German Science and Humanities Council certifies Fritz Bauer Institute's "impressive achievements"

Combining high-quality research and a wide range of educational offerings is something the Fritz Bauer Institute does very well despite its limited staffing. That is the conclusion reached in an evaluation of the German Science and Humanities Council, which was commissioned by the Hessian Ministry of Science and the Arts. The Frankfurt-based institute's research on National Socialist crimes of violence, and especially on the Holocaust, as well as on the legal and societal handling of these crimes after 1945, is of high quality, the report said. "Research on the Holocaust and the conveyance of a critical awareness of history remain greatly important today, especially in Germany. The Fritz Bauer Institute makes a valuable contribution to this, one that in future should resonate even more on the international stage," Dorothea Wagner, Council chairwoman, was quoted as saying in a press release.

In the face of the pandemic, the Institute had offered its lecture events online - both as a livestream and also for later accessing. The public's response to the offer was great, and the Institute was able to expand its reach. That is why the German Science and Humanities Council recommends maintaining the online offer, while at the same time emphasizing that this would require better staffing. It is not just the Institute's education and outreach activities that are thinly staffed, the Council's evaluation found, but also the areas of IT, digitization and media support in particular. It is solely thanks to the exceptionally high commitment of the employees that the Institute is able to uphold its extensive and high-quality services. The German authority recommends a moderate increase in the number of base-funded positions and an annual increase in the budget to keep pace with rising costs.

"We are happy about this great appreciation of our work," comments Prof. Sybille Steinbacher, who has headed the institute since 2017 and holds the specially created professorship on "Researching the History and Impact of the Holocaust" at Goethe University's Department of History. "Although we are a small institute, we do a lot. The fact that our potential is recognized and appreciated is important for us and will hopefully be reflected in an increase in our funding." The evaluation formulated expectations with regard to digitization, internationalization and networking, which had in fact already been set in motion. "We are glad that the Council report confirmed that this cannot be achieved without an increase in personnel. We are fully aware that these are financially difficult times, but we urgently need more funds, especially for our digital offerings, for outreach work in and outside of schools, and for our exhibitions," Steinbacher said.

"We are pleased to have the independent Fritz Bauer Institute working closely with us, especially thanks to the establishment of a cooperative professorship at the History Department," said Goethe University President Prof. Enrico Schleiff. "The Fritz Bauer Institute conducts research at the highest level and will increasingly explore its research questions in an interdisciplinary manner - a development that is in line with the entire Goethe University. After all, solutions to the challenges facing society as a whole must be as diverse and multi-perspective as the challenge itself. Doing that puts a comprehensive university enriched by affiliated institutes in a position to research the knowledge for tomorrow," Schleiff continued.

The Fritz Bauer Institute was founded in 1995 as a foundation under civil law. It was named after Fritz Bauer (1903-1968), the Hessian attorney general who set the first Auschwitz trial in Frankfurt in motion. In 2000, the Fritz Bauer Institute became an independent cultural institute affiliated with Goethe University. In 2017, the institute's director was for the first time jointly appointed with Goethe University, and Prof. Sybille Steinbacher has held this position ever since. From the time of its founding, the Fritz Bauer Institute has closely linked research on the Holocaust and its impact and reception history with mediation and documentation. The Institute implements research projects, publications, scientific and public events as well as traveling exhibitions. It is also involved in teaching at Goethe University's History Department. The Institute is financed by the State of Hesse and the City of Frankfurt; a further, smaller share is provided by the friends' association Fritz Bauer Institute e.V. Goethe University also contributes to the financing by providing infrastructure. In addition, the Fritz Bauer Institute also draws on third-party funding from foundations and the public sector to finance its research projects, which currently include several on the history of Frankfurt under National Socialism. Apart from that, a fund endowed by and named after the Frankfurt physician Dorothee Freudenberg was established in 2020, enabling both research projects and scholarships, especially on the history of "euthanasia" in Nazi Germany and occupied Europe.

The German Science and Humanities Council's press release (in German) can be accessed here.

Images for download: https://www.uni-frankfurt.de/127353222

Captions:

Photo 1: "We are happy about this great appreciation of our work." Prof. Sybille Steinbacher has served as head of the Fritz Bauer Institute since 2017. (Photo: Niels P. Jørgensen)

Photo 2: Fritz Bauer at Club Voltaire, pictured between 1965 and 1968. (Photo: Siegfried Träger, Fritz Bauer Institute, Frankfurt am Main)

Photo 3: A look inside the archives of the Fritz Bauer Institute. (Photo: Werner Lott)

Photo 4: The Fritz Bauer Institute is located in the IG Farben House on Goethe University's Westend Campus. (Photo: Werner Lott)

Further information

Prof. Dr. Sybille Steinbacher

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