Institute News

A woman with medium-length brown hair, wearing glasses, a purple top, and earrings, stands against a blurred background.

Regine Paul Joins MPIfG

April 01, 2026

Regine Paul, a political scientist and professor at the University of Bergen, Norway, is joining the MPIfG in the middle of April to take up a position as head of a new research group. Technology and Statehood will officially start its work at the beginning of October, exploring articulations of competition statehood in global tech races across time, space, and specific technologies, as well as their social and political implications. more

Headshot Hanna Kuusela

Hanna Kuusela, an associate professor in sociology at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, is the MPIfG’s Scholar in Residence for 2026. Joining the Institute at the end of March, Kuusela will work at the intersection of economic power and cultural legitimization to ask: Who are the rich, how do they legitimize their wealth, and what does that tell us about the society in which they live?  more

Eight people are standing on a terrace. In the background, there are tall plants and modern buildings. Everyone is wearing formal attire.

The Board of Trustees of the MPIfG convened at the end of March for its annual meeting. The role of the MPIfG Board of Trustees is to promote the exchange of ideas and information between the MPIfG and the general public. more

In a brightly lit conference room, several people are watching a presentation on equality, diversity, and inclusion on a screen.

The MPIfG’s fourth annual event to mark International Women’s Day took place on March 9 this year with a program featuring talks by two external speakers on structural inequalities in academia. more

A middle-aged woman with a friendly smile and flowing reddish-blonde hair parted on the right side of her head stands in front of a background that reveals an oversized image of a large-leaved plant. She conveys grace and peacefulness.

MPIfG senior researcher Pálma Polyák is set to begin a Max Weber Fellowship at the Robert Schuman Centre of the European University Institute (EUI) in Florence in September 2025. The program is one of the most prestigious postdoctoral awards in the social sciences and humanities. more

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A woman with medium-length brown hair, wearing glasses, a purple top, and earrings, stands against a blurred background.

Regine Paul Joins MPIfG

April 01, 2026

Regine Paul, a political scientist and professor at the University of Bergen, Norway, is joining the MPIfG in the middle of April to take up a position as head of a new research group. Technology and Statehood will officially start its work at the beginning of October, exploring articulations of competition statehood in global tech races across time, space, and specific technologies, as well as their social and political implications. more

Headshot Hanna Kuusela

Hanna Kuusela, an associate professor in sociology at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, is the MPIfG’s Scholar in Residence for 2026. Joining the Institute at the end of March, Kuusela will work at the intersection of economic power and cultural legitimization to ask: Who are the rich, how do they legitimize their wealth, and what does that tell us about the society in which they live?  more

Eight people are standing on a terrace. In the background, there are tall plants and modern buildings. Everyone is wearing formal attire.

The Board of Trustees of the MPIfG convened at the end of March for its annual meeting. The role of the MPIfG Board of Trustees is to promote the exchange of ideas and information between the MPIfG and the general public. more

In a brightly lit conference room, several people are watching a presentation on equality, diversity, and inclusion on a screen.

The MPIfG’s fourth annual event to mark International Women’s Day took place on March 9 this year with a program featuring talks by two external speakers on structural inequalities in academia. more

A middle-aged woman with a friendly smile and flowing reddish-blonde hair parted on the right side of her head stands in front of a background that reveals an oversized image of a large-leaved plant. She conveys grace and peacefulness.

MPIfG senior researcher Pálma Polyák is set to begin a Max Weber Fellowship at the Robert Schuman Centre of the European University Institute (EUI) in Florence in September 2025. The program is one of the most prestigious postdoctoral awards in the social sciences and humanities. more

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Group photo of the approximately 35 participants and speakers

The MPIfG hosted the second Max Planck Summer School for Women in Political Economy in September 2025. First launched two years earlier in response to the problem of women’s underrepresentation at all levels of the discipline, the initiative aims to establish a network of women researchers in political economy and reduce existing gendered inequalities. Leonie Fernholz, a doctoral researcher at the MPIfG, shares her personal impressions and insights from a week of workshops, skills sessions, and roundtables. more

The European Commission headquarters in Brussels, showcasing a large banner with the EU emblem and the commission's name in English, French, and German. The building has a modern architectural design with glass and steel elements, surrounded by greenery and a clear blue sky.

