Early years Andy Markovits was born in October 1948 in the west
Romanian city of
Timișoara. He was raised as the single child of a middle-class Jewish family, speaking German and Hungarian at home. In school he learned Romanian, and from his early childhood he was tutored in English—later in French as well. Thus, his multilingual identity dates back to his childhood as well as the polyglot part of the world where he grew up. At the age of nine, he and his father emigrated from Romania, first to Vienna and then to New York, the two cities that would play the most important roles in his upbringing. Between 1959 and 1967, he spent the school year—September through June—in Vienna; and the summer months in New York.
University and post-doctoral education After being graduated from Vienna's prestigious
Theresianische Akademie with a Matura degree (the Austrian equivalent of the German Abitur), Markovits enrolled at
Columbia University in New York City where he completed all of his post-secondary education, acquiring five degrees in the process. He studied political science, economics, sociology, and business administration. After receiving his doctorate in political science in 1976, he went to the Center for European Studies at
Harvard University of which he would remain an active member and a research associate until June 30, 1999.
Institutional affiliations At the Harvard Center, Markovits chaired for many years the study group on German Politics as well as one entitled "The Jews in Modern Europe." He founded the quarterly journal German Politics and Society in 1983 which in the meantime has become the foremost scholarly journal on modern German politics in the United States. He participated in many of the center's activities and became one of that institution's mainstays over the years. In turn, the center's uniquely rich intellectual atmosphere and immensely creative interdisciplinarity have had a major hand in forming Markovits's scholarly life. Between 1977 and 1983, Markovits was an assistant professor in the Department of Government at
Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut. Thereafter, he joined the faculty at Boston University where he was associate professor in the Department of Political Science from 1983 until 1992. He then became professor in the Department of Politics at the
University of California at Santa Cruz which he chaired until 1995 and where he remained until joining the faculty at the University of Michigan on September 1, 1999. Markovits has been awarded many fellowships, scholarships and research grants. During the academic year of 2002/2003, Markovits was visiting professor of social studies at Harvard University. He has held academic appointments at a number of universities overseas. Among them have been Dortmund University, Osnabrück University and Bochum University in Germany; Innsbruck University in Austria where he was a Fulbright Professor in the Department of Political Science; St. Gallen University in Switzerland; and The Hebrew University and Tel Aviv University in Israel. He spent the academic year 1998/99 as a Fellow at the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin—Institute for Advanced Study Berlin. In June 2008, Markovits served as the Dr. Elizabeth Ortner-Chopin Visiting Professor at Webster University in Vienna, Austria. Andy Markovits was a Fellow in 2008–2009 at the
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at
Stanford University. In the spring term of 2010, Andy Markovits was the Sir
Peter Ustinov Professor of the City of Vienna in the Department of Contemporary History of the
University of Vienna in Vienna, Austria.
Areas of research and publication A specialist on the politics of Western and Central Europe—Germany and Austria in particular—Markovits has published nineteen authored and co-authored books as well as edited and co-edited volumes; well over 100 scholarly articles; more than 50 review essays; and many articles and interviews in the American and European press. Markovits's research interests and areas of publication include: German and European labor; German and European social democracy, as well as social movements; German-Jewish relations; Germany's role in the new Europe; Anti-Americanism in Europe; the comparative sociology of modern sports cultures and – most recently – the new dimensions of the human-animal bond, particularly its deeply feminized features. Markovits's scholarly work has been published in English, German, Italian, French, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish, Hungarian, Russian, Ukrainian, Romanian, Chinese,
Persian, Hebrew, Korean, Georgian, and Czech. Markovits's latest book publication is entitled
Hillel at Michigan 1926/27 – 1945: Struggles of Jewish Identity in a Pivotal Era. His previous book
From Property to Family: American Dog Rescue and the Discourse of Compassion, published by the
University of Michigan Press in the fall of 2014, garnered the University of Michigan Press's Distinguished Book Award in 2015.
Teaching career Markovits has won a number of teaching awards at the institutions with which he was affiliated during his academic career. At the University of California, Santa Cruz, he was awarded the "Excellence in Teaching Award" in 1997, distinguishing him as the best teacher on campus that year. At the University of Michigan, he was bestowed the Tronstein Award in 2007 and 2016 for being the best teacher in the Department of Political Science and the Golden Apple Award for being the best instructor on the University of Michigan's Ann Arbor campus. On March 15, 2009, Markovits received the coveted Arthur F. Thurnau professorship from the University of Michigan. Supported for by the Thurnau Charitable Trust, the Thurnau Professorship is annually bestowed upon five or six tenured faculty from the University of Michigan in recognition of commitment to and investment in undergraduate teaching which has had a significant impact on the intellectual development of their students. Markovits has advised doctoral dissertations at many major American universities, as well as universities in Great Britain, France, Germany, Austria, Holland, Switzerland, Canada and Israel. On July 4, 2007, Markovits was awarded a Dr. Phil. honoris causa—an honorary doctorate—by the Faculty of Social Sciences of the
Leuphana Universität Lüneburg in
Lüneburg, Germany. In a ceremony on November 5, 2025, Markovits received his second honorary doctorate from the
University of Passau, awarded by the Faculty of Social and Educational Sciences.
Bundesverdienstkreuz erster Klasse Markovits was bestowed the
Bundesverdienstkreuz erster Klasse—The Federal Cross of The Order of Merit, First Class—by the president of the Federal Republic of Germany. The Consul General of the Federal Republic of Germany in Chicago handed this award to Markovits on March 14, 2012. This award is the highest honor the Federal Republic of Germany rewards to any civilian, German or foreign. ==Current work==