The "Leipzig School", rich in the talents of a first generation, was of strong theoretical influence on Schelsky. But Freyer also dreamt of building up a sociological think tank for the Third Reich - quite differently to most other sociologists, e. g. to the anti-Hitlerian Ferdinand Tönnies and to Leopold von Wiese, and to the émigrés. Freyer's ambitions failed miserably, the Nazipower elite monopolizing ideology, but helped the talented student Schelsky in his first career steps. After the Second World War, no longer a National Socialist, Schelsky became a star of applied sociology, due to his great gift of anticipating social and sociological developments. He published books on the theory of institutions, on social stratification, on the sociology of family, on the sociology of sexuality, on the sociology of youth, on Industrial Sociology, on the sociology of education, and on the sociology of the university system. In Dortmund, he made the Social Research Centre a West German focus of empirical and theoretical studies, being especially gifted in finding and attracting first class social scientists, e.g. Dieter Claessens, Niklas Luhmann, and many more. It helped that Schelsky was an outspoken liberal professor, without any ambition to create adherents - a rare bird among German mandarins. He helped another 17 sociologists qualify as lecturers and anticipated the boom in sociological chairs at German universities. Manning them, he was professionally even more successful than the outstanding remigrants René König and Otto Stammer - the Frankfurt School starting to be of influence only after 1968. Schelsky was able to design Bielefeld University as an innovative institution of the highest academic quality, both in research and in thought. But the fact that his own university had moved away from his ideas hit him hard. His later books, criticizing ideological sociology and on the sociology of law kept up his reputation as an outstanding thinker, but fell out of grace with younger sociologists. Moreover, his fascinating analyses, being of highest practical value, went out of date for the same reason; only by 2000 did new sociologists start to read him again.
Selected bibliography
Theorie der Gemeinschaft nach Fichtes "Naturrecht" von 1796, 1935
Das Freiheitswollen der Völker und die Idee des Planstaats, 1946
Zur Stabilität von Institutionen
Wandlungen der deutschen Familie in der Gegenwart
Soziologie der Sexualität
Die sozialen Folgen der Automatisierung
Die skeptische Generation, 1975
Schule und Erziehung in der industriellen Gesellschaft
Ortsbestimmung der deutschen Soziologie, 1959
Der Mensch in der wissenschaftlichen Zivilisation, 1961
Einsamkeit und Freiheit. Die deutsche Universität und ihre Reformen, 1973
Die Arbeit tun die anderen. Klassenkampf und Priesterherrschaft der Intellektuellen ²1977