Freiburg, 18/12/2024
At its inaugural meeting on 18 December 2024, the University Council, which was newly appointed on 1 October 2024, elected Prof. Dr. Holger Reinecke as its chair and Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. mult. Andreas Voßkuhle as his deputy.
At its inaugural meeting on 18 December 2024, the University Council of the University of Freiburg, newly appointed as of 1 October 2024, elected Prof. Dr. Holger Reinecke as chair for the current term of office from 1 October 2024 to 30 September 2027. Reinecke is the Board Member for Research and Development and Regulatory Affairs at Aesculap AG. The board also elected Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. mult. Andreas Voßkuhle as his deputy and confirmed him in this office. Voßkuhle is Professor of Public Law and Director of the Institute for state science and legal philosophy at the University of Freiburg. “I warmly congratulate Holger Reinecke on his election as chair of the University Council and Andreas Voßkuhle as his deputy,” says Prof. Dr. Kerstin Krieglstein, Rector of the University of Freiburg. “Their experience and knowledge are extremely valuable and I look forward to working with Holger Reinecke, Andreas Voßkuhle and the other members of the University Council to shape the future of the University of Freiburg.”
Reinecke studied chemistry at Clausthal University of Technology, where he gained his doctorate in 1990. He then worked for more than 14 years at STEAG microParts GmbH, now Böhringer Ingelheim microParts GmbH, where he held various positions in the areas of research & development, production and market development. From 2004 onwards, Reinecke held the professorship for process technology at the Department of Microsystems Engineering (IMTEK) at the University of Freiburg for ten years and was simultaneously head of the Institute for Micro and Information Technology at Hahn-Schickard-Gesellschaft für angewandte Forschung e.V. in Villingen-Schwenningen. From 2014 to December 2023, he was CEO of the Schölly Group. He was appointed to the Executive Board of Aesculap AG on 1 July 2022.
Voßkuhle is Director of the Institute for state science and legal philosophy at the University of Freiburg. From March 2010 to June 2020, he was President of Germany’s Federal Constitutional Court and Chairman of the Second Senate. Prior to this, the constitutional law professor was elected Rector of the University of Freiburg in 2007, a position he held briefly from April to May 2008 until he was appointed judge and Vice President of the Federal Constitutional Court. Voßkuhle is a member of many academic committees and has received numerous honours. He has been a member of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities since 2007 and a member of the Leopoldina – National Academy of Sciences and Humanities since 2018. His research specialisms include constitutional law and constitutional and legal theory. Together with Matthias Jestaedt, Voßkuhle is co-founder of the Cluster of Excellence initiative Constitution as Practice in Times of Transformation (ConTrans) at the University of Freiburg.
For its term of office from 1 October 2024 to 30 September 2027, the University Council will consist of the following:
External members
Internal members
In accordance with the Baden-Württemberg State Higher Education Act, the University Council supports the university, assumes responsibility in strategic terms, decides on structural and development planning and proposes measures that serve to raise the university’s profile and increase its performance and competitiveness. It supervises the management of the Rectorate. The University Council can comment on strategic higher education matters to the Ministry of Science at any time, and the Ministry of Science may request opinions from the University Council. The University Council consists of eleven members, six from outside the university and five from within. They are nominated by a selection committee consisting of members of the University Senate and the Baden-Württemberg Ministry of Science, Research and the Arts and appointed by the Minister of Science. A term of office lasts three years.