Hannah Arendt Institute for Totalitarianism Studies explained

51.0296°N 13.7243°W

Hannah Arendt Institute for Totalitarianism Studies
Named After:Hannah Arendt
Abbreviation:HAIT
Founders:-->
Dissolved:-->
Purpose:Basic research in contemporary history and comparative politics
Location:Dresden, Germany
Coords:51.0296°N 13.7243°W
Region Served:-->
Languages:-->
Leader Title:Director
Parent Organization:Dresden University of Technology
Staff:c. 50 (incl. assistants and fellows)[1]

The Hannah Arendt Institute for Totalitarianism Studies (German: Hannah-Arendt-Institut für Totalitarismusforschung, abbreviated HAIT) is a research institute hosted by Dresden University of Technology and devoted to the comparative analysis of dictatorships. The institute focusses particularly on the structures of Nazism and Communism as well as on the presuppositions and consequences of the two ideological dictatorships. The institute is named after the German-American philosopher and political scientist Hannah Arendt, whose magnum opus The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951) is considered across disciplines as one of the most influential works of the 20th century and continues to shape in particular scholarly discussions of totalitarian systems of political domination.[2] [3]

The initiative for establishing the HAIT originated in the nearly 60-year, double dictatorship experience of Eastern Germany and in the Enlightenment-driven Peaceful Revolution of 1989/90, and goes back to former civil rights activists who, as members of the Saxon State Parliament, brought about an Act of Parliament setting up the institute in November 1991. The institute began operation on June 17, 1993, under the direction of the historian of Eastern Europe .[4]

Research profile

In keeping with the entirety of Hannah Arendt's work, research activities[5] of the institute named after her – the HAIT – focus on the comparative analysis of dictatorships while also reflecting on the historical and political conditions of liberal-democratic polities. In accordance with the institute's statutes, the systematic study of political, social and cultural developments during the Nazi and SED dictatorships lies at the heart of its work. Particular attention is devoted to the analysis of opposition and resistance to these two German dictatorships of the 20th century. In addition, international as well as intertemporal comparative perspectives on other fascist and state-socialist regimes belong to the research programme, as does analysis of the political, economic and social transformations in the post-Communist countries after 1989. The institute also devotes research to current challenges and dangers faced by democracy, in particular from autocratic and fundamentalist regimes as well as extremist, racist and anti-Semitic attitudes and movements.

In line with these perspectives, work at the HAIT currently breaks down into five fields of research:

A central part of activities at the HAIT lies in conveying, in accordance with the institute's statutes, its own research results to the general public. In keeping with this endeavour, continual collaboration occurs with various memorial sites, organisations supporting historical and political education, teacher training institutions, schools and players from civil society, who regularly avail themselves of the institute's range of services in consulting, continuing education and lectures.

Publications

In the classical print media segment, the range of publications from the HAIT comprises an academic journal[6] as well as four academic book series,[7] in part published in collaboration with co-operation partners. In March 2020 HAIT has started curating his own science blog Denken ohne Geländer [″Thinking Without a Banister″],[8] and in September 2020 it has launched its own Twitter channel @HAIT_TUD. In addition, the institute makes available several databases focussing on contemporary history to the academic research community.

Journal

Book series

Databases

Institute library

The HAIT maintains its own special library,[18] with currently around 53,800 volumes (status: January 2024) available to both the academic community and the general public for use on site. The collection areas are largely geared to the institute's research specialisations. Priority is accordingly given to literature on the history of National Socialism, the history of the Soviet Occupation Zone/GDR, the history of the transformation after 1989 and on dictatorships and political extremism in Europe. Comprehensive holdings of around 550 pertinent journals and newspapers are also available.

Evaluation

In March 2019 an expert committee appointed by the German Council of Science and Humanities and headed by conducted an evaluation that found the institute to be an ″important driving force for research in contemporary history and political science″ that has made ″valuable and indispensable contributions to both academic support of the remembrance of victims of the Nazi dictatorship and the SED regime and of political education in Saxony in general″.[19] [20]

Committees and people

The HAIT has the legal form of a registered association, with juridical persons governed by private or public law – such as the Free State of Saxony, represented by the Saxon State Ministry for Science, Culture and Tourism – serving as members with voting power. According to its statutes,[21] management of the association falls to a chairperson officially designated as the ″director”, who conducts ongoing business and is assisted by his or her two deputies. The director is appointed by the board of trustees in consultation with the Academic advisory council for a term of five years after having been proposed by a joint search committee of Dresden University of Technology and HAIT. He or she is also holding a regular professorship at Dresden University of Technology. The Board of trustees supervises the fulfilment of association's duties in conformity with the statutes. It consists of seven members with voting power, who as representatives of various institutions designated in the statutes are elected or appointed for a term of five years. The Academic advisory council advises the board of trustees and the director on all significant academic matters. It has between five and nine members with voting power, each of whom is appointed for a term of five years by Dresden University of Technology, Leipzig University or by the board of trustees in consultation with the director.

