Western Institute

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Western Institute
Instytut Zachodni. Instytut Naukowo-Badawczy im. Zygmunta Wojciechowskiego w Poznaniu
Instytut Zachodni
EstablishedFebruary 27, 1944 (1944-02-27)
FounderZygmunt Wojciechowski
Founded atWarsaw
TypeState-sponsored think tank
FocusGermany–Poland relations, European politics
HeadquartersMostowa Street 27 A
Location
Coordinates52°24′19″N 16°56′20″E / 52.40528°N 16.93889°E / 52.40528; 16.93889
Director
Michał Nowosielski
Deputy director
Krzysztof Malinowski
Websitewww.iz.poznan.pl Edit this at Wikidata

The Western Institute in Poznań (Polish: Instytut Zachodni; German: West-Institut; French: L'Institut Occidental) is a scientific research society focusing on the Western provinces of Poland (including Greater Poland, Silesia, Pomerania), history, economy and politics of Germany, and contemporary and historical Polish-German relations.

Established by professor Zygmunt Wojciechowski in 1944 in Warsaw, since 1945 based in Poznań. There were branches in Warsaw (1945–53), Wrocław (1948–49), and scientific posts in Kraków and Olsztyn.

History

The Western Institute was founded in 1944 and became the flagship of the Polish Research of the West.[1]

Mission

The mission of the Institute is to conduct research projects within fields of political science, sociology, history, economics and law-especially focusing on Polish-German issues as well as European politics. It has been founded by a group of Poznań University professor in 1944, and incorporated with Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1992[2]

Historiographical assessment and legacy

In contemporary scholarship, the wartime and communist-era work of the Western Institute is evaluated through a nuanced lens that distinguishes between its valuable documentary achievements and its structural role in state-directed politics of history (polityka historyczna).

Modern historiography heavily criticizes the institute's early decades for its dependency on nationalist and ethnocentric dogmas. Polish historians such as Jan M. Piskorski and Robert Traba, alongside international scholars like Gregor Thum, have critically deconstructed the institute's early post-war role as a pragmatic expert alliance between its national-democratic founders, such as Wojciechowski, and the emerging communist regime.[3] The institute effectively institutionalized a rigid "national paradigm" (paradygmat narodowy), providing the historical, archeological, and geopolitical arguments required to normalize the forced displacement of the German population and legitimize the annexation of the so-called Recovered Territories. Critical scholarship emphasizes that this framework was built upon the ideological premise of an eternal, biological German-Polish antagonism, which narrowed the academic focus to a search for an exclusive Slavic continuity while deliberately erasing the region's complex, multi-layered German heritage.[4][5]

Following the formal recognition of East Germany by the Polish People's Republic in 1949, the institute underwent a process of ideological Sovietization. Its researchers were pressured to artificially divide their scholarship into a heavy critique of "West German revanchism" while maintaining strict ideological compliance and censorship regarding the socialist East. Historian Richard Blanke has noted that much of the academic output produced during the height of the communist era suffered from systemic anti-German bias, rigid methodology, and direct political instrumentalization.[6]

Conversely, contemporary scholarship heavily praises the institute's pioneering efforts in documentation and international law. Its foundational source collection, Documenta Occupationis, which meticulously recorded Nazi war crimes in occupied Poland, is universally recognized by modern Israeli, American, and German scholars as an indispensable and highly reliable canon of historical research. This monumental contribution to documenting the realities of the occupation was prominently lauded by Polish historian and diplomat Władysław Bartoszewski.[7] Furthermore, the institute's legal and political experts successfully drafted the international law frameworks that defended the inviolability of the Oder–Neisse line, providing the essential groundwork for the Treaty of Warsaw and the eventual German-Polish Border Treaty of 1990.[8]

Following the fall of communism in 1989, particularly under the long-standing leadership of director Anna Wolff-Powęska, the Western Institute underwent a profound paradigm shift. It abandoned its former ethnocentric, confrontational frameworks, transitioned toward a critical transnational perspective, and reestablished itself as a leading institution for Polish-German reconciliation, academic dialogue, and collaborative European research.[9]


Directors

Main publications

  • The Western Review (Przegląd Zachodni)[11]
  • Polish Western Affairs
  • La Pologne et les Affaires Occidentales

See also

References

  1. Gregor Thum, Die fremde Stadt. Breslau nach 1945, 2006, pp.276, ISBN 3-570-55017-6, ISBN 978-3-570-55017-5
  2. "Historia Instytutu Zachodniego". Archived from the original on 2009-11-24. Retrieved 2011-05-17.
  3. Piskorski, Jan M. (2010). Przesiedlenie Polaków i Niemców: Mit i rzeczywistość (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Poznańskie. ISBN 978-8371777141.
  4. Thum, Gregor (2011). Uprooted: How Breslau Became Wrocław during the Century of Expulsions. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691140223.
  5. Traba, Robert (2009). Przeszłość w teraźniejszości: Polskie spory o historię na przełomie XX i XXI wieku (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Poznańskie. ISBN 978-8371775895.
  6. Blanke, Richard (1993). Orphans of Versailles: The Germans in Western Poland, 1918–1939. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0813118031.
  7. Bartoszewski, Władysław (1993). Oczami świadka (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Dolnośląskie. ISBN 83-7023-288-6. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: checksum (help)
  8. Madajczyk, Piotr (2015). Na drodze do rządu jedności narodowej: Polityka historyczna PPR i PPS 1944–1945 (in Polish). Instytut Studiów Politycznych PAN. ISBN 978-8360580981.
  9. Wolff-Powęska, Anna (2011). Pamięć – brzemię i uwolnienie. Niemcy wobec przeszłości (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Poznańskie. ISBN 978-8371778117.
  10. "Management | Instytut Zachodni". IZ.Poznan.pl. Retrieved 1 August 2025.
  11. "Wydania". Instytut Zachodni. Retrieved March 3, 2018.