. (Econ.) International Political Economy, London School of Economics. B.A. International Relations, Economics and German (Magna Cum Laude), Brigham Young University.

PUBLICATIONS Monographs 1. An Empire of Minds: German Political Economy and the World, 1880-1922 (under advance contract with Cambridge University Press). 2. The Rise of Historical Economics and Social Reform in Germany, 1864-1894. Oxford Historical Monographs. Oxford: Clarendon Press; New York: Oxford University Press, 2003. Articles and Book Chapters 1. “A Place in the Sun: Rethinking the Political Economy of German Overseas Expansion and Navalism Before the Great War.” In The Legitimacy of Power: New Perspectives on the History of Political Economy, ed. Robert Fredona and Sophus Reinert (under review). 2. “Geopolitik und Nationalökonomie vor dem Ersten Weltkrieg.” In Die Zeit um den Ersten Weltkrieg als Krisenzeit der Nationalökonomen, ed. Michael Trautwein, Studien zur Entwicklung der ökonomischen Theorie. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot (forthcoming in press). 3. “Germany: From Sciences of State to Modern Economics.” In The Routledge Handbook to the History of Global Economic Thought, ed. Vincent Barnett, 86-101. London and New York: Routledge, 2015.

Grimmer-Solem cv 2 4. “The Mature Limited Access Order at the Doorstep: Imperial Germany and Contemporary China in Transition,” Constitutional Political Economy 26 (2015): 103120. 5. “‘Selbständiges verantwortliches Handeln‘: Generalleutnant Hans Graf von Sponeck und das Schicksal der Juden in der Ukraine, Juni-Dezember 1941,” Militärgeschichtliche Zeitschrift 72 (2013): 23-50. An article about this essay appeared in the German newsmagazine DER SPIEGEL (No. 52, Dec. 23, 2013) and it was the subject of a response by the German Government in the Bundestag on February 17, 2014. 6. “National Identity in the Vanquished State: German and Japanese Postwar Historiography from a Transnational Perspective,” History and Theory 51 (May 2012): 280-291. 7. “Die preußische Bildungspolitik im Spannungsfeld des internationalen Kulturwettbewerbs: der Fall Japan (1869-1914).” In Kulturstaat und Bürgergesellschaft. Preußen, Deutschland und Europa im 19. und frühen 20. Jahrhundert, ed. Bärbel Holtz and Wolfgang Neugebauer, 203-221. Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 2010. 8. “‘Every True Friend of the Fatherland’: Gustav Schmoller and the ‘Jewish Question’, 1916-17.” Leo Baeck Institute Year Book 52 (2007): 149-163. 9. “The Professors’ Africa: Economists, the Elections of 1907, and the Legitimation of German Imperialism.” German History 25, no. 3 (2007): 313-347. 10. “German Social Science, Meiji Conservatism, and the Peculiarities of Japanese History.” Journal of World History 16, no. 2 (June 2005): 187-222. 11. “Imperialist Socialism of the Chair: Gustav Schmoller and German Weltpolitik, 18971905.” In Wilhelminism and its Legacies: Crisis, Continuity, and the Meanings of Reform in Germany, 1890-1930, ed. Geoff Eley and James Retallack, 106-21. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2003. 12. Commentary: David Lindenfeld's “Grand Historical Narratives or Intellectual Strategy.” In The Historicity of Economics: Continuities and Discontinuities of Historical Thought in 19th and 20th Century Economics, ed. Heino H. Nau and Betram Schefold, 78-85. Berlin, Heidelberg and New York: Springer, 2002. 13. With Roberto Romani. “In Search of Full Empirical Reality: Historical Political Economy, 1870-1900.” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought 6 (Autumn 1999): 333-364. 14. With Roberto Romani. “The Historical School, 1870-1900: A Cross-National Reassessment.” History of European Ideas 24 (1998): 267-299. Encyclopedia Entries 1. “Engel’s Law.” In Encyclopedia of Consumer Culture, ed. Dale Southerton, 527-529.

