Project Details
Projekt Print View

SFB 536:  Reflexive Modernization

Subject Area Social and Behavioural Sciences
Term from 1999 to 2009
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 5483766
 
The collaborative research centre 536 "Reflexive Modernization" is an interdisciplinary research group established in 1999. It is predicated upon the hypothesis of a fundamental transformation within modernity. Modernity has not vanished, but it is becoming increasingly problematic. The research programme concentrates on the consequences and limitations, the discontinuities and paradoxes of modernity.In the wake of reflexive modernization basic principles of modernity are being either dissolved or transformed: the nation-state "container model" of society, the neo-corporatist bargaining systems, the organization of work and production in a capitalist enterprise system, the ideal of normal full employment, the mass parties rooted in a class structure, the clear distinction between gender roles, and the belief in an increasing domination of nature. In first or simple modernity, at least the principles and coordinates of change itself appear to be ultra-stable. In second or reflexive modernity, however, the key problems are: What is modernity all about? How to decide under conditions of manufactured uncertainties? How to live in more reflexive ways, facing an open and problematic future? Europe invented modernity. Therefore it has a special responsibility to "de-invent" it, i.e. to contribute to a reshaping of modernity on a globalscale. As a first step towards this aim, the collaborative research centre seeks to investigate this transformation from a European perspective. On the one hand, it will retrace the transformations of background assumptions and of basic institutions of simple modernity in the light of empirical case studies. On the other hand, it will seek to identify those concepts, indicators and institutions which can be regarded as the trailblazers of the emerging second modernity.
DFG Programme Collaborative Research Centres
International Connection Switzerland, USA

Completed projects

Spokespersons Professor Dr. Ulrich Beck, since 2/2008 (†); Professor Dr. Edgar Grande, from 2/2006 until 1/2008
 
 

Additional Information

Textvergrößerung und Kontrastanpassung