Academic literature on the topic 'Bavarian Soviet Republic'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bavarian Soviet Republic"

1

Painter, Corinne. "Women in Politics and the Public Sphere: Munich 1918/1919." European History Quarterly 54, no. 2 (April 2024): 319–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02656914241236651.

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Women have never been passive bystanders to the history being made around them and they have always found ways to contribute to shaping their world. Munich in 1918/1919 provides a useful site to examine women's experiences and roles due to the long-standing involvement of women in the peace movement and welfare work, as well as the foundation of the Bavarian Soviet Republic after the First World War. However, Munich in the early years of the Weimar Republic is most commonly associated with Adolf Hitler's Beer Hall Putsch in 1923, an attempt by right-wing men to seize political power. Moreover, the 1918 revolution is also often told through the lens of male political figures. As a result, politics in the early twentieth century is easy to view as a male-dominated affair with women merely experiencing the effects of male political power. This era, particularly from the perspective of Munich, also becomes viewed through the lens of the rise of fascism, which obscures and distorts the alternative political visions many women held and worked towards. This article centres on women's experiences and roles in politics and the public sphere in revolutionary Munich to ask what opportunities the revolution and its immediate aftermath presented for women and how they were able to influence political decision-making despite huge barriers. Through an understanding of how their world was gendered, their role as political agents comes to the fore.
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2

Becker, Klaus. "Health Effects of High Radon Environments in Central Europe: Another Test for the LNT Hypothesis?" Nonlinearity in Biology, Toxicology, Medicine 1, no. 1 (January 1, 2003): 154014203908444. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15401420390844447.

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Among the various “natural laboratories” of high natural or technical enhanced natural radiation environments in the world such as Kerala (India), Brazil, Ramsar (Iran), etc., the areas in and around the Central European Ore Mountains (Erzgebirge) in the southern parts of former East Germany, but also including parts of Thuringia, northern Bohemia (now Czech Republic), and northeastern Bavaria, are still relatively little known internationally. Although this area played a central role in the history of radioactivity and radiation effects on humans over centuries, most of the valuable earlier results have not been published in English or quotable according to the current rules in the scientific literature and therefore are not generally known internationally. During the years 1945 to 1989, this area was one of the world's most important uranium mining areas, providing the former Soviet Union with 300,000 tons of uranium for its military programs. Most data related to health effects of radon and other carcinogenic agents on miners and residents became available only during the years after German reunification. Many of the studies are still unpublished, or more or less internal reports. By now, substantial studies have been performed on the previously unavailable data about the miners and the population, providing valuable insights that are, to a large degree, in disagreement with the opinion of various international bodies assuming an increase of lung cancer risk in the order of 10% for each 100 Bq/m3 (or doubling for 1000 Bq/m3), even for small residential radon concentrations. At the same time, other studies focusing on never-smokers show little or no effects of residential radon exposures. Experiments in medical clinics using radon on a large scale as a therapeutic against various rheumatic and arthritic disease demonstrated in randomized double-blind studies the effectiveness of such treatments. The main purpose of this review is to critically examine, including some historical references, recent results primarily in three areas, namely the possible effects of the inhalation of very high radon concentrations on miners; the effect of increased residential radon concentrations on the population; and the therapeutic use of radon. With many of the results still evolving and/or under intense discussion among the experts, more evidence is emerging that radon, which has been inhaled at extremely high concentrations in the multimillion Bq/m3 range by many of older miners (however, with substantial confounders, and large uncertainties in retrospective dosimetry), was perhaps an important but not the dominating factor for an increase in lung cancer rates. Other factors such as smoking, inhalation of quartz and mineral dust, arsenic, nitrous gases, etc. are likely to be more serious contributors to increased miner lung cancer rates. An extrapolation of miner data to indoor radon situations is not feasible. Concerning indoor radon studies, the by far dominating effect of smoking on the lung cancer incidence makes the results of some studies, apparently showing a positive dose-response relationship, questionable. According to recent studies in several countries, there are no, or beneficial, residential radon effects below about 600 to 1000 Bq/m3 (the extensive studies in the U.S., in particular by B. Cohen, and the discussions about these data, will not be part of this review, because they have already been discussed in detail in the U.S. literature). As a cause of lung cancer, radon seems to rank — behind active and passive smoking, and probably also air pollution in densely populated and/or industrial areas (diesel exhaust soot, etc.) — as a minor contributor in cases of extremely high residential radon levels, combined with heavy smoking of the residents. As demonstrated in an increasing number of randomized double-blind clinical studies for various painful inflammatory joint diseases such as rheumatism, arthritic problems, and Morbus Bechterew, radon treatments are beneficial, with the positive effect lasting until at least 6 months after the normally 3-week treatment by inhalation or bathes. Studies on the mechanism of these effects are progressing. In other cases of extensive use of radon treatment for a wide spectrum of various diseases, for example, in the former Soviet Union, the positive results are not so well established. However, according to a century of radon treatment experience (after millenniums of unknown radon therapy), in particular in Germany and Austria, the positive medical effects for some diseases far exceed any potential detrimental health effects. The total amount of available data in this field is too large to be covered in a brief review. Therefore, less known — in particular recent — work from Central Europe has been analyzed in an attempt to summarize new developments and trends. This includes cost/benefit aspects of radon reduction programs. As a test case for the LNT (linear non-threshold) hypothesis and possible biopositive effects of low radiation exposures, the data support a nonlinear human response to low and medium-level radon exposures.
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Books on the topic "Bavarian Soviet Republic"