Grimmer-Solem cv 3 London: Sage, 2011. 2. “Empire and Imperialism: The German Colonial Empire.” In Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern World, vol. 3, ed. Peter N. Stearns, 129-137. New York: Oxford University Press, 2008. 3. “Schmoller, Gustav Friedrich von (1838-1917).” In Encyclopedia of Law and Society: American and Global Perspectives, vol. 3, ed. David S. Clark, 1348. Los Angeles: Sage Publications, 2007. Book Reviews 1. Wissensproduktion im Staat: Das königlich preußische statistische Bureau 1860-1914. By Michael C. Schneider. German History (online March 4, 2015; forthcoming in press). 2. Walter Rathenau: Weimar's Fallen Statesman. By Shulamit Volkov. Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies 33, No. 1 (Fall 2014): 138-141. 3. Koloniale Verhandlungen: Gerichtsbarkeit, Verwaltung und Herrschaft in Kamerun 1884-1916. By Ulrike Schaper. German History 31, No. 3 (September 2013): 424. 4. Optimizing the German Workforce: Labor Administration from Bismarck to the Economic Miracle. By David Meskill. American Historical Review 116 (December 2011): 1586-1587. 5. Alabama in Africa: Booker T. Washington, the German Empire, and the Globalization of the New South. By Andrew Zimmerman. Enterprise and Society 12 (December 2011): 926-929. 6. Die Ältere Historische Schule: Wirtschaftstheoretische Beiträge und wirtschaftspolitische Vorstellungen. Edited by Christian Scheer. European Journal of the History of Economic Thought 13, No. 3 (September 2006): 449-452. 7. Statistics and the German State: The Making of Modern Economic Knowledge. By J. Adam Tooze. H-NET BOOK REVIEW, published by [email protected] (September, 2005). 8. Heinrich Pesch on Solidarist Economics: Excerpts from the Lehrbuch der Nationalökonomie. By R.J. Ederer. The Journal of Economic History 60, no. 2 (June 2000): 555-556. 9. August Sartorius von Waltershausen: The Worker's Movement in the United States, 1879-1885. Edited by David Montgomery and Marcel van der Linden. The Journal of Economic History 59, No. 4 (December 1999): 1100-1101. Work in Progress 1. Liberal Numbers: the Prussian Statistical Bureau and German Politics, 1860-82

Grimmer-Solem cv 4 (monograph). 2. Labor Frontiers: Henry Farnam and the German History of American Trade Unions, 1878-1900 (article). 3. Institutions and Organizational Theory in History: the Case of the Carl Zeiss Optical Works (article). INVITED TALKS AND PANELS 2015: Institut Historique Allemand/Deutsches Historisches Institut, Paris: L’Etat social bismarckien: transferts et genèse (July 2-3, 2015). Invited talk: “Bismarck d’un continent à l’autre: le transfert d’idées politiques et sociales vers le Japon et les États-Unis” [Bismarck From One Continent to Another: The Transfer of Socio-political Ideas to Japan and the United States.] 2014: Walter Eucken Institute, Freiburg, Germany: Germany’s Catch-Up Development, from Limited to Open Access to Political and Economic Organizations and Competition (February 28–March 1, 2014). Invited panelist: The Mature Limited Access Order at the Doorstep: What Imperial Germany Can tell us about China Today.” 2013: Harvard Business School: New Perspectives on the History of Political Economy (November 1-2, 2013). Invited panelist: “A Place in the Sun: Rethinking the Political Economy of German Overseas Expansion and Navalism before the Great War.” 2013: Walter Eucken Institute, Freiburg, Germany: Workshop on the Theory of Limited and Open Access Orders: The Case of Germany (March 14-15, 2013). Invited panelist: “The Mature Limited Access Order at the Doorstep: What Imperial Germany can tell us about China Today.” 2012: Verein für Socialpolitik (German Economics Association), Auschuss für die Geschichte der Wirtschaftswissenschaften, Deutsches Literaturarchiv, Marbach, Germany: Die Zeit um den Ersten Weltkrieg als Krisenzeit der Nationalökonomen (June 14-16, 2012). Invited panelist: “Geopolitik und Staatswissenschaft im Ersten Weltkrieg.” 2008: Cambridge University, Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities: Social Policy Across Borders: Commonalities, Convergence and Paradoxes in Connectivity, 1850-1950 (September 12-13, 2008). Invited panelist: “Reform Redux: The Second Life of the German Social Question in the Colonies, 1900-1918. 2008: Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences, Berlin: Kulturstaat und Bürgergesellschaft (April 3-5, 2008). Invited panelist: “Die preußische Hochschulpolitik im Spannungsfeld des internationalen Kulturwettbewerbs: der Fall Japan (1869-1914).” 2007: Harvard University, Center for History and Economics, Faculty of Arts and Sciences: Invited roundtable guest for “Histories of Economic Thought” (November 7, 2007). 1999: Norwegian School of Management (Handelshøyskole B.I.), Sandvika, Norway (June 7, 1999). Invited talk: “Institutions and Organizational Theory in History: Gustav Schmoller and the Case of the Carl Zeiss Optical Works.” 1998: Cambridge University, Leverhulme/Thyssen Historical Political Economy Conference (October 2-3, 1998). Invited panelist: “The Fickle Servant of Progress: History and Social Reform in Germany, 1870-1914.” 1998: Oxford University, Faculty of Modern History, Seminar in Modern German History, European Studies Centre, St. Antony's College, Oxford (January 26, 1998). Invited talk: “Economists, Social Reformers and the Rediscovery of the Mittelstand, 1860-1880.”

