Geschwister-Scholl-Institut

Geschwister-Scholl-Institut für Politikwissenschaft (Scholl Siblings Institute for Political Science, also referred to as GSI) is a research institute of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and one of the leading political-science institutions in Europe. It is named after Hans and Sophie Scholl, members of the White Rose, a student group in Munich that was active in the non-violent resistance movement in Nazi Germany. In post-war Germany, Hans and Sophie Scholl are recognized as symbols of the German resistance movement against the totalitarian Nazi regime.
By naming the GSI after the Scholl siblings, the GSI commits itself to the world view of freedom, democracy and tolerance, and to a teaching that conveys these values to the students and encourages them to be critical.

Scholl Siblings Institute for Political Science
Geschwister-Scholl-Institut für Politikwissenschaft
– GSI –
TypeResearch Institute
Established1958 (1958)
AffiliationLudwig Maximilian University of Munich
DeanProf. Dr. Klaus H. Goetz
Location, ,
Websitewww.gsi.uni-muenchen.de

As one of the largest political science institutes in Germany, the GSI has with its affiliated think tank C.A.P. (Centrum für angewandte Politikforschung), a centre for Policy Research an extraordinary influence in practical politics of Germany. The founding director was Eric Voegelin.

Geschwister-Scholl-Institut main entrance

History

The history of political science at the University of Munich began long before the founding of the GSI. Political science was back then subdivided between historical studies and jurisprudence. King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria promoted the methodological possibilities of historical science to study politics, therefore prominent historians were called to Munich, for instance Joseph Görres, Leopold von Ranke, Carl Adolph Cornelius, Heinrich von Sybel or Wilhelm Heinrich Riehl. The jurisprudence at the University of Munich dealt with diverse political thoughts, their interaction with constitutions and political behavior arising from them.

A further political science dimension at the University of Munich is shown above all by the work of economists like Lujo Brentano or Max Weber. They contributed to major developments in political science at the University of Munich. Historians of the University of Munich, e.g. Hermann Oncken studied political consequences from the course of history, which refined the profile of political science in Munich.

During the Nazi Era sociology and political science were disintegrated, because the analytical potential of these sciences threatened to harm the Völkisch movement as the intellectual and spiritual foundation of the new Reich. Therefore numerous social scientists were driven into emigration, from which only a small part would return to Germany after the Second World War.

The so-called Munich School of Political Science, i.e. the normatively oriented political science at the University of Munich after the Second World War, was shaped by the emigrant Eric Voegelin. He had survived the Third Reich in the United States and was from the point of view of the USA and in the public opinion of the post-war period in Germany, suitable to start the Reeducation and Denazification and to promote political science, that was now widely understood as a science of democracy. Thanks to his international connections and his international reputation, Voegelin managed to organize German and American donations for the establishment of the institute (which was initially housed in Theresienstrasse 3-5) and to attract significant foreign guest lecturers.

In 1996 the Geschwister-Scholl-Institut got its final location in the former Radio Free Europe building at the Englischer Garten.

Degree programs

The Geschwister-Scholl-Institut educates undergraduate and graduate students in political science. The GSI offers one BA program, one MA program, two dual-degree programs.

Bachelor of Arts

The GSI offers a six-semester Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) program in which, on the one hand, the disciplinary core of political science is introduced, and on the other hand, students are flexibel in setting individual priorities in the various political science disciplines. The BA program is research-oriented. Special attention is paid to the training of methods (quantitative and qualitative methods), which allows students to relate theory and empirical reality to each other. In addition, a minor must be chosen. Available minors are amongst others sociology, communication science, economics, history, law or philosophy.

Master of Arts

At the GSI one can obtain a Master of Arts degree by studying for four semesters. The program is essentially disciplinary and is studied without a minor subject. A one-semester foundation course provides an overview of the three main areas of the Master's programme: Theory and Empirics of Democratic Politics, International and European Politics and Governance and Public Policy. Students decide on the further study profile according to their own interests.

In addition, together with two partner universities, two double master degree options are offered as part of the master's programme:


The GSI has various international contacts to renowned partner universities, such as the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (SciencesPo), The Hebrew University of Jerusalem or the University of British Columbia, from which one can benefit in the context of an exchange year. In addition, internationally renowned political scientists are regularly invited to Munich as visiting professors.

Voegelin-Centre for Politics, Culture and Religion

Voegelin-Zentrum für Politik, Kultur und Religion (Voegelin-Centre for Politics, Culture and Religion), which is affiliated to the GSI, sees its central task as enabling and expanding a scientific discussion of the subject area of politics, culture and religion. The center emerged from the Eric Voegelin Archive founded by Peter J. Opitz in 1990, and pursues nowadays two thematic priorities. On the one hand an intensive research of the philosophical work of Eric Voegelin. Previously unpublished writings by Eric Voegelin have been translated and edited and new contributions to Voegelin research have been published in the Voegeliniana series. On the other hand, the Centre pursues an intensified examination of the subject area of politics, culture and religion. This topic has gained enormously in importance and attention in recent years, in particular in the context of the debates on a "return of religion" or with regard to new forms of religious fundamentalism. The Center addresses the relationship between politics and religion from a primarily political-theoretical perspective, and is expressly committed to an interdisciplinary approach.

MCG - Munich Center on Governance, Communication, Public Policy and Law

The Munich Center on Governance, Communication, Public Policy and Law (MCG), in which the GSI participates, has been established at the Faculty of Social Sciences at LMU. The MCG is an interdisciplinary research center and part of the LMUinnovativ concept. The basic aim of the MCG is to contribute with its research to a better understanding of the various governance arrangements. The MCG is an interdisciplinary institution of the LMU Munich, in which the topic "Governance in Modern Societies" is jointly researched by political scientists, legal scholars, economists and communication scientists.

Centrum für angewandte Politikforschung (C.A.P.)

The Centrum für angewandte Politikforschung (Center for Applied Policy Research, C.A.P.) was founded in 1995 by Werner Weidenfeld with the aim of providing long-term strategy consulting and scientifically based orientation for politics, business and civil society. As an independent think tank, the C.A.P tries to close the gap between politics and science with its special working approach of "applied policy research". The C.A.P is one of the largest university institutes for political consulting on European and international issues in Germany.

Notable faculty

Notable alumni

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