2017年3月31日星期五

Leibniz Association Berlin, Germany


The Leibniz Year in the Leibniz Association: 2016, the Leibniz Association simultaneously commemorates the 370th birthday and the 300-year death anniversary of its namesake Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz with numerous events and the joint virtual exhibition put on by the 8 Leibniz research museums. Featuring 8 objects, the museums offer insights into their research and their collections, which comprise 100 million objects. But scientific interdisciplinary cooperation is not restricted to the museums alone. The Leibniz Association places special emphasis on fostering the exchange by more than 9,000 researchers at 88 institutes across a wide variety of disciplines, at the same time realising Leibniz’s request of “theoria cum praxi” for all sciences.

The Leibniz Association (German: Leibniz-Gemeinschaft or Wissenschaftsgemeinschaft Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz) is a union of German non-university research institutes from various branches of study.

In 2017, 91 non-university research institutes and service device for science belong to the Leibniz-Gemeinschaft. The fields range from natural science, engineering, and ecology, to economics, other social sciences, space science, and humanities. The Leibniz Institutes work in an interdisciplinary fashion, and connect basic and applied science. They cooperate with universities, industry, and other partners in different parts of the world. The "evaluation" of the Leibniz-Gemeinschaft is a benchmark for all institutes. The Leibniz Institutes employ 18,700 people and budget was €1.7 billion.

Leibniz Institutes are funded publicly to equal parts by the federal government and the Federal states (Bundesländer).

The Leibniz-Gemeinschaft is named after the German philosopher, mathematician, scientist, and inventor Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716).

The Leibniz Association evolved from the "Blaue Liste" (blue list) in former Western Germany and research institutions of the German Academy of Sciences at Berlin of the former DDR, whose research capability was deemed worth keeping after an evaluation by the German Wissenschaftsrat. The name 'Blaue Liste' for a German model for funding science has been retired, and traces back to the color of a dossier.
The Leibniz Association's headquarter is located in Berlin and there is EU bureau in Bruxelles. Since 2014 the engineer Prof. Dr.-Ing. Matthias Kleiner is president of the Leibniz Association, Christiane Neumann acts as secretary general.
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