Émile Durkheim Research Unit: Crisis Analysis

Welcome to the Homepage of the Émile Durkheim Research Unit: Crisis Analysis

Émile Durkheim Saal
© Privat

The Émile Durkheim Research Unit focuses on the comparative-historical analysis of poly- and meta-crises of the 21st century.

It is based on the principles of internationality, interdisciplinarity, the Fellow principle and the formation of a thematically focused learning community on “crisis analyses” through Fellowships, which designate different disciplines and regions that are of particular importance in post-global times.


News

Reflecting on the Summer School Crisis Analysis
It was a truly insightful and engaging Summer School that we had the pleasure of conducting at our institution from 14.05 to 16.05.2025, conceptualized by Werner Gephart and organized by Jure Leko. Together, we explored the pressing challenges of our time – from climate change, war, and the rise of authoritarian systems to the long-term effects of the pandemic. 💡 Particularly valuable was the engagement with the theories of Émile Durkheim and Pierre Bourdieu, which not only offer historical insights but also allow us to analyze today’s societal challenges in a rigorous way. 📚 Key Highlights of the Week: Introduction to the theoretical foundations of crisis analysis by renowned experts including Werner Gephart (Bonn), Gisèle Sapiro (Paris), Paul Lagneau-Ymonet (Paris), Jörg Blasius (Bonn), and Daria Vystavkina (Bonn/Köln/Odessa).The program offered intensive discussions on theoretical, methodological, and artistic approaches—alongside personal reflections on crisis experiences concerning the definition of pheneomena as crisis loaden, semantics of crisis, explanations and reactions as well as resilience strategies to crises. Practical application of analytical tools to different crisis areas, from politics to economics.🤝 The Summer School provided an interdisciplinary platform for learning, networking, and collaborative research – in an atmosphere of collegial exchange at eye level. 🙏 A heartfelt thank you to all participants, speakers, and to Jure Leko for the seamless organization! We look back on three intensive days filled with input, discussions, and new ideas. 📖 We look forward to continuing the conversation on crisis analysis and resilience, and to future projects. 📸 Meanwhile, take a look at some impressions and contents from our academic exchange here: Photos
Democracy in America? Re-Reading Alexis de Tocqueville
After the globally attention-grabbing speech by Vice President J.D. Vance at the Munich Security Conference and the approving endorsement by President Trump, a number of unresolved questions arise for academic observers: How is it possible that the alleged weakening of democracy in European societies, through the supposed erosion of freedom of speech, is seen as a greater danger than Russia's military aggression under Putin, which aims to restore imperial power? And how is it conceivable that this complete miscalculation comes from a political camp that ennobles the storming of the Capitol - the symbol of American democracy - through a subsequent collective pardon of the perpetrators? How can the administration's actions be understood, not only publicly criticizing judges but also making massive interventions in the judicial system, while ideologically placing the president above the law? In Old Europe, we recognize this as a hallmark of absolutist rule. But how can all of this be reconciled with the observations and insights of Alexis de Tocqueville, who studied the particular sociological reasons behind Démocratie en Amérique? Therefore, a re-reading of this great classic of political science and sociology seems worthwhile, in order to better understand today's contradictions and misunderstandings in the interpretation of democracy, which are currently calling into question long-established transatlantic relations – as an expression of a global crisis of this form of domination. To address these questions, we invite you to a panel discussion with renowned international guests. We would be delighted to welcome you to this event.
A festival of thought with Homi Bhaba
With regard to Homi Bhaba the workshop led to an intensive exchange with all those who have contributed to a postcolonial view of “law” at the former Käte Hamburger Center for Advanced Study in the Humanities and the questions of justice for the location for law and normativities.
Symposiumreport „Discourses of Justice. Indicators of Crises?“
The Émile Durkheim Research Center: Crisis Analysis addresses the central question of justice in the post-global era and focuses on the comparative-historical analysis of poly- and meta-crises. The aim is to analyze both the inherent logic/rationality of the individual crisis spheres and their interconnectedness - with the aim of making the knowledge generated available to other social actors and entering into a dialogue with them.

Events

Research Symposium: War as a Crisis of Society?
Kunstmusuem Bonn
10:00 AM
This symposium is being organised in cooperation with the Kunstmuseum Bonn. Further information will follow soon.
„Game over? Mit Risikomanagement unsere Zukunft sichern“
Argelanderstraße 1, ...
Whole Day
On the second day of the STEM vacation program of the Sparkasse KölnBonn Knowledge Foundation, students aged 16 and over will have the opportunity to learn ...
Working Group "Crisis Analysis"
Émile Durkheim-Forschungs...
04:00 PM - 06:00 PM
The Emile Durkheim Research Unit cordially invites you to the sixth meeting of the Working Group on Crisis Analyses. The aim of the working group is to ...
Interdisciplinary Summer School: Crisis Analysis
Argelanderstraße 1, ...
10:00 AM
What We Can Learn from the Classical Theories of Durkheim and Bourdieu Current crises affect nearly all aspects of human existence and all spheres of late ...

Die Forschungsstelle
© Jörgen Rumberg, Axel Grunhöfer, Werner Gephart

Research Unit

A thematically centered research center for the analysis of contemporary crises is being set up at the Rhenish Friedrich Wilhelm University of Bonn as a further knowledge format of the university of excellence.