1

Höller, Ralf. Der Anfang, der ein Ende war: Die Revolution in Bayern 1918/19. Berlin: Aufbau Taschenbuch, 1999.

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Seligmann, Michael. Aufstand der Räte: Die erste bayerische Räterepublik vom 7. April 1919. Grafenau, Germany: Trotzdem Verlag, 1989.

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Silvio Gesell in der Münchener Räterepublik: Eine Woche Volksbeauftragter für das Finanzwesen im April 1919. 2nd ed. Zell am Main, Germany: Religion & Kultur Verlag, 2018.

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70 Jahre Räterevolution: 1918/1988 – Diskussionsbeiträge und Dokumente zur Münchner Rätezeit 1918/19. Munich, Germany: GNN-Verlag, 1989.

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hsam, Erich. Von Eisner Bis Levine. tredition Verlag, 2012.

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Der Anfang, der ein Ende war: Die Revolution in Bayern 1918/19. Berlin, Germany: Aufbau Taschenbuch Verlag, 1999.

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7

Aufstand der Räte (Hauptband): Die erste bayerische Räterepublik vom 7. April 1919. Grafenau, Germany: Trotzdem Verlag, 1989.

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8

Aufstand der Räte (Anhang): Die erste bayerische Räterepublik vom 7. April 1919. Grafenau, Germany: Trotzdem Verlag, 1989.

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9

Dreamers. Pushkin Press, Limited, 2018.

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Dreamers. Pushkin Press, Limited, 2019.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bavarian Soviet Republic"

1

Hockenos, Paul. "Autumn of the Euromissiles." In Joschka Fischer and the Making of the Berlin Republic, 172–98. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195181838.003.0007.

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Abstract The Federal Republic’s reactions to the newest party on the national stage ranged from intense skepticism to mild bemusement. Bavaria’s premier conservative, Franz Josef Strauss, invoked vintage Adenauer-era anticommunism, labeling the Greens a “Trojan Soviet cavalry.”1 The chancellor- elect, Christian Democrat Helmut Kohl, wagered that the rebel ecologists would find their way back under the wing of the SPD, vanishing completely from the political scene in two years time. This is exactly what the Social Democrats themselves hoped.2 In the meantime, however, the new party wasn—t going to get a free ride from the republic’s oldest. Hesse’s minister president, the Social Democrat Holger Bö rner, boasted that in the old days, on the construction site, types like Greens were brought to heel with the flat side of a two-by-four.
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