Supporting body The supporting body of the VWI is an association that had been formed in the founding phase of the VWI by the Jewish Community Vienna, the
Jewish Documentation Center (Dokumentationszentrum des Bundes Jüdischer Verfolgter des Naziregimes), the
Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (Dokumentationsarchiv des österreichischen Widerstandes DÖW), the
Institute of Contemporary History at the University of Vienna (Institut für Zeitgeschichte der Universität Wien), the Institute of Conflict Research (Institut für Konfliktforschung), the
Jewish Museum Vienna and the International Research Centre for Cultural Studies (Internationales Forschungszentrum Kulturwissenschaften, IFK). Following a dispute on the permission for use of the archive of the Jewish Community Vienna, the Institute of Conflict Research and the IFK left the supporting body in November 2009, their representatives also resigning from their posts in the VWI board of directors. After the settlement of this dispute, a lending agreement on the use of the Holocaust-relevant materials in the IKG archive – as envisaged by the original board of directors – was signed by the new board of directors in November 2009. Subsequently, the
International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance and the Centre for Jewish Cultural History at the
University of Salzburg (Zentrum für jüdische Kulturgeschichte, Universität Salzburg) joined the supporting body of the VWI in the beginning of 2010. The development of the institute and preparation for full operation was continued on the basis of the step-by-step plan as agreed on in the founding phase. With the arrival of the first fellows in autumn 2012 the institute started its all-out operation.
Board of directors The board of directors of the VWI is appointed by the members of the supporting body. This holds the highest decision-making power in all organisational aspects of the VWI.
Anton Pelinka was the first chairman of the board, the historian and philosopher
Ingo Zechner VWI's first managing director. In November 2009, after a dispute on the proper usage of the archives of the IKG (intended to become a part of the holdings of the VWI), several members of the board and the managing director resigned. Under the new chairman of the board, the professor of law at the University of Salzburg, Georg Graf, is deputies being Brigitte Bailer-Galanda and
Ariel Muzicant this conflict – well documented in the Austrian media – finally was settled, and a contract on the usage of the archives already worked out by the former board in accordance with the IKG was signed. In January 2010, the Viennese contemporary historian Béla Rásky became VWI's new managing director. As of October 2012, sociologist Éva Kovács from the Centre of Social Studies at the
Hungarian Academy of Sciences became the institute's Research Programme Director. In December 2018, Georg Graf resigned and was followed by
Terezija Stoisits as new chairwoman of the board.
International Academic Board The International Academic Board is a key actor in all academic issues. The board consists of at least nine, maximum twelve internationally renowned experts, of whom no more than three are allowed to be from within Austrian academic institutions. Particular care is taken that the board remains interdisciplinary. Members and employees of members of the supporting body of the VWI cannot join the International Academic Board. The International Academic Board is elected for a period of three years at the general assembly, like the board. As of January 2020, the members of the board are as follows (in alphabetical order): • Nanci Adler (
NIOD, Amsterdam) • Jolanta Ambrosewicz-Jacobs (
Uniwersytet Jagielloński, Kraków) • Peter Black (
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum) • Susanne Heim (
Institute of Contemporary History, Munich-Berlin) • Robert Graham Knight (
Loughborough University, Leicestershire) • Dan Michman (International Institute for Holocaust Research,
Yad Vashem, Jerusalem;
Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan) • Anthony
Dirk Moses (
European University Institute, Florence) •
Dirk Rupnow (
University of Innsbruck) • Irina Sherbakova (
Memorial, Moscow) • Sybille Steinbacher (Fritz Bauer Institut, Frankfurt) • Dominique Trimbur (
Fondation pour la Mémoire de la Shoah) • Yfaat Weiss (Simon-Dubnow-Institut, Leipzig) == Activities ==