Outstanding Results for ZEW Mannheim

Research

External Scientific Evaluation by the Leibniz Association

ZEW Mannheim has received top marks from the Leibniz Association in terms of the quality of its research, policy advice, and transfer activities.

ZEW Mannheim has received top marks from the Leibniz Association in terms of the quality of its research, policy advice, and transfer activities. The external evaluators awarded the highest rating of “excellent” to five of ZEW’s eight research units, and the rating of “very good to excellent” to three, attesting to “ZEW’s outstanding performance”. On the basis of this result, the Leibniz Association has decided to recommend ZEW for further federal and state funding.

The statement further asserts: “ZEW regularly and continuously produces important research results, which are widely received in the scientific community both nationally and internationally. A substantial number of articles are published in highly visible journals. The institute collects unique datasets, including datasets on business and innovation activity within Germany, which are made available for external use. Its activities are of high relevance for policymakers. The institute conducts numerous transfer activities and maintains close links to stakeholders and institutions. ZEW’s transfer strategy coherently links its research activities to policy advice and knowledge transfer and is facilitated very effectively by the science-supporting units.”

“We are delighted with the top results and feel validated in our institute’s strategy. We would like to express our gratitude to the evaluators, whose suggestions we are happy to incorporate,” says ZEW President Professor Achim Wambach. “The evaluation also highlights the excellent research infrastructure and outstanding team spirit that have developed at ZEW over the last decades,” emphasises ZEW Managing Director Thomas Kohl.

About the evaluation procedure

The 97 independent research institutions belonging to the Leibniz Association are jointly financed by the federal government and states due to their national importance and overall state-level scientific policy interest. At regular intervals, but at the latest every seven years, the federal and state governments verify whether the institutions united within the Leibniz Association still meet the requirements for joint funding.

Find out more about the evaluation procedure of the Leibniz Association

Full statement of the Leibniz Senate on ZEW Mannheim (in german only)

About the Leibniz Association

The Leibniz Association is one of the four major non-university research organisations in Germany and connects almost 100 independent research institutes that range in focus from the natural sciences, engineering, and environmental sciences to economics, spatial and social sciences and the humanities.

Leibniz institutes address issues of social, economic and ecological relevance. They conduct basic and applied research, including in the interdisciplinary Leibniz Research Alliances, maintain scientific infrastructure, and provide research-based services. The Leibniz Association identifies focus areas for knowledge transfer, and advises and informs policymakers, the scientific community, industry and the general public. Because of their importance for the whole country as a whole, the Leibniz Association Institutes are funded jointly by the German federal and state governments. The Leibniz institutes employ around 20,500 people, including 11,500 researchers. Their financial volume amounts to two billion euros.