Abstract(s)
After developing independently following World War II, the research systems of East and West
Germany reunited at the end of the Cold War, resulting in Westernization of East German
Research institutions. Using data from the Web of Science over the 1980-2000 period, this
paper analyses the effects of these political changes on the research activity of scholars from
East and West Germany before and after the reunification. It shows that these groups differ in
terms of levels of production, publication language, collaboration patterns and scientific impact
and that, unsurprisingly, the scholarly output of the East became much more similar to that of
the West after the reunification. At the level of individual researchers, analysis shows that East
German researchers who had direct or indirect ties with the West prior to the 1990s were less
affected by the reunification, or were perhaps quicker to adapt to this major change, than their
colleagues who were more deeply rooted in the Eastern research system.