Directorate

Currently
Formerly

Sponsoring association

Board of trustees

Academic advisory council

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jahresbericht 2019 . hait.tu-dresden.de . 2021-01-12 . de . PDF; 2.3 MB.
  2. Book: Backes, Uwe . Uwe Backes . Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism… . Kailitz . Steffen . Steffen Kailitz . Schlüsselwerke der Politikwissenschaft . de . Wiesbaden . VS Verlag . 2007 . 8–12 . 978-3-531-14005-6.
  3. Book: Rensmann, Lars . Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism… . Salzborn . Samuel . Klassiker der Sozialwissenschaften: 100 Schlüsselwerke im Portrait . de . Wiesbaden . Springer VS . 2016 . 187–192 . 978-3-658-13212-5.
  4. Book: Henke, Klaus-Dietmar . Hannah-Arendt-Institut für Totalitarismusforschung e. V. an der TU Dresden . Mählert . Ulrich . Vademekum DDR-Forschung: Ein Leitfaden zu Archiven, Forschungseinrichtungen, Bibliotheken, Einrichtungen der politischen Bildung, Vereinen, Museen und Gedenkstätten . de . 2 . Opladen . Leske + Budrich . 1999 . 359–360 . 3-8100-2326-4.
  5. Web site: Research – Overview . hait.tu-dresden.de . 2021-01-12.
  6. Web site: Journal 'Totalitarianism and Democracy' . hait.tu-dresden.de . 2021-01-12.
  7. Web site: Book series – Overview . hait.tu-dresden.de . 2021-01-12.
  8. Web site: Blog 'Denken ohne Geländer' . haitblog.hypotheses.org . 2021-01-12 . de.
  9. Web site: Database 'Der Freiheitskampf' . hait.tu-dresden.de . 2021-01-12 . de.
  10. Web site: Projekt 'Virtuelle Archive für die geisteswissenschaftliche Forschung' . saw-leipzig.de . 2021-01-12 . de.
  11. Web site: Database 'Filmzensur Ost-West' . filmzensur-ostwest.de . 2021-01-12 . de.
  12. Book: Hilger . Andreas . Schmidt . Ute . Wagenlehner . Günther . Sowjetische Militärtribunale. Volume 1: Die Verurteilung deutscher Kriegsgefangener 1941–1953 . de . Cologne/Weimar/Vienna . Böhlau . 2001 . 3-412-06701-6.
  13. Book: Hilger . Andreas . Schmeitzner . Mike . Mike Schmeitzner . Schmidt . Ute . Sowjetische Militärtribunale. Volume 2: Die Verurteilung deutscher Zivilisten 1945–1955 . de . Cologne/Weimar/Vienna . Böhlau . 2003 . 3-412-06801-2.
  14. Book: Richter . Michael . Sobeslavsky . Erich . Die Gruppe der 20: Gesellschaftlicher Aufbruch und politische Opposition in Dresden 1989/90 . de . Cologne/Weimar/Vienna . Böhlau . 1999 . 3-412-06499-8.
  15. Book: Urich, Karin . Die Bürgerbewegung in Dresden 1989/90 . de . Cologne/Weimar/Vienna . Böhlau . 2001 . 3-412-06801-2.
  16. Book: Richter, Michael . Die Bildung des Freistaates Sachsen: Friedliche Revolution, Föderalisierung, deutsche Einheit 1989/90 . de . Göttingen . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht . 2004 . 3-525-36900-X.
  17. Book: Richter, Michael . Die Friedliche Revolution: Aufbruch zur Demokratie in Sachsen 1989/90 . de . 2 Volumes . Göttingen . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht . 2009 . 978-3-525-36914-2.
  18. Web site: About the library . 2024-01-02 . hait.tu-dresden.de.
  19. Web site: Stellungnahme zum Hannah-Arendt-Institut für Totalitarismusforschung e.V. (HAIT), Dresden . wissenschaftsrat.de . 2020-01-31 . 2021-01-12 . 8 . de . PDF; 424 kB.
  20. Web site: Wissenschaftsrat nimmt Hannah-Arendt-Institut für Totalitarismusforschung unter die Lupe . medienservice.sachsen.de . 2020-02-03 . 2021-01-12 . de.
  21. Web site: Charter . hait.tu-dresden.de . 2021-01-12.