News Release

New Merian Center not just on but also in Latin America

Bielefeld University and University of Kassel head major academic policy project with up to 20 million Euros of funding

Grant and Award Announcement

Bielefeld University

Prof. Dr. Olaf Kaltmeier,  Bielefeld University

image: The historian Prof. Dr. Olaf Kaltmeier is Director of the new Latin America Institute CALAS in Guadalajara, Mexico. view more 

Credit: Photo: Bielefeld University

The Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) will be funding each Merian Centre for up to twelve years with up to 20 million Euros. This makes the new centre the most highly funded research project on Latin America currently being sponsored by Germany.

The new institute is called the 'Maria Sibylla Merian Centre for Advanced Latin American Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences' (CALAS). It will be set up with funds from the BMBF's Maria Sybilla Merian Programme. By establishing the international research schools known as 'Maria Sibylla Merian Centres', the BMBF aims to promote the internationalization of the humanities, cultural studies, and social sciences in Germany through close bi- and multilateral cooperation projects located in other countries. Work on the first Merian Centre in Delhi (India) commenced in July 2015. A further Merian Centre will start in April at the Universidade de São Paulo (Brazil). Above that, another centre should be founded in a sub-Saharan African country.

For the Latin American centre CALAS, the main location in Guadalajara will be supplemented by regional centres in Argentina, Ecuador, and Costa Rica. The historian Professor Dr. Olaf Kaltmeier from Bielefeld University's Center for InterAmerican Studies (CIAS) is the Director of CALAS and the Speaker for the German university consortium: 'This project places Bielefeld University among the forerunners in both German and international research on the Americas.'

The main research approach at CALAS is to address social crises from four perspectives: 'socio-ecological transformation', 'social inequalities', 'violence and conflict resolution', and 'identity and region'. 'We want to learn from the world region of Latin America and find out how they master crises,' says Kaltmeier. Starting in 2019, changing groups of up to twenty Fellows (i.e. international guest scientists) should work in research groups and there should also be doctoral students in graduate programmes.

'A central goal of CALAS is to carry out research together with academics from Latin America - and not to carry it out over their heads,' says Kaltmeier. Latin America produces remarkable solutions to crises. 'In light of socio-ecological change, for example, the Latin American idea of "Buen Vivir", the good life, offers an excellent model. The concept draws on the values of the native cultures of the Andes,' says Kaltmeier. 'Another unconventional example deals with the resolution of conflicts. Several countries, and most recently Columbia, have developed the principle of the truth commission and applied it successfully to process the injustice of civil wars and dictatorships.'

Bielefeld University's Center for Interdisciplinary Research (ZiF) was also involved in the proposal to set up CALAS. 'ZiF is a strong inspiration for CALAS,' says Kaltmeier. Founded in 1968 as a 'nucleus' of Bielefeld University, it promotes outstanding interdisciplinary and innovative research projects. Professor Dr. Héctor Raúl Solis Gadea, Rector of the University of Guadalajara came to the ZiF in 2016 together with an architect. The designated Mexican directors of the Centre, Professor Dr. Sarah Corona and Professor Dr. Gerado Cham, both attended the ZiF as guest scientists.

'At CALAS, we are using and expanding the ZiF principle of temporary research groups,' says Kaltmeier. As at the ZiF, academics will be able to submit a proposal to CALAS for a research group to study a particular topic. If the proposal is accepted, then the Fellows of the group will spend one year living and working together at CALAS. They will invite other academics to conferences, produce joint publications, and disseminate their findings in lectures and discussions. 'The CALAS regional centres will also enable the Fellows to work in their archives and, for example, to survey people in the respective country,' says Kaltmeier.

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The BMBF is initially funding the two-year preliminary phase. The plan is then to fund CALAS for a further maximum of ten years (a six-year main phase and a four-year final phase). For the first eight years alone, funding will run to 13 million Euros.

Just like Bielefeld University, the University of Guadalajara is also extending and modernizing its campus. The new quarter includes not only buildings for the social sciences and the humanities, including CALAS, but also theatres and museums. With 4.5 million residents, Guadalajara is the second largest city in Mexico. It also hosts the second largest book fair in the world making it an international centre of culture. The University of Guadalajara has had close ties with Bielefeld University for more than ten years including an exchange programme for teachers and students funded by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD).

Bielefeld University has specialized in studying North and South America from the perspective of the social sciences and cultural studies and it founded the Center for InterAmerican Studies (CIAS) in 2011. One CIAS project is entitled 'The Americas as Space of Entanglements'. This project is being funded by the BMBF until the end of 2019, and is studying the historical and social ties between North and South America and how they influence each other. From 2008 to 2009, the ZiF research group 'E Pluribus Unum' analysed ethnic identities in the Americas and how these forge ties across borders. Olaf Kaltmeier was one of the organizers of this group.


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