Claus Offe
Claus Offe (16 March 1940 – 1 October 2025) was a German political sociologist associated with the Frankfurt School. Offe was founding member of the Greens and the Hertie School. He was an advocate for basic income.
Life and careerOffe was born in Berlin on 16 March 1940,[1][2] the eldest of the four children of the chemist Hans Albert Offe and his wife Ursula née Brenneke.[1] He first studied sociology at the University of Cologne from 1959 to 1960.[2] He then moved to the Humboldt-University of Berlin, completing with a diploma in 1965. He was an assistant at the University of Frankfurt, achieved his PhD in 1968, supervised by Jürgen Habermas. He taught there sociology of organisations and political sociology until 1969. He completed his habilitation at the University of Konstanz in 1973.[2] In Germany, he held chairs for political science and political sociology at the Bielefeld University from 1975 to 1989, the University of Bremen from 1989 to 1995, and the Humboldt-University from 1995 to 2005.[3] He worked as fellow and visiting professor at the Institutes for Advanced Study in Stanford, Princeton, and the Australian National University as well as Harvard University, the University of California at Berkeley and The New School in Greenwich, New York.[2] He taught from 2005 to 2010 political sociology at the Hertie School of Governance, a private university in Berlin that he co-founded.[3] He made substantial contributions to understanding the relationships between democracy and capitalism. His work focused on economies and states in transition to democracy. A left-leaning German academic, he is counted among the second generation of the Frankfurt School.[4] He was founding member of the Greens.[5] In politics, he advised Social Democrats to collaborate with the Greens already in the late 1970s.[4] Basic incomeOffe was one of the founding members of the Basic Income European Network, a network that later renamed to Basic Income Earth Network, and he wrote several articles and books around the idea from the 1980s.[6] To the article "A Basic Income for All" by Philippe Van Parijs in Boston Review, Offe published a response. Offe clarified some of his thoughts about the universal basic income and how to get there. He started by saying that he agreed with Van Parijs that basic income clearly was a "morally attractive arrangement" and also thought that Van Parijs provided a "normatively compelling argument for it in terms of real freedom and social justice". He moved on to the question of why so many people, both elites and non-elites, seemed reluctant or even against the idea of an unconditional basic income. He argued that one way of looking at this was to acknowledge that certain groups may well have legitimate or rational reasons to fear the introduction of unconditional basic income. Employers may, for example, fear that their control over the workers may be weakened. Individuals and organizations may also fear that the "moral underpinnings of a social order" will be substantially weakened, that is the idea that everyone should work, employed or self-employed, in order to have a legitimate right to a living income. There was also the fear, he noted, that the tax will be too high.[7] Taking these fears into account, Offe suggested that the basic income implementation should be "governed by principles of gradualism and reversibility". Instead of thinking about basic income implementation as "before" and "after" he thought it was better to promote the system change in the dynamic terms of less and more. One way of gradually moving towards a universal basic income, according to Offe, could be to expand the list of groups, conditions and activities that were recognized as legitimate for something like a basic income already, as Tony Atkinson had proposed earlier in the name of a participation income.[7] Personal lifeOffe married Ulrike Poppe in 2001. He died on 1 October 2025, at the age of 85.[3][4] Publications
Dissertation
References
Further reading
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