Piotr Madajczyk


Piotr Włodzimierz Madajczyk (born September 11, 1959 in Warsaw) is a Polish historian, professor of humanities, academic lecturer. The son of Czesław Madajczyk.

Curriculum vitae

He studied history at the. Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań (1978-1980) and at the University of Warsaw (1980-1982). The promoter of his master's thesis was Tadeusz Jędruszczak. In 1989, Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań defended his doctoral dissertation, Traditional Tradition and Modern Politics. Politics and political concepts Gustav Stresemann (1915-1992), written under the direction of Antoni Czubiński. In 1998 also at the Institute of History of the Adam Mickiewicz University received a doctorate degree in Habilitation on the basis of a dissertation entitled "Connecting the Opole Silesia to Poland 1945-1948. He was also a grantee of the Institut für Europäische Geschichte in Mainz. By the President of the Republic of Poland dated 12 March 2003 he was awarded the title of Professor.

After graduation he was an employee of the Archive of New Records in Warsaw and the Western Institute in Poznań. In 1989 he was employed at the Institute of Socialist Countries in Warsaw. In 1990 he went to work at the Institute of Political Studies at the Polish Academy of Sciences, where he became an associate professor and head of the Department of German Studies. He was also an employee of the director of the National Minorities Office of the Ministry of Culture and Art (including the director), lecturer at Collegium Civitas, the Mazovian School of Higher Education and the Higher School of Commerce and Law.

He specializes in the issues of forced displacement of people in Central and Eastern Europe in the years 1945-1950 and studies on national minorities. It also deals with the problem of collaboration during World War II.

Awarded the Knight's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta (2011). Selected publications Bibliography

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