Jan Tavernier, Ph.D. (2002), Catholic University of Louvain, is professor of Ancient Near Eastern Studies at the Université catholique de Louvain. His research axes are inter alia: Elamite and Old Persian languages, linguistic history of the Achaemenid Empire and interaction between the Arabian peninsula and Mesopotamia.Elynn Gorris, Ph.D. (2014), Catholic University of Louvain, is a Marie Curie Global Fellow at the Université catholique de Louvain and Macquarie University. Her research is focused on the political, diplomatic and commercial history of the Neo-Elamite kingdom and its neighbors. She recently published a monograph Power and Politics in the Neo-Elamite Kingdom (Leuven, 2020).Katrien De Graef, Ph.D. (2005), Ghent University, is Associated Professor of Assyriology and History of the Ancient Near East at Ghent University. She has published monographs and many articles on the socio-economic history of Babylonia and Elam, including The Middle East after the Fall of Ur: from Ešnunna and the Zagros to Susa (Oxford, 2022).