For long-term stability, Germany should not only focus on exports, but also strengthen its own domestic market. more

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A promotional image for a lecture titled "European Society: Its Meaning and its Promise" by Armin von Bogdandy from the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law, scheduled for June 17, 2025. It includes a photo of the speaker and branding elements from the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies.

The European constitutional navigation of the noughties succeeded in stipulating that European integration had ushered in European society (Article 2 TEU). This choice remains underexplored. In light of current European uncertainty, the lecture explores the meaning and promise of European society. more

Lecture announcement featuring Valeria Pulignano on "The Politics of Unpaid Labor," discussing inequality in precarious work. Date: June 3, 2025, at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies.

In her lecture, Valeria Pulignano introduces a theory of the politics of unpaid labor, advancing our understanding of inequality within the context of precarious work. She establishes a crucial link between unpaid labor’s political dimensions and its role in fueling emerging forms of precarious work that are characterized by persistent inequalities in a context of labor market reforms, societal shifts, and technological changes. She shows how these seemingly disparate elements intertwine, connecting the intricate dynamics of the social system's micro-level components to larger macro-level structural patterns. Advancing the current discussion on how unpaid labor contributes to inequality in precarious work, she will establish the characteristics differentiating employment from self-employment, and how these lead to a revised definition of unpaid labor. She further illustrates that unpaid labor is both shaped by class and serves to reproduce class interests, revealing ongoing changes in welfare, employment, and state institutional policies. Finally, she considers the necessity to establish conditions within the labor market that are conducive to genuinely cultivating and honoring the diversity of human capabilities and actions within labor structures and promoting their manifestation. more

A lecture poster featuring Jonathan White from the European Institute, discussing "The Future as a Democratic Resource," scheduled for May 7, 2025, at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies.


Beliefs about the future shape attitudes, experiences, and priorities in the present. This lecture explores the relationship between democracy and the expected world to come. As it argues, visions of the future are an important resource for democratic politics, as a way to put the present in critical perspective, to aid in the formation of a collective agent, and to consolidate commitment in adversity. Indirectly, they contribute also to the legitimacy of democratic institutions, shaping the exercise of citizenship and the capacity to contend with the flaws of representation. The democratic significance of the imagined future becomes all the more visible in today’s age of skepticism towards future-regarding politics, where speculative modes of thinking run up against the desire for certainty and precision. more

The image features a promotional graphic for an MPIfG lecture by Matthias Thiemann on the topic of shadow banking and financial stability concerns.


This introductory lecture lays out the main object of study of the lecture series, the shadow banking system, its wider importance for the understanding of the contemporary political economy, and the dominant explanations for its rise as well as its positive and detrimental effects. The shadow banking system – the generation and trading of credit outside of the banking system, financed with short-term deposits – and its rise after WWII, is identified in the contemporary literature as a major factor in the process of financialization that unfolded from the 1970s and in the diffusion and impact of the Transatlantic Financial Crisis as it unfolded from 2007. As such, it is closely linked to the central banks’ rise to the heights of macroeconomic policy and the credit-based growth model more

A promotional graphic for a lecture titled "Foundations of the Rise of Shadow Banking in the US in the 1980s and 1960s" by Matthias Thiemann from Sciences Po, part of the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies lecture series.

The second lecture pursues the theme of agency of state actors in an attempt to explain the rise of the shadow banking system in the US by focusing on the establishment of the core market for liquidity provision to the shadow banking system, namely the repo-market in the US after WWII. It introduces the crucial concept of the liquidity triangle between the fiscal agent, the central bank, and private market-makers in order to develop the reasons that drove state actors to lay the foundations for the expansion of the shadow banking system. It documents how the Federal Reserve consciously and against prevalent legal interpretations started to enter into the provision of liquidity to broker dealers via the repo-market. more

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