Andrei S. Markovits
Andrei S. Markovits was born in October 1948 in the West Romanian city of Timisoara as the only child of a Hungarian-speaking middle-class Jewish couple. He is the Karl W. Deutsch Collegiate Professor Emeritus of Comparative Politics and German Studies and an Arthur F. Thurnau Professor Emeritus at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
Raised in Vienna and New York City, Markovits attended Columbia University from which he received five degrees. His academic career led him to holding positions on the faculties of Wesleyan University, Boston University, and the University of California at Santa Cruz before assuming his professorships at the University of Michigan in 1999.
In addition, he was a long-time member of the Center for European Studies at Harvard University where he was also a Visiting Professor of Social Studies in 2002-2003. He held guest professorships at universities in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, and Israel. He has been awarded many fellowships and was a member of the prestigious Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences of Stanford University and the eminent Institute for Advanced Study Berlin (Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin).
His many books, articles, and reviews have appeared in eighteen languages. Markovits’ published scholarship ranges from European social democracy and labor unions to, quite prominently, European anti-Americanism and its close relative, anti-Semitism; from the politics of scandal to that of the Green movement and party in Germany.
His latest work has been primarily focused on the consumption of sports (i.e., the fans as opposed to the athletes) in North America and Europe, as well as dog rescue in the ever-changing context of human-animal relations, a topic on which he wrote a prize-winning book.
Markovits was awarded two honorary doctorates by German universities: Lueneburg in 2007 and Passau in 2025 respectively.
Additionally, the President of the Federal Republic of Germany bestowed on Markovits in 2012 the Cross of the Order of Merit, First Class, one of the highest honors awarded by Germany to Germans and foreigners alike.
He recently published his memoir under the title THE PASSPORT AS HOME: COMFORT IN ROOTLESSNESS. (Budapest and Vienna: The Central European University Press, 2021). The book has also appeared in a German and Romanian translation!
A lover of all music, Markovits has been particularly enamored with the work of Mozart, Beethoven, Dvorak, and the Grateful Dead, whom he followed on many a tour on the East Coast between 1969 and Jerry Garcia’s tragic and untimely death in 1995. A devoted lover of golden retrievers over many years, Markovits and his wife, Kiki, live with their beloved golden Emma in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
