Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies
The Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies (German: Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung, MPIfG) is a German social-science research institute within the Max Planck Society located in Cologne.
Established in 1985, it was initially headed by sociologist Renate Mayntz (1985/86), followed by political scientist Fritz W. Scharpf (1986–2003), both of whom exerted a profound influence on the institute's research and public image.[1] The institute is currently directed by Lucio Baccaro and Jens Beckert with 31 employees and around 20 doctoral and post-doctoral fellows. The research group leaders are Martin Höpner and Leon Wansleben.[2]
Wolfgang Streeck became director of the institute in 1995 and remained in this position until his retirement in 2014, becoming emeritus director.[3]
References
External links
- mpifg.de, English site
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- Evolutionary Anthropology
- Social Anthropology
- Astronomy
- Astrophysics
- Art History (Rome)
- Art History (Florence)
- Biochemistry
- Biogeochemistry
- Biological Intelligence
- Biology of Ageing
- Molecular Biomedicine
- Biophysics
- Brain Research
- Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics
- Chemistry
- Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
- Research on Collective Goods
- Colloids and Interfaces
- Study of Crime, Security and Law
- Biological Cybernetics
- Demographic Research
- Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity
- Dynamics and Self-Organization
- Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems
- Chemical Ecology
- Chemical Energy Conversion
- Evolutionary Biology
- Neuroscience (Florida)
- Friedrich Miescher Laboratory
- Fritz Haber Institute
- Molecular Genetics
- Gravitational Physics
- Heart and Lung Research
- History of Science
- Human Development
- Science of Human History
- Immunobiology and Epigenetics
- Infection Biology
- Informatics
- Innovation and Competition
- Intelligent Systems
- Coal Research
- Tax Law and Public Finance
- Comparative Public Law and International Law
- Comparative and International Private Law
- Social Law and Social Policy
- European Legal History
- Mathematics
- Mathematics in the Sciences
- Medical Research
- Meteorology
- Marine Microbiology
- Terrestrial Microbiology
- Microstructure Physics
- Multidisciplinary Sciences
- Neurobiology of Behavior
- Ornithology
- Science of Light
- Chemical Physics of Solids
- Physics of Complex Systems
- Physics
- Extraterrestrial Physics
- Nuclear Physics
- Molecular Physiology
- Plant Breeding Research
- Molecular Plant Physiology
- Plasma Physics
- Polymer Research
- Psychiatry
- Psycholinguistics
- Quantum Optics
- Radio Astronomy
- Security and Privacy
- Study of Societies
- Software Systems
- Solar System Research
- Solid State Research
- Sustainable Materials
research schools
- Otto Hahn (1948–1960)
- Adolf Butenandt (1960–1972)
- Reimar Lüst (1972–1984)
- Heinz Staab (1984–1990)
- Hans F. Zacher (1990–1996)
- Hubert Markl (1996–2002)
- Peter Gruss (2002–2014)
- Martin Stratmann (2014–2023)
- Patrick Cramer (since 2023)
- Walther Bothe (1954)
- Karl Ziegler (1963)
- Feodor Lynen (1964)
- Manfred Eigen (1967)
- Konrad Lorenz (1973)
- Georges J. F. Köhler (1984)
- Klaus von Klitzing (1985)
- Ernst Ruska (1986)
- Johann Deisenhofer (1988)
- Robert Huber (1988)
- Hartmut Michel (1988)
- Bert Sakmann (1991)
- Erwin Neher (1991)
- Paul J. Crutzen (1995)
- Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard (1995)
- Theodor W. Hänsch (2005)
- Gerhard Ertl (2007)
- Stefan W. Hell (2014)
- Emmanuelle Charpentier (2020)
- Reinhard Genzel (2020)
- Benjamin List (2021)
- Klaus Hasselmann (2021)
- Svante Pääbo (2022)
- Ferenc Krausz (2023)
- Kaiser Wilhelm Society
- Max Planck Digital Library
- Harnack Medal
- Schloss Ringberg
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