It is committed to the principles of internationality, interdisciplinarity and the fellow principle, which aims to find new questions and solutions in a learning community. With Émile Durkheim (1858-1917), it not only draws on a founding figure of the social sciences, but also opens the view to global reception from Marcel Mauss to Pierre Bourdieu and Bruno Latour, Mary Douglas to Cotterell, Talcott Parsons and J.C. Alexander, to name just a few. In view of Durkheim's delayed reception in Germany, it makes sense to honour the author, who was influenced by his study stays in Germany, which at the same time ostracized him under National Socialism. Despite a focus on the social sciences, Durkheim in particular offers numerous starting points for spanning the scientific cultures between the humanities and cultural studies as well as the natural sciences and for bringing them into a fruitful dialogue.

Subject of research

The research center would like to deal with challenges of the 21st century that manifest themselves in various crises, which were first analyzed in their breadth and interconnectedness by Durkheim. We encounter these developments as consequences of climate change, as a return of war, as a dramatic crisis of democracy, the inequality of the distribution of wealth and prosperity on a global scale or the crises of the “mind” in times of extensive digitalization and the advancement of artificial intelligence. We can expand this list to include financial crises, pandemic crises, crises of meaning and interpretation, etc., since almost every place in the “human condition” and all spheres of modernity (Max Weber) are susceptible to crises. They trigger discourses about justice and, taken as a whole, lead to a kind of “crisis of justice” that radiates into all areas of society. Discontent, resistance and anger about existing living conditions are expressed worldwide in a feeling of injustice that requires closer analysis. Depending on the media-influenced attention, these crisis phenomena are being researched in the respective disciplines of the natural sciences and humanities. However, the systematic-comparative analysis of the causes, consequences and interconnections of these crisis phenomena, as carried out in the individual disciplines, is neglected and deserves special research efforts.

La condition humaine, 2016 2023.jpg
© Werner Gephart
Multiple Crisis, 2023.jpg
© Werner Gephart

Research objectives

Here, the concept of crisis, which Durkheim reserved in his study of the division of labor for the so-called “anomic”, i.e. insufficiently regulated division of labor, has an appeal character. As soon as a phenomenon is recognized as being in crisis and defined as such in public, a call is made to action. The question remains open as to what can be learned from crises that have already been overcome: the earthquake in Chili, the Spanish flu, from which Max Weber died in 1920 (!) or the horror of the world wars. This resulted in an unmistakable number of individual analyzes and suggestions for coping, which, of course, were not put to the test of comparative analysis. What about the perception and definition of what counts as a “crisis”, i.e. the “découpage de l’objet” as Durkheim calls it? Are there similarities in the dynamics of the crisis unfolding and the structural upheavals associated with it? Post-socialist societies have often been described as “anomic” transformations. Are there comparable coping strategies that are also transferable? And finally, crises are obviously intertwined to lead to accumulations and seemingly inextricable entanglements, which German constitutional law and its judges in Karlsruhe initially did not want to know about in the judgment of November 17, 2023, by the transfer of the funds that the federal government Originally provided in 2021 to combat the Corona crisis, may not be used for climate protection, i.e. the nature crisis. So would there be a need for a universal state of emergency or other constitutional options to take the interconnectedness of the crises into account?

And how could such interdependencies be interrupted? How do we deal with this seemingly inextricable intertwining of “polycrises” without losing the powers of systemic and personal resilience?

Research methods

Given such a complex problem, it is obvious that these questions cannot be analyzed and possibly answered by the individual researcher. And it is not enough to retreat to a single discipline; this only seems to be possible through the interaction of the scientific cultures of the natural sciences and the humanities. If the ecological crisis is already a global one, this also applies to crises in democracy or questions of meaning-making. It is all the more necessary to move away from a Eurocentric perspective in order to fundamentally exchange ideas with the perspectives of other cultures in the world, from problem definition and the formation of analytical categories to their solution approaches. In their sociological study of knowledge “De quelques formes primitives de classification” (1906), Émile Durkheim and his nephew Marcel Mauss showed that supposedly universal categories such as “time” and “space” are socially structurally and culturally determined. In times of profound post-colonial debates, which are already perceived as a crisis of “old European” thinking, we must open up to other cultures of thought down to our basic terminology, without arbitrarily giving up the Western reference. In this project, it will be important to bring together the forces of the Bonn University of Excellence with top-class scientists from all over the world. A link could be achieved by combining cross-sectional groups and research groups focused on annual crisis analysis topics. The task of one cross-sectional group will be to think about and reflect on the conditions of creativity, including visual imagination and analysis, as well as to bring together the results of the annual themes in the project of developing a historical-comparative crisis theory in a second group develop.

The Bonn University of Excellence offers an outstanding location for such a project, which not only arises from the competences of the University of Bonn, but is also based on the presence of numerous international organizations that are based in the federal city of Bonn.

37 a 01. Le monument au sociologue inconnu (Robin), 1998.jpg
© Werner Gephart
La condition humaine, 2016 2023.jpg
© Werner Gephart

Added value for the university and society

There is great agreement among many researchers around the world that the time for glass bead games and “intellectual gourmetness” is over. Émile Durkheim very impressively documented the value of intellectual work in his statements on the Dreyfus affair, from which the figure of the “intellectual” emerged in the first place. The sciences are called upon to face the special challenges of our time and to make their contribution. The President of the DFG, Katja Becker, opened the year 2023 with the article “Science and overcoming crises”. In our opinion, the task of the sciences is to face complexity and to search for innovative scientific solutions with all their might and to convey them. The Émile Durkheim Research Center at the University of Excellence Bonn offers an ideal place to take on this challenge.

Reaktionen aus der Wissenschaft

Reaktionen aus der Wissenschaft
© Thorsten Gerwin
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