Research

 The research focus “Crisis Analysis” is guided by the basic assumption that in the 21st century, crises can no longer be regarded as an exclusively unique phenomenon, but are defined in an interaction with the globalized world. Against this background, various contributions set out to analyze the causes and contexts of the “polycrisis” in the Durkheimian tradition and to provide impetus for innovative further developments.

Eine Wissenschaftlerin und ein Wissenschaftler arbeiten hinter einer Glasfassade und mischen Chemikalien mit Großgeräten.
© Werner Gephart

Introduction

“Qui est Durkheim?” asks Philippe Besnard in his introduction to the publication of Durkheim's letters to Marcel Mauss. The images are manifold: on the one hand he is portrayed as a “patron saint”, then as a “prophet” or religious leader, if not a charismatic figure, and on the other we hear of the features of the worried family father who dies under the grief of his fallen son André. Durkheim characterized himself above all as the son of a rabbi: “Above all, I am the son of a rabbi.” But who was Durkheim really? - An ascetic despot who swore his employees by the value of “work”, a fervent patriot and critic of the Germans, for whom Germany was “above everything”? And can these questions even be meaningfully asked within the framework of his own sociological approach? Do they not belong in psychology, which he so strongly marginalized, or in history, but not in sociology?

Prof. Gephart addresses these questions in an introduction on the sociological biography of Émile Durkheim.

Named Fellows.png
© Werner Gephart/Creative Commons

Fellow Principle

The Émile Durkheim Research Center is based on the principles of 

- internationality

- interdisciplinarity

- the Fellow principle

- the formation of a learning community thematically focused on “crisis analysis”

These principles are also reflected in our Fellow principle, where five Fellowships designate the different disciplines and regions that are of particular importance in post-global times.

In this spirit, the following Named Fellowships will be established:

- Émile Durkheim Fellowship

- W.E.B. Du Bois Fellowship

- Mary Douglas_Feellowship

- Ambedkar Fellowship

- Chie Nakane Fellowship

Discover here what the Named Fellowships stand for.


Akademische Partner

Max Weber Stiftung

The Max Weber Foundation (MWS) is one of the leading sponsors of German humanities research abroad. With an annual budget of around 48 million euros (2024), it is one of the ten largest German foundations under public law. As an autonomous part of foreign cultural and educational policy, the federal government finances the foundation through the Federal Ministry of Education and Research.

VW-Stiftung

The Volkswagen Foundation is Germany's largest private, non-profit science funding organization. The Foundation's funding programs are aimed at the natural sciences, life sciences and engineering as well as the humanities and social sciences - both in Germany and abroad.

Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University

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Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas University

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