London Consortium
London Consortium
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Eric W. Nye is Professor of English and adjunct in Religious Studies at the University of Wyoming in Laramie. He teaches courses in nineteenth-century British literature, Milton, the Bible, and book history. Having founded the English Honors program at Wyoming early in his career, he continues to direct it regularly and is an officer in Phi Beta Kappa. Most of the last decade he has directed the international student essay contest of the Jane Austen Society of North America, and he is the honorary North American Treasurer of the Bibliographical Society of London. A member of Queens’ College, Cambridge, he spent 2012-2013 as a Visiting Fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge, where he wrote his recent book, John Kemble’s Gibraltar Journal: The Spanish Expedition of the Cambridge Apostles, 1830-1831 (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015). In his free time he enjoys rare book collecting, restoration of historical book bindings, and choral singing (bass in Barts Choir, London). He did his first degree at St Olaf College and graduate degrees at the University of Chicago.
Carol Frost earned her BA at Dartmouth College and PhD at Cambridge University. She has been professor of geology at the University of Wyoming since 1983. For the past three years she served as Division Director for Earth Sciences at the National Science Foundation in Arlington, Virginia. An isotope geochemist and petrologist, her research focuses on the evolution of the continental crust, origin of granites, and application of isotopic tracers to environmental problems. Frost’s published research record includes more than 125 scientific articles in peer-reviewed journals and books reporting the results of over $11 million in contracts and grants. Frost's teaching recognitions include the Carnegie Foundation/CASE Professor of the Year for Wyoming. She is co-author of the textbook Essentials of Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology published by Cambridge University Press in 2014.
Linda Bolton has taught for AIFS for seven years. She has published 12 books on 19th and 20thc artists and art movements. She also works for the Development Department of Tate Modern where she speaks to their corporate sponsors and at the National Gallery where she works within their Education Department. Some of her work there has been recorded by the eminent documentary film maker Fred Wiseman.
Nicole D’Adamo originally worked in the study abroad sector, organizing student programs around western and central Europe, particularly in Italy, where she spent much of her childhood and where she completed an Erasmus program as part of her degree. In 2003, she started teaching British Life and Cultures (BLC) to American University students, focusing on the historical and contemporary relationship between America and Britain. Building on a background in politics, she has taken interest and enjoyment from working with American students and indeed completed an MA in United States Studies from the Institute of Americas. Nicole has a Distinction in Professional Certificate for Teaching and Learning at Higher Education from the Institute of Education in London and is a fellow of the Higher Education Academy. Along with BLC, she teaches The History of London and particularly enjoys leading student groups on field trips and imparting an enthusiasm for our culture heritage. Nicole lives in St Albans, Hertfordshire with her husband and two young sons.
Educated at the Universities of Reading, Bologna and Warwick. He has worked as a Researcher at the European University Institute in Florence, and as a Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Principal Lecturer at the University of North London and London Guildhall University. Latterly he has been a Reader in European Economics at London Metropolitan University. He has published extensively, including books for McGraw-Hill, Prentice–Hall and Routledge, on the European Union, Contemporary Europe and Italy. He also has made numerous contributions in books, as well as publishing articles in refereed journals such as the British Journal of Industrial Relations and European Dossiers. His current research interests include the political economy of monetary union, economic policy in the Euro zone, migration, economic philosophy, economic systems and the political economy of contemporary Italy. He has extensive experience and expertise in teaching North American students, and his teaching interests include the economics and politics of Europe and the EU, international economic and international relations, as well as many other aspects of Economics and contemporary issues.