Grimmer-Solem cv 5 1997: Cambridge University, Centre for History and Economics, King's College, History and Economics Seminar (November 19, 1997). Invited talk: “Historical Political Economy, 1870-1900.” 1996: London School of Economics, Centre for the Philosophy of the Natural and Social Sciences (October 24, 1996). Invited talk: “Historical Political Economy in the European Dimension 1870-1900: An Overview.” CONFERENCE PAPERS 2015: German Congress for Economic History, University of Münster, Germany (March 11-14, 2015). Section 22 (F102) Violence and Social Order? The Political Economy of Germany in the 19th and 20th centuries. “The Mature Limited Access Order at the Doorstep: Imperial Germany.” 2009: Fifth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Alexander von Humboldt, 2009: Travels Between Europe and the Americas, Free University of Berlin (July 27-31, 2009): “Henry Farnam, August Sartorius von Waltershausen and the German History of American Trade Unions, 1878-1900.” 2006: German Studies Association, Pittsburgh (September 28-October 1, 2006): “China's German Syndrome: Germany's Long Nineteenth Century and the Rise of China.” 2005: German Studies Association, Milwaukee (September 29-October 2, 2005): “‘Every True Friend of the Fatherland’: Hugo Preuss, Gustav Schmoller and Max Warburg in the debate over the ‘Jewish Question,’ 1916-17.” 2004: German Studies Association, Washington D.C. (October 8-10, 2004): “The Empire of Ambitions: Professors, Colonial Policy, and the Radicalization of German Weltpolitik.” 2004: European Social Science History Conference, Berlin (March 24-27, 2004): “The Professors' Africa: Colonial Reform, the Kolonialpolitisches Aktionskomité, and the Radicalization of German Weltpolitik, 1904-1914.” 2001: German Studies Association, Washington D.C. (October 4-7, 2001): “Beyond AntiModernism and Pathological Modernity: German Social Science and Japan, 1880-1914.” 1998: European Society for the History of Economic Thought Conference, University of Bologna (February 27-March 1, 1998): “Preserving Estate in an Age of Class: German Social Reformers, the Struggle for the Mittelstand, and the Decline of Economic Liberalism, 1860-1880.” PANELS MODERATED AND PAPERS OR BOOKS DISCUSSED 2014: European Social Science History Conference, University of Vienna, Austria (April 23-26, 2014): Session A-14—Invited book panelist for Andrew Zimmerman, Alabama in Africa: Booker T. Washington, the German Empire, and the Globalization of the New South (Princeton 2010). 2014: Business History Conference, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany (March 13-15, 2014): Session 6D—The Business of Empire (discussant and moderator). 2011: Shasha Conference on the Histories of Race, Wesleyan University (April 8-10, 2011): Session VI—The Scientific Origins of Nazi Race Theory (moderator). 2010: Association for the Study of Nationalities 2010 World Convention, Columbia University (April 15-17, 2010). Invited book panelist for Vejas Liulevicius, The German Myth of the East: 1800 to the Present (Oxford 2009). 2010: German Studies Association, Oakland, CA (October 7-10, 2010): German Expansionism

