Academic literature on the topic 'Domestic relations – Germany – Hamburg'

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Journal articles on the topic "Domestic relations – Germany – Hamburg"

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Kwiatkowska, Barbara. "The Saint Vincent and the Grenadines v. Guinea M/V Saiga Cases." Leiden Journal of International Law 11, no. 3 (1998): 547–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0922156598000399.

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The article surveys the Saint Vincent and the Grenadines v. Guinea M/V Saiga cases which inaugurated jurisprudence of the 21 Member International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) in Hamburg, Germany, with delivery of two important decisions on prompt release of the vessel and its crew (1997, Case No. 1) and on provisional measures of protection (1998, Case No. 2). The decisions provided precedential instances of application by the Tribunal of Articles 292 and 290 of the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea respectively, and of the relevant provisions of the ITLOS Rules. The prescription of provisional measures of protection formed the incidental proceedings of the pending M/V Saiga (Merits) case which is to be settled by ITLOS in mid-1999 (Case No. 2) and is to be the subject of a separate article. In view of the ITLOS Statute and the Rules being closely modelled in the Statute and the Rules of the International Court of Justice (ICJ), careful attention is given to comparison of the inaugural practice of ITLOS with the longstanding practice of the ICJ, and preservation of judicial consistency by ITLOS is particularly commended. A history of the M/V Saiga dispute, intertwined with domestic proceedings before Guinean courts, is for the reader's convenience outlined in a Chronological Table annexed to this article.
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Rolshoven, Max Philipp. "The Last Word? – The July 22, 2004 Acquittals in the Mannesmann Trial." German Law Journal 5, no. 8 (2004): 935–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s2071832200012967.

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[Editors’ Note: This short note concerns the most recent acquittals in the Mannesmann criminal trial against former Mannesmann CEO, Klaus Esser; Deutsche Bank's CEO (Vorstandssprecher) and then Member of Mannesmann's supervisory board, Josef Ackermann, and other members of the Supervisory Board. The Landgericht [Regional Court] Düsseldorf acquitted all six defendants on 22 July 2004, and this timely note provides but for a first rendition of the circumstances, the reactions and the thrust of the judgment. For more extensive background to the criminal proceedings against Esser, Ackermann et al. and the importance that domestic and international observers have regularly been assigning to this case in the context of a worldwide corporate governance debate, see already Peter Kolla's article in the 1 July 2004 Issue of German Law Journal. German Law Journal will publish a more extensive case commentary in the coming months. Meanwhile, the Mannesmann proceedings have, once more, highlighted to German, European and International observers the particular features of law and politics in “Germany Inc.”, “Rhenish Capitalism”, or “Rhineland Capitalism”. As begun in the aftermath of Josef Ackermann's inthronization at the head of Deutsche Bank and Ackermann's subsequent transformation of the Board's control structure, German Law Journal has published several contributions to the ongoing changes in German corporate governance and its embeddedness within the specific German economic and legal system. In this issue, we are publishing a fine piece by Jürgen Hoffmann, Professor of Sociology in Hamburg, on the current interdisciplinary debate over the future fate of so-called Rhineland Capitalism. In the next issue, to be published on 1 September 2004, Professor Christopher Allen of the University of Georgia will further deepen this inquiry and place the contemporary debate over the possible end of Rhineland capitalism in the historical context of Germany's development in the 20th Century. The Editors of German Law Journal are very pleased and honored to be able to provide for a further forum for this important debate, bringing together lawyers, economists, political scientists and sociologists, for a much needed exploration of the historical and political origins as well as of the legal framework of Germany's much critizised and, at the same time, ardently praised system of corporate governance and industrial relations. We invite our readers to contribute to this debate, which has so far found too little resonance in Germany itself. The Editors.]
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Bamber, Greg. "Feature?International Industrial Relations Association Seventh World Congress Hamburg, West Germany, September 1986." New Technology, Work and Employment 2, no. 1 (1987): 66–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-005x.1987.tb00075.x.

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Bendix, John, and Niklaus Steiner. "Political Asylum in Germany: International Norms and Domestic Politics." German Politics and Society 16, no. 2 (1998): 32–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/104503098782173859.

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Although political asylum has been at the forefront of contemporaryGerman politics for over two decades, it has not been much discussedin political science. Studying asylum is important, however,because it challenges assertions in both comparative politics andinternational relations that national interest drives decision-making.Political parties use national interest arguments to justify claims thatonly their agenda is best for the country, and governments arguesimilarly when questions about corporatist bargaining practices arise.More theoretically, realists in international relations have positedthat because some values “are preferable to others … it is possible todiscover, cumulate, and objectify a single national interest.” Whileinitially associated with Hans Morgenthau’s equating of nationalinterest to power, particularly in foreign policy, this position hassince been extended to argue that states can be seen as unitary rationalactors who carefully calculate the costs of alternative courses ofaction in their efforts to maximize expected utility.
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Baldyga, Natalya. "Corporeal Eloquence and Sensate Cognition: G. E. Lessing, Acting Theory, and Properly Feeling Bodies in Eighteenth-Century Germany." Theatre Survey 58, no. 2 (2017): 162–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040557417000059.

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Most know Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729–81) for his dramatic theory, specifically