ABSTRACT Aims This article examines the role of soil scientist Fritz Scheffer (1899–1979) under National Socialism and offers a critical assessment of his scientific, institutional, and political positioning between 1933 and 1945. It asks how Scheffer shaped his career within the tension between disciplinary specialization, political expectations, and personal willingness to adapt. Results The analysis shows that although Scheffer was not directly involved in racial or settlement‐related crimes, his work was embedded in key agrarian policy programs of the regime, and he benefited considerably from the National Socialist science system through his functions in the Nazi research service ( Forschungsdienst ), his deanship at the University of Jena, and his integration into politically exposed networks. His programmatic writings contain explicit declarations of loyalty to the goals of the “Greater German Reich,” while his post‐war self‐portrayal in denazification proceedings as an apolitical specialist proves to be highly selective and reductive. Conclusions Overall, Scheffer emerges as a typical representative of an academic functional elite which, without pronounced ideological zeal but through consistent adaptation and strategic self‐presentation, became stably integrated into the structures of the regime. The article thus contributes to a more nuanced understanding of the history of German soil science under National Socialism.
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Jan Arend
University of Tübingen
Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science
University of Tübingen
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Jan Arend (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ba43584e9516ffd37a485e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/jpln.70064