Research at MU

Research at MU

RESEARCH STRATEGY AT MU

We aim to foster independent and original research and in turn, bring the benefits of innovation to the research community and the public.

Research is determined to be the prerequisite of high-quality teaching and Modul University Vienna pursues a research-led teaching approach. As a result, researchers at our University are committed to conducting contemporary, as well as future-oriented basic and applied research. The University’s research profile is characterized by a dynamic development of research activities, where researchers of various disciplines are highly innovative and meet the criteria for cutting-edge research. Interdisciplinary research activities shape the research profile of the institution.

Today, the University is organized into four academic Schools, each of which contributes to teaching and research in their fields of expertise (School of Tourism and Service Management, School of International Management, School of Applied Data Science, School of Sustainability, Governance and Methods) and one research center (Research Center of New Media Technology)

The Schools and the Research Center focus on 17 different core areas of research that form the basis for an exceptional output of more than 1500 publications with almost half being peer-reviewed journals, 100+funded research projects, and 300+ conference contributions.. Importantly, this research provides the essential foundation for new and innovative approaches that will contribute to society for decades.

The 17 core research areas are summarized in five research focal areas:

  1. Digitalization and business transformation

  2. Big Data analysis, artificial intelligence, and blockchain

  3. Governance for innovation and sustainable development

  4. Socioeconomic aspects of climate change

  5. Travel behavior, trend, and competition analysis

The University aims at further strengthening its interdisciplinary research activities and balancing basic and applied research. Many of the 17 research areas are joint interests and activities of researchers from different disciplines. In order to provide a conducive environment for cutting-edge research, a few of our development steps are as follows:

  • Further support, especially to young researchers in developing their own research areas and provide guidance to them. This particularly includes PhD candidates, as well as young PostDoc researchers, especially female faculty members.

  • Continue building-up a research support infrastructure at the University in order to support researchers in submitting high quality project proposals. This includes funding support in the form of personal consultation and project controlling support.

  • Expanding the interconnectedness between schools and research centers and the future foundation of a second research center, so that the organizational anchoring of research is further developed.

  • Collaborations with other universities in Vienna to leverage PhD training opportunities

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Arno Scharl

Director of the Research Center for New Media Technology

At Modul University Vienna, sustainability is more than a guiding principle – it is embedded in the very DNA of our research. Our team at the Research Center for New Media Technology (NMT), for example, has developed the SDG Intelligence Platform for the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), a system designed to translate complex global data into actionable insights for policy and decision-makers worldwide. Locally, the DWBI project – Vienna’s Digital Well-Being Index – reflects our commitment to digital humanism. This joint project with MU's School of Sustainability, Governance and Methods aims to empower communities with transparent, data-driven quality of life measures. Such initiatives help us advance the state of the art in symbolic and sub symbolic artificial intelligence, while ensuring that our research delivers practical tools to engage stakeholders and address societal challenges.

Research seminar series

Modul University Vienna invites international scholars to share their expertise and present latest research. Presentations and subsequent discussions last for about 30 minutes each. All sessions are live-streamed, free to attend, and open to the public. No registration needed.


Florian Hartleb

Modul University Vienna, Vienna, Austria

Terrorism in the Digital Age"

Date: March 10th 2026 13:00-14:00 (Vienna local time)
Location: Modul University Vienna, Austria, 1190 Vienna, Am Kahlenberg 1, Room no. 2.07

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Abstract: Terrorism didn’t get smarter — it got software: in the age of new technologies, extremists don’t just spread propaganda faster, they scale like a startup, stitching together encrypted chats, cheap drones, synthetic media and online marketplaces into a plug-and-play ecosystem that lowers the barrier to violence and raises the cost of prevention — and the most dangerous shift is the human one: lone actors who radicalize in algorithmic echo chambers, learn tactics from tutorials, and move from grievance to action without a network to infiltrate, plus a new wave of teenage terrorism, where kids are groomed, gamified, and pushed into “prove it” moments by online subcultures that turn violence into status; the real threat isn’t one gadget, it’s the workflow that makes recruitment, instruction, targeting and denial faster and cheaper — and if our response stays stuck in slow policy cycles, we’ll keep fighting yesterday’s threat with tomorrow’s headlines, because when harm moves at internet speed, defense has to run on friction, resilience, and rapid mitigation, not paperwork.

Jinyan Chen

The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong

Tracking Tourist Mobility by Big Data Analytics: How and Why."

Date: December 2nd 2025 11:00-12:00 (Vienna local time)
Location: Modul University Vienna, Austria, 1190 Vienna, Am Kahlenberg 1, Room no. 4.05

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Abstract: Dr. Jinyan (Emily) Chen’s research sits at the intersection of tourism, artificial intelligence, and big data analytics. In her upcoming presentation, she will explore innovative methods for tracking tourist mobility using large-scale data sources, uncovering patterns that inform destination competitiveness and destination development. Through real-world examples, Dr. Chen illustrates how these advanced analytics provide valuable insights into travel patterns. Ultimately, the presentation demonstrates how artificial intelligence and big data analytics can help tourism professionals design better strategies to manage visitor flows, improve infrastructure, and support growth in the tourism industry.

Ocelík Petr
Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic

“Network Perspective on Policy Change: A Case of the Czech Climate Policy"

Date: October 6th 2025 14:15-15:15 (Vienna local time)
Location: Modul University, Austria, 1190 Vienna, Am Kahlenberg 1, Room no. 2.09

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Abstract: Explaining policy change has long been a core ambition of policy analysis and lies at the heart of various policy process theories, including the Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF) or Punctuated Equilibrium Theory. Yet, policy change is rarely operationalized or measured explicitly. Instead, policy process research often relies on qualitative categorizations, such as major, minor, incremental, or punctuated changes. Thus, this research aims to integrate insights from the policy process approaches and legislative networks. The central assumption here is that to better capture policy change, it is necessary to unpack the “black box” of the legislative process and pinpoint the role of political parties, key aggregators of societal interests who also authoritatively shape the legislative agenda, and consequently, the design and adoption of policy outputs. The studied case, Czech climate policy, is exposed to sustained Europeanization pressures. The research thus uses network modelling to explore mechanisms, such as policy alignment or policy resistance, that drive or oppose the policy change imposed by the EU. The findings suggest that the opposition towards Europeanization is present, although through subtler mechanisms of delayed implementation and bounce-back correction, which reduce the magnitude of the policy change.

RESEARCH REPORT

Modul University Vienna is at the forefront of groundbreaking research. For the past 10 years we have been a center of excellence for research in sustainability, consumer behavior, digital trends, tourism and hospitality, as well as socioeconomic sciences. 

Here we are proud to present a comprehensive reflection on 10 years of insightful research at MU Vienna. 

This report delves into the cutting-edge topics explored by five departments across the university, showcasing the remarkable work of 27 Modul University Vienna researchers, both past and present. It also encompasses the contributions of our third-party researchers and associate researchers, highlighting our collaborative and multidisciplinary approach. 

Discover a rich tapestry of research topics, insights into our publication output, and innovative approaches applied by our researchers when searching for answers in their diverse fields. 

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