[1][2][3][4] The institute was based in London, and headed by Dr. Quintin Hoare, who was a joint founding editor with Branka Magaš of published quarterly online magazine called Bosnia Report.
[11] The board of trustees was chaired by historian Sir Noel Malcolm elected a fellow of the British Academy, alongside Dr. Bojan Bujić of Magdalen College, Cambridge historian Dr. Brendan Simms, and journalist Melanie McDonagh.
[1] Director was Dr. Quintin Hoare, familiar with the region of former Yugoslavia and fluent in Serbo-Croatian, along French, German, and Italian.
Associates were Nermin Mulalić, a lawyer from Sarajevo, who later worked at the Bosnian embassy in London; Helen Walasek, who has been deputy director of Bosnia and Herzegovina Heritage Rescue and an expert on the destroyed architectural heritage of Bosnia and Herzegovina and consultant for the Council of Europe on museums in the country; and editorial and administrative assistant was Vanda Teuta Vučičević.
[1] Among the institute many consultants were likes of Ivo Banac, Professor of History and director of the Council on European Studies at Yale University; Norman Cigar, Professor of Strategic Studies at the US Marine Corps Command and Staff College, and a senior associate at the Public International Law and Policy Group, Washington DC; Paul Garde, Emeritus professor of Slav linguistics at the University of Provence and French expert on the former Yugoslavia; Branka Magaš historian; Paul Williams, Professor of Law and International Relations at the American University, Washington DC.