Anu Bradford has been a Professor of Law at the Columbia Law School since 2012. From 2008 to 2010 she was an assistant professor at the University of Chicago Law School. She has also taught at Harvard College, Brandeis University and the University of Helsinki Law School. Her research and teaching interests include international trade law and international political economy, international antitrust law, and EU law. Her most recent publications include Digital Empires: The Global Battle to Regulate Technology (2023) and The Brussels Effect: How the European Union Rules the World (2021).
Kolleg-Forschungsgruppe Europe’s History of the Present: Universalism and Particularism
The KFG (Kolleg-Forschungsgruppe) is an interdisciplinary research group which is a Center for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences funded by the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG).
The Center investigates universalist and particularist models of order in European contemporary history from the 1970s to the present. Universalist claims aim to validate universally applicable rules. However, demands for such rules usually grow out of concrete interests. In contrast, particularist models reject any general claim and justify guiding principles that are oriented towards the construction of individual or group-related needs. The KFG research program asks how universalist and particularist claims were constructed in contemporary history and investigates the ways these claims helped conceptualize, justify, promote, or even prevent socio-political change. The KFG research agenda consists of three areas: religion and secularity, economy, and human rights, which are being investigated in a three-step sequence: (1) identification and analysis of universalist and particularist concepts, (2) their transmission and (3) their functions.
The goal of the KFG is to better understand the complex ways in which universalist and particularist models of order were transmitted and layered on each other in European contemporary history. The Center’s research encompasses both Western and Eastern Europe in a global perspective. It is especially interested in the period of transformation whose prehistory lies in the 1970s and the concomitant developments in Western Europe intertwined with it. The assumption that contemporary history in Eastern and Western Europe can only be adequately described in its interdependencies and global entanglements is central to the KFG.
The KFG is headed by three scholars who represent contemporary history (Andreas Wirsching), European history (Kiran Klaus Patel), and Eastern European history (Martin Schulze Wessel). This constellation of scholars enables the Center to examine the history of Western and Eastern Europe in its global context.
The KFG pursues a theoretical program grounded in an intensive dialogue between historians and social scientists. Distinguished Fellows Marta Bucholc (sociology), Alexander Libman (political science), and Angelika Nußberger (law) thus play a key role in the framework of the Center. The KFG intends to discuss concepts of historical and social science research in terms of their potential for analyzing recent contemporary history.
The fellowship program, in which senior and junior fellows are invited, is a central part of the KFG. This program allows many leading experts to intensively explore and exchange ideas about innovative research topics at the Center in Munich. The KFG attaches great importance to the involvement of further colleagues of the LMU Munich and to the media dissemination of scientific results to scientific and non-scientific target groups. As an important result of its work, the KFG will at the end of its term present a theoretically founded European contemporary history based on interdisciplinary cooperation, which takes up the basic ideas of the Center.