New endowed professorship at Goethe University Frankfurt to research social transformation of the working world due to digitalization
A new endowed professorship in Digital
Transformation and Work will enhance the social science research at the Goethe
University and build on the tradition of critical social theory. The contract
was signed on November 8, 2022, by the two donors
ProLife Foundation and Frankfurt University of Labour along with Goethe
University.
FRANKFURT. Digital information, systems and culture have long been key parts of our day-to-day lives and have fundamentally changed the way we work and do business. Success in business is determined, for example, by whether the maximum amount of data is gathered and algorithms are expertly managed, whether the greatest attention is attracted from potential customers and whether offerings are delivered in real time. How is this change occurring and what are the social consequences of the transformation from the industrial to the digital age – for society and particularly for business and the world of work? How do new technologies change social practices and work processes, public opinion and forms of corporate participation and co-determination? The new endowed professorship at the Faculty of Social Sciences at Goethe University Frankfurt will explore these questions in depth.
The
professorship is financed by an endowment fund from the ProLife Foundation and the University of Labour, an institution
supported by the IG Metall metalworkers' union and the German Trade Union
Confederation (DGB). The contract was signed yesterday in the presence of the
Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences, Professor Christopher Daase, by Jürgen
Eckert, CEO of the ProLife Foundation,
Professor Martin Allespach, President of the University of Labour, Rainer
Gröbel, Chancellor of the University of Labour, and Professor Enrico Schleiff,
President of the Goethe University.
Eckert
explained the objective of the new endowment fund: “With this professorship, we
want to further understanding of the social consequences of digitization. We
can see the technical changes that are coming to the world of work all around
us – but we are missing the narrative around what that actually means for
people in their working world and living environment". Gröbel went on to say:
“From our point of view, this is not about rejecting the digital
transformation, but about the question of how we can impart knowledge and
skills to deal with the transformation processes to students and employees in
companies." The donors emphasized that in choosing the Goethe University they
are consciously aiming to draw on the tradition of critical social theory and develop
the university's strengths in social philosophy and social research.
“We
are very pleased with the trust placed in Goethe University to make significant
contributions to solving pressing global challenges in research and teaching",
said University President Schleiff. “The fund also gives us the opportunity to
strengthen our profile area of Orders and Transmissions, in which colleagues
from various faculties and centers at the Goethe University are primarily
addressing the question: What does the fundamental digital transformation and
its consequences mean for the future of people, nature and the environment?"
“For
the Faculty of Social Sciences", says the dean of the faculty, Professor
Christopher Daase, “the new professorship offers the holder the opportunity to
sharpen their profile in critical social research and demonstrate their
political and social relevance."
The ProLife Foundation and the University
of Labour already have links to the Goethe University and the Institute for
Social Research, the Sigmund Freud Institute, and the Frobenius Institute
through their project funding. The endowed professorship will increase the
collaboration between the Goethe University and the University of Labour.
Images to download: www.uni-frankfurt.de/128030034
Caption: The contract for the new endowed professorship in Digital Transformation and Work has been signed: (from left) donors Jürgen Eckert, CEO of the ProLife Foundation , Rainer Gröbel, Chancellor of the University of Labour, and Professor Martin Allespach, President of the University of Labor (2nd from right), and Professor Christiane Thompson, Vice President of Teaching, Study and Continuing Education, University President Professor Enrico Schleiff (center) and Professor Christopher Daase, Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences (right) (photo: Uwe Dettmar)