Thomas Heberer (sinologist)

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Born (1947-11-03) November 3, 1947 (age 78)
Offenbach am Main, West Germany
CitizenshipGerman
EducationUniversity of Bremen (PhD)
OccupationSinologist
Thomas Heberer
Born (1947-11-03) November 3, 1947 (age 78)
Offenbach am Main, West Germany
CitizenshipGerman
EducationUniversity of Bremen (PhD)
OccupationSinologist
EmployerUniversity of Duisburg-Essen

Thomas Heberer (Chinese: 王海; born 3 November 1947) is a German social anthropologist and political scientist specializing in Chinese politics and society. He has conducted extensive research on local governance, minorities’ policies, and the political role of private entrepreneurs in China.[1]

Heberer studied social anthropology, philosophy, political science, and Chinese studies at several German universities. He earned his doctorate from the University of Bremen in 1977 with a dissertation on the Chinese Communist Party’s Mass Line concept.[1] Between 1977 and 1981, he worked in Beijing as a reader and translator for the German edition of the Peking Review, observing China’s transition from the Cultural Revolution to the reform era.[2]

Academic career

Upon returning to Germany, Heberer held research positions at institutions including the Übersee-Museum Bremen[3] and the University of Bremen. He completed a habilitation on China’s informal economic sector, receiving the venia legendi in political science.[1]

Heberer’s professorships include:

After retirement, he was appointed senior professor at Duisburg-Essen until the end of 2025.[4] He has also held visiting appointments at Seoul National University, the University of Washington, National Taiwan University, Zhejiang University, and Peking University.[5]

Research and themes

Heberer’s work is influenced by social theorists including James C. Scott, Pierre Bourdieu, Theodor W. Adorno, Norbert Elias, Lucian W. Pye, and Michel Foucault. He emphasizes field research as essential for understanding societies from within.[6] He has written on the concept of “the scientist as a traveler,” highlighting the personal and intellectual insights gained through immersive research.[7]

His research focuses on:

  • Ethnic minority policy, particularly the Yi (Nosu) in Liangshan, Sichuan Province
  • Rural–urban development and social change in China
  • Political roles of private entrepreneurs and local cadres
  • Environmental governance and community politics in urban China
  • Social disciplining, civilizing processes, and political morality
  • Digital representation in Chinese society.

Heberer has published extensively in German, English, and Chinese, including monographs and edited volumes.[4]

Together with Gunter Schubert, he developed the sociological concept of “strategic groups” to analyze the behavior of local cadres and entrepreneurs in development processes.[8][9][10]

Heberer has also promoted research on the Yi beyond academia, organizing conferences and exhibitions and raising funds to support a Yi minority school in Meigu County.[11][12]

Public engagement and institutional roles

Heberer has served on editorial boards for journals including The China Quarterly, The European Journal of East Asian Studies, and the Journal of Current Chinese Affairs. He co-founded the German Association of Social Science Research on China (ASC) and has contributed to public discussions on China in German-language media and academic forums.[13]

Controversy

In September 2023, Heberer co-authored an opinion piece with sinologist Helwig Schmidt-Glintzer following a self-funded visit to Xinjiang by five German academics. The article suggested that Europeans should consider dialogue with Chinese authorities if conditions improved.[14] The piece drew criticism for allegedly downplaying ongoing human rights concerns,[15] though others defended the authors, emphasizing the need for informed scholarly engagement.[16]

Heberer and colleagues also published edited volumes on Xinjiang in 2024 (Xinjiang – eine Region im Spannungsfeld von Geschichte und Moderne, LIT, 2024, German) and 2026 (Xinjiang – A Region at the Crossroads of History and Modernity, LIT, 2026, English).

Selected English book publications

Notes

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