Grimmer-Solem cv 6 and Empire at Home and Abroad (moderator). 2006: German Studies Association, Pittsburgh (September 28-October 1, 2006): “Inter- and Intracultural Identity: Religious and Ethnic Discourses in the Nineteenth Century (moderator). 2004: German Studies Association, Washington D.C. (October 8-10, 2004): Anti-Semitism, Liberalism, and Zionism, 1811-1896 (moderator). 2000: Continuities and Discontinuities of Historical Thought in 19th and 20th Century Economics, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt (November 24-25, 2000). Invited discussant for D.F. Lindenfeld, “Grand Historical Narrative or Intellectual Strategy: The Institutional Establishment of the Historical School of Political Economy in the 19th Century.” MEDIA APPEARANCES, INTERVIEWS, AND PUBLIC DISCUSSIONS 2015: • “Remembering Lusitania A Century Later,” The Hartford Courant (May 9, 2015). • “Verteidigungsministerium gibt OK: Sponeck-Kaserne wird in Südpfalz-Kaserne umbenannt,“ Pfalz Express (4/14/2015). • “Bürgerinitaitive “Graf Sponeck” wehrt sich gegen Umbenennung der Germersheimer Kaserne,” Pfalz Express (4/11/2015). • “Gedenktafel wirft Fragen auf,“ Nordkurier (3/17/2015). • “Vorwürfe gegen Wehrmachtsgeneral: Der Stolperstein muss wieder raus,” Weser Kurier (3/10/2015). • “Not So Good, After All,” World War II Today 29, no. 5 (January/February 2015): 13. 2014: • Umbenennung der Graf-von-Sponeck-Kaserne, radio interview on Südwestrundfunk (7/24/2014). • Antwort der Bundesregierung, Ehrung des mutmaßlichen Kriegsverbrechers Hans Graf von Sponeck, Deutscher Bundestag, 18. Wahperiode, Drucksache 18/2167 (7/21/2014). • “Umbenennung Sponeck-Kaserne: Wie soll sie künftig heißen? Lebhafte Diskussion um Vorschläge,” Pfalz Express (4/8/2014). • “Umbenennung Sponeck-Kaserne: Bürgermeister Schaile will Dialog und Bürgerbeteiligung bei Namensfindung,” Pfalz Express (3/7/2014). • Antwort der Bundesregierung, Ehrung eines möglichen Kriegsverbrechers durch die Bundeswehr, Deutscher Bundestag, 18. Wahlperiode, Drucksache 18/538 (2/17/2014). • Ehrung eines möglichen Kriegsverbrechers durch die Bundeswehr, Deutscher Bundestag, 18. Wahlperiode, Drucksache 18/408 (1/30/2014). 2013: • “Mord Auf der Krim,” DER SPIEGEL (12/21/2013). • “Coming to terms with the Nazi Past in Contemporary Germany.” Chinese Social Sciences Today (9/13/2013). HONORS, PRIZES, GRANTS AND FELLOWSHIPS 2014-15: Project Grant, Wesleyan University (research grant). 2013-14: Project Grant, Wesleyan University (research grant). 2013: Binswanger Prize for Excellence in Teaching, Wesleyan University. The prize recognizes

Grimmer-Solem cv 7 outstanding faculty members determined by a selection committee of Wesleyan emeriti, current faculty, and members of the Alumni Association's Executive Committee. Recommendations are solicited from members of the last ten graduating classes, the current junior and senior classes, and current graduate students. 2012: Member (by election), Ausschuss für die Geschichte der Wirtschaftswissenschaften, Verein für Socialpolitik (German Economics Association). 2011-12: Project grant, Wesleyan University (research grant). 2010-11: Project grant, Wesleyan University (research grant). 2008-12: Official guest, Ausschuss für die Geschichte der Wirtschaftswissenschaften, Verein für Sozialpolitik (German Economics Association). 2007-08: Project grant, Wesleyan University (research grant). 2007: Meigs Fund small grant, Department of History, Wesleyan University (research grant). 2005-06: Project grant, Wesleyan University (research grant). 2005: Carol A. Baker ’81 Memorial Prize for excellence in teaching and research, Wesleyan University. This is awarded annually to a junior faculty member in the social and behavioral sciences to encourage and recognize excellence in teaching and research. 2004-05: Project grant, Wesleyan University (research grant). 2003-04: Project grant, Wesleyan University (research grant). 2003: NEH Summer Stipend junior faculty nominee, Wesleyan University. 2003: Meigs Fund small grant, Department of History, Wesleyan University (research grant). 2002-03: Project grant, Wesleyan University (research grant). 1999-2002: William Rainey Harper Fellowship, Society of Fellows in the Liberal Arts, University of Chicago. 1996-98: Senior Research Studentship, Centre for History and Economics, King's College, Cambridge University. 1996-98: Research grant, Fritz Thyssen Foundation. 1996-98: Research grant, Leverhulme Trust. 1996: Research grant, Arnold, Bryce and Read Fund, Oxford University. 1996: Research grant, Faculty of History/Committee for Graduate Studies, Oxford University. 1996-98: Research grant, Nuffield College, Oxford University. 1994-98: Oxford Overseas Bursary, Oxford University (tuition grant). 1994-98: Overseas Research Student Award, Committee of Vice Chancellors and Principals of the Universities of the United Kingdom (tuition grant). 1994-96: Studentship, Nuffield College, Oxford University. 1992: Cambridge Overseas Trust Bursary, Cambridge University (tuition grant). 1989: The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi. 1989: Alvina S. Barrett Scholarship, Brigham Young University (tuition grant). 1988: Golden Key National Honor Society. COURSES TAUGHT Wesleyan University 1. Introductory seminars: • History 120: Empire, Nationhood and the Quest for German Unity, 1815-1990. • History 163: European Economic History Since 1700. 2. Lecture survey courses:

