We are a team of scholars who have come together to deliver assistance to individuals, families, students, academics, and organizations for Holocaust research, education, and public engagement.
We work in a variety of disciplines in the field of Holocaust Studies and have expertise that ranges across histories, theories, and languages. Our members are historians, teachers, media scholars, and librarians. We specialize in migrations, refugees, global history, the World Wars, zionism, resistance, children and the Holocaust, letters and letter-writing during the world wars, Holocaust representation in popular media, genealogy, Holocaust memory, and more. Our members are historians, teachers, media scholars, and librarians, working in a variety of fields that includes the study of the Holocaust, Genocide, Jewish History and Culture, Germany, Memory, Gender and Sexuality, Media, Migration, Refugee History, and Antisemitism.

We also have affiliations with Holocaust libraries, archives, institutions, and universities across the world, and our members have collaborated often with well-known institutions like the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, The Wiener Holocaust Library, the German Historical Institute, the Institute of Historical Research, and the European Holocaust Research Infrastructure.
Our researchers have organized international conferences; created museum exhibitions; been trained in and conducted oral testimony interviews with Holocaust survivors; created educational materials for classrooms; delivered Holocaust lessons to schools across the UK and USA; organized university seminars and reading groups; participated in and organized Holocaust Memorial Day/Yom HaShoah events, at both the national and local level; hosted Holocaust film series; and taught the Holocaust and related subjects at the university and grade-school level.
Our members have written peer-reviewed journal articles in The Journal of Holocaust Research, Holocaust Studies, Film & History, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Asian Studies Review, European Review of History, Jewish Culture and History, among others, and have contributed book-chapters in edited volume, and academic book reviews.
We have undertaken fellowships at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, the Holocaust Education Foundation at Northwestern University, Yad Vashem, the Wiesenthal Institue, the Jewish Museum in Prague, European Holocaust Research Infrastructure, Arolsen Archives, University of Southern California, National Archives of Australia, and Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, among others.
Our work has received funding from the Leo Baeck Institute, the Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/Non-Jewish Relations, the Past and Present Society, German History Society, the University of Oxford, The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities, the Royal Historical Society, Social History Society, and many others.
Our members have taught at the University of Oxford, University College London, the University of Manchester, and more.