CIERA’s network directory

The CIERA community includes more than 1,000 students, PhD students, post-docs and university teachers working in connection with the German-speaking area in the humanities and social sciences.


AN INTERACTIVE TOOL SERVING THE COMMUNITY

This CIERA Community Directory is an interactive tool for researchers, journalists and the general public. It allows you to identify and connect with the researchers in our network in France, Germany and beyond. The search and filter function in the left-hand column can be used to navigate the directory more easily.


Are you a present or future researcher in humanities and social sciences, working in connection with the German-speaking area? Register here and become a member of our community.

Want to get in touch with a colleague? Log in to use the contact form.

Are you a journalist? Contact us to be put in touch directly with the network's researchers.

 

Formation des identités ethniques, Haut Moyen Age, Empire carolingien, Goths, Francs, Historiographie, Écriture de l'histoire, Lois barbares, Anthropologie / ethnologie, Interculturalité, Identité(s), Droit, Mémoire

Frontières extractives et exploitation des ressources naturelles , Commerce international, flux de matières et d’énergie , Environnement et histoire globale , Paysages, territoires et identités nationales (XIXe-XXe siècles), Mondes germaniques et Europe centrale

Histoire sociale du confessionnel dans le Saint-Empire moderne, Espaces et frontières internes au Saint-Empire moderne, Les différences de calendrier dans le Saint-Empire moderne, Identité(s), Espace, Frontières, Aufklärung, Elites, Catholicisme, Eichsfeld, Confession

Europe centrale/Mitteleuropa, Intégration européenne, Histoire des relations internationales

Population et nationalités en Europe centrale (19e-20e siècle), Biopolitiques, Histoire de la protection sociale, Histoire de la statistique, des sciences de l'Etat et de l'administration

Histoire des émotions

Les chemins de l'Empire. Voyages princiers, politique et lien social dans le Saint-Empire romain germanique (1520-1700).