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History 263: Inside Nazi Germany, 1933-1945. History 268: The Origins of Global Capitalism—Economic History, 1400-1800. History 280: The Industrial Revolution in Global Context—Economic History Since 1800.

3. Advanced seminars: • History 319: Crisis, Creativity and Modernity in the Weimar Republic, 1918-1933. • History 347: The Social Question and the Rise of the Welfare State in Germany. • History 362: Issues in Contemporary Historiography. • History 376: The Holocaust. 4. Group tutorials: • College of Social Studies 240: The Emergence of Modern Europe. • College of Social Studies 340: Post-Imperial History, 1945-1990. 5. Graduate discussion courses and seminars: • Graduate Liberal Studies Program: Nation, State and Empire in Modern Germany. • Graduate Liberal Studies Program: Inside Nazi Germany, 1933-1945. • Graduate Liberal Studies Program: The Origins of Global Capitalism—Economic History Since 1600. The University of Chicago 1. Core courses: • History 13100: History of Western Civilization 1 (Ancient Greek and Roman Civilization). • History 13200: History of Western Civilization 2 (Middle Ages, Renaissance and Reformation). • History 13300: History of Western Civilization 3 (Modern European History). • Social Science 27500-27700: French Civilization (taught in Paris). 2. Advanced seminar: • History 23500: Social Reform and the Welfare State in the Nineteenth Century. Balliol College, Oxford University: • • • • • •

Honour Moderations: “Society, Nation and Empire, 1815-1914.” General History XI, 1799-1856. General History XII, 1856-1914. General History III, 1914-1945. General History XIV, 1941-1973. Final Honours School, Comparative History and Historiography. Supervised second and third-year students writing extended comparative history essays.

B.A. HONORS THESES ADVISED 1. Max Shafer-Landau, “Philip’s Italy, 1556-1598: A Microcosm of Spain’s Empire”

Grimmer-Solem cv 9 (2015). Awarded High Honors in History. (Co-advised with Laurie Nussdorfer) 2. Gillian Mahoney, “The Palace and the Castle: A Tale of Divided Memory in United Berlin” (2015). Awarded Honors in History. 3. Madalene Smith-Huemer, “The Apolitical Activist: East Germany's New Forum and the History of German Grassroots Movements” (2014). Awarded Honors in History and German Studies, the Robbins Prize in History, and the Blankenagel Prize in German Studies. 4. Carolyn Lipp, “A Fragile Home in the Waiting Room: The Ambivalent Postwar Relationship between Americans and Jewish Displaced Persons in U.S.-Occupied Bavaria” (2014). Awarded High Honors in History, the Dutcher Prize for highest excellence in History, and nominated for University Honors. 5. Sara Lynch, “The Survival of Friedensreich Hundertwasser: Utopian Vision Consistencies and Contradictions” (2013). Awarded Honors in History. (Co-advised with Oliver Holmes) 6. Guangshuo Yang, “The History of the Normalization Movement in the Chinese University.” (2011). Awarded Honors in CSS. 7. Anneliese Rapp, “Manipulating Modernity: The Neue Frau Votes for Hitler” (2011). Awarded Honors in CSS. 8. Anna Mageras, “Nesting the Nation: Youthful Conceptions of Nature, Culture, and Modernity in Wilhelmine Germnany” (2010). Awarded High Honors in History, the Dutcher Prize for highest excellence in History, and the Juan Roura-Parella Prize by the University Honors Committee. 9. Heather Stanton, “Where German Hearts are Molded: Historical Memory and State Legitimation in the German Democratic Republic, 1945-1989” (2010). Awarded High Honors in History and the Prentice Prize in German Studies. 10. Ari Edmundson, “Therefore Choose Life - Historiography and the Encounter of Holocaust Testimony: Towards a Redemptive Historical Practice” (2009). Awarded High Honors in History and the Robbins Memorial Prize. (Co-advised with Nat Greene) 11. John McNeil, “Pacifists at War: The German Green Party’s Convention on the Kosovo War.” (2008). Awarded High Honors in CSS. 12. Stephen Lazer, “The Mediatization of the Imperial Knights in Württemberg.”(2005). Awarded High Honors in History and the Robbins Memorial Prize. 13. Julie Ren, “Are you a Berliner? Integrating German-Born Descendants of Immigrants.” (2005). Awarded Honors in CSS. (Co-advised with Sarah Wiliarty). 14. Vincent Veccione, “Over Forty Hours a Week: A Multi-Themed Approach to Work Time History.” (2007). Awarded Honors in History. 15. Susanna Morrison, “The French Referendum: Contestation and the Constitution.” (2007). Awarded High Honors in CSS. 16. Elena Green, “Great Britain and Czechoslovakia: A Study in National Myth-Making and Policy Formation.” (2008). Awarded Honors in History. 17. Fletcher Durant, “The World of Unity: Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi and the PanEuropean Movement, from the Paris Peace to the Briand Plan.” (2003). Awarded Honors in History. 18. Katie Newkirk, “Women in the Weimar Republic: New Women, New Problems.” (2003). Awarded Honors in History.

Grimmer-Solem cv 10 ACADEMIC SERVICE 2014-15: Educational Policy Committee, Ad Hoc Committee on Syllabi. Wesleyan University. 2010-12: Co-Chair, College of Social Studies, Wesleyan University. 2009-12: Director, John E. Andrus Center for Public Affairs, Wesleyan University. 2009-12: Chair, Davenport Grant selection committee, Wesleyan University. 2009-12: Social Sciences Computing Committee, Wesleyan University. 2009-10: Chair, modern Russian history search committee, History Department, Wesleyan University. 2009-10: Common Life Committee, History Department, Wesleyan University. 2008-13: Campus committee, Vanderbilt-Wesleyan-Wheaton Program in Regensburg, Germany. 2007-08: Board member, Friends of the Wesleyan Library. 2007-08: Search committee, Mellon Fellowship, Center for the Humanities, Wesleyan University. 2007-08: Honors Committee, Department of History, Wesleyan University. 2007: Davenport Grant selection committee, History Department, Wesleyan University. 2006: Resident Director, Vanderbilt-Wesleyan-Wheaton Program in Germany, Regensburg, Germany. 2005: Davenport Grant selection committee, College of Social Studies, Wesleyan University. 2004-05: Chair, Common Life Committee, Department of History, Wesleyan University. 2004: Davenport Grant selection committee, History Department Wesleyan University. 2004: Faculty search interviewer and referee, German Studies Department, Wesleyan University. 2003-04: John W. Macy Summer Internship in Public Administration selection committee, Wesleyan University. 2003: Search interviewer and referee, Mellon Fellowship, Center for the Humanities, Wesleyan University. 2002-04: Honors Committee, Department of History, Wesleyan University. 2002: Program faculty member, University of Chicago Study Abroad Program, Paris. 2001-02: Faculty Fellow, Compton House, Shoreland Hall, University of Chicago Housing. Conducted colloquia and provided faculty contact to students in a university house. 2001-02: Faculty Sponsor, Historical Sociology and Comparative Political Economy Workshop, funded by the Council on Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Chicago. 1999-2000: Western Civilization module committee, Collegiate Division of the Social Sciences University of Chicago. Devised the new 19th century module used for the University of Chicago’s Western Civilization sequence. 1996: JCR President, Nuffield College, Oxford University (Hilary Term 1996). Managed and coordinated all student affairs as student body president of an Oxford graduate college. 1995: Panel discussion leader for AIESEC-Oxford on European Monetary Union (March 1995). Led a panel that included Charles Goodhart (formerly of the Bank of England), Patrick Minford (formerly H.M. Treasury) and Robert Raymond (Director-General of the European Monetary Institute). An article relating to this panel discussion appeared in The European (17-23 March 1995, p. 18). JOURNAL EDITORSHIP Co-editor (with Joachim Zweynert and Nils Goldschmidt), Schmollers Jahrbuch: Journal of Contextual Economics (beginning January 2016).

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MANUSCRIPT REVIEW Bloomsbury Publishing Cambridge University Press University of Toronto Press History and Theory The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought Journal of Institutional Economics LANGUAGES German (fluent written and spoken), French (basic written; limited spoken) Norwegian (basic written; limited spoken). PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS American Historical Association Association for the Study of Nationalities Ausschuss für die Geschichte der Wirtschaftswissenschaften im Verein für Socialpolitik German Studies Association