Institute for Human Sciences: Difference between revisions
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==Criticism== At the beginning of last year, Olena Semenyaka, chief ideologue and international secretary of the Ukrainian neo-Nazi National Corps party, got a six-month job as a researcher at the Institute of Humanities in Vienna. The university only withdrew her contract when a storm of outrage arose on social media after a photo of Semenyaka with a swastika flag and a Hitler salute had gone viral. Tag: possible vandalism |
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The IWM is registered as a non-profit organization. It receives core funding from the Austrian government and the City of Vienna. Its projects and activities are supported by international foundations and sponsors. |
The IWM is registered as a non-profit organization. It receives core funding from the Austrian government and the City of Vienna. Its projects and activities are supported by international foundations and sponsors. |
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==Criticism== |
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At the beginning of last year, Olena Semenyaka, chief ideologue and international secretary of the Ukrainian neo-Nazi National Corps party, got a six-month job as a researcher at the Institute of Humanities in Vienna. The university only withdrew her contract when a storm of outrage arose on social media after a photo of Semenyaka with a swastika flag and a Hitler salute had gone viral. |
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==Collaborations== |
==Collaborations== |
Revision as of 14:29, 22 January 2022
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2018) |
The Institute for Human Sciences (Template:Lang-de, IWM) is an independent institute for advanced study in the humanities and social sciences based in Vienna, Austria.
History and core idea
The IWM was founded in 1982 by the Polish philosopher Krzysztof Michalski, who was rector of the institute until his death in February 2013. Since 2015 Shalini Randeria, professor of social anthropology and sociology, has been the institute's rector. The IWM is committed to broaching new and often contested topics of social relevance, thus contributing to debates on a wide range of political, social, economic, and cultural issues. Since its inception, the IWM has promoted international exchange and dialogue among scholars and intellectuals from different fields, societies, and cultures, most notably from Eastern and Western Europe. This exchange has increasingly included researchers from North America, from South-Eastern Europe and from former Soviet states.
Structure and program
The IWM is sustained by a community of scholars consisting of permanent fellows, visiting fellows and junior visiting fellows.
Permanent fellows of the IWM are: János Mátyás Kovács, member of the Institute of Economics at the Hungarian Academy of Science, Budapest (Hungary); Ivan Krastev, chair of the board at the Centre for Liberal Strategies, Sofia (Bulgaria); Shalini Randeria, professor of social anthropology and sociology at the Graduate Institute in Geneva; Ivan Vejvoda; Timothy D. Snyder, professor of history at Yale University (U.S.); and Charles Taylor, professor emeritus of philosophy at McGill University, Montreal (Canada); Miloš Vec, professor of European legal and constitutional history at Vienna University.
Research at the institute is currently focused on eight fields:
- Scales of justice and legal pluralism
- Economic ideas and institutions in Eastern Europe
- Democracy in question
- United Europe – divided history
- Religion and secularism
- The philosophical work of Jan Patočka
- International law and multinormativity
- Sources of inequality
During each year the IWM hosts about 100 fellows and guests, including scholars as well as journalists and translators, who are awarded with fellowships to pursue their individual research while working at the Institute.
The IWM regularly organizes lectures, debates, and conferences for a broad public, as well as developing policy-oriented programs. The results of this work are published in monographs, articles, and translations, as well as in the biannual journal Transit-Europäische Revue and the magazine IWMpost.
The IWM is registered as a non-profit organization. It receives core funding from the Austrian government and the City of Vienna. Its projects and activities are supported by international foundations and sponsors.
Criticism
At the beginning of last year, Olena Semenyaka, chief ideologue and international secretary of the Ukrainian neo-Nazi National Corps party, got a six-month job as a researcher at the Institute of Humanities in Vienna. The university only withdrew her contract when a storm of outrage arose on social media after a photo of Semenyaka with a swastika flag and a Hitler salute had gone viral.
Collaborations
The IWM collaborates with a number of other institutions:[1]
References
- ^ "Partners & Donors". IWM.
External links