Franz Rothenbacher


Franz Rothenbacher is a German sociologist.

Academic career

Rothenbacher studied sociology at the University of Mannheim from 1975 until 1981. For the next year and a half he was research assistant at the special research group 3 Microanalytic Foundations of Social Policy, Frankfurt a.M. and Mannheim.
From mid-1982 until 1988 Rothenbacher worked as lecturer and research fellow at the chair for sociology of Wolfgang Zapf at the Faculty for Social Sciences of the University of Mannheim. In 1988 he received a philosophers doctoral degree in sociology.
Since 1989 Rothenbacher is a social researcher at the Mannheim Centre for European Social Research at the infrastructural department Eurodata.

Research

Rothenbacher in the beginning was interested in the long-term analysis of social change in Germany, also known as modernization. He analysed central long-term macrosocial processes of change in the social subsystems of family, health, housing, and in a cross-sectional perspective the structures of social inequality. He intended to apply the perspective of social reporting or of social indicators to historical processes and structures.
At the Mannheim Centre for European Social Research Rothenbacher contributed to the implementation of the infrastructural department Eurodata and the European statistics library. The research tradition of modernization and of the territorial structuring of Europe formed the basis for extensive long-term and comparative data collections for the European countries which appear in the data handbook series The Societies of Europe. For this series Rothenbacher wrote both volumes on the West European and the volume on the East European population.
Other research interests of Rothenbacher include European social reporting, the comparative analysis of the European public services, and finally local historical research, as well.

Selected works

Soziale Ungleichheit im Modernisierungsprozeß des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts.. Frankfurt/New York: Campus Verlag, 1989. Social Statistics and Social Reporting in and for Europe. Bonn: InformationsZentrum Sozialwissenschaften, 1994..Historische Haushalts- und Familienstatistik von Deutschland 1815–1990.. Frankfurt/New York: Campus Verlag, 1997..Statistical Sources for Social Research on Western Europe: A Guide to Social Statistics. Opladen: Leske and Budrich, 1998..The European Population 1850–1945. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK and New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002.. Reprint 2006.The European Population since 1945. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK and New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005.. Reprint 2006.The Central and East European Population since 1850. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK und New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013..
  • chapter 2 ‘Bevölkerung, Haushalte und Familien’. In Thomas Rahlf, Deutschland in Daten: Zeitreihen zur Historischen Statistik. Bonn: Bundeszentrale für Politische Bildung / bpb, 2015, pp. 30–45.. Second, updated and extended edition 2022. An English edition of this text with the title can be found on the project homepage.
  • chapter 2 ‘Bevölkerung, Haushalte, Familien’. In: Thomas Rahlf, Dokumentation zum Zeitreihensatz für Deutschland, 1834–2012. Documentation of the German Time Series Dataset, 1834-2012. Documentation for: Thomas Rahlf, Deutschland in Daten: Zeitreihen der Historischen Statistik. Bonn: Bundeszentrale für Politische Bildung. Version 29 Juni 2015. Historical Social ResearchHistorische Sozialforschung, HSR Trans 26 v01. Köln: GESIS, 2015, pp. 69–130..