U-M Professor Andrei Markovits is awarded the Officer’s Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany

March 14, 2012
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Andrei MarkovitsAndrei MarkovitsANN ARBOR—University of Michigan Professor Andrei Markovits received the Officer’s Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany from Consul General Onno Hueckmann today at a ceremony at the German Consulate General in Chicago.

The award is one of the highest distinctions the Federal Republic of Germany bestows upon private individuals, whether German or foreign.

The Order of Merit, instituted in 1951 by Federal President Theodor Heuss, is the only honor that may be awarded in all fields of endeavor to individuals for services to the nation. The award recognizes achievements in the political, economic, social or intellectual realm and for all kinds of outstanding services to the nation in the field of social, charitable or philanthropic work.

“Your service to furthering the world’s understanding of Germany is extraordinary,” Hueckmann said in a speech today. “You have been a beacon for all things German not only in the American Midwest but throughout the US and across the globe. With your outstanding dedication as a scholar and a teacher, you have fostered the German-American friendship and understanding.”

Markovits said he considered the award “a great honor.”

At U-M Markovits is an Arthur F. Thurnau Professor, the Karl W. Deutsch Collegiate Professor of Comparative Politics and German Studies, professor of political science, professor of Germanic languages and literatures and a professor of sociology.

He is the author and editor of many books, scholarly articles, conference papers, book reviews and newspaper contributions in English and many foreign languages on topics as varied as German and Austrian politics, anti-Semitism, anti-Americanism, social democracy, social movements, the European right and the European left. Markovits has also worked extensively on comparative sports culture in Europe and North America.

His latest book on that subject is entitled “Sport: Motor und Impulssystem für Emanzipation und Diskriminierung.” (Picus Verlag, 2011.) Written in German, this book delineates Markovits’ long-held arguments on sports in North America and Europe, particularly in terms of their representing forces for emancipation, meritocracy and progress on the one hand; but also for discrimination, prejudice and exclusion on the other.

Markovits was born in Romania and speaks several languages including German, Hungarian, Romanian, French and English. After coming to the United States he earned five degrees at Columbia University in New York, including a doctorate in political science.

He was a research associate at Harvard University and taught at Wesleyan University, Boston University and the University of Southern California at Santa Cruz before coming to U-M in 1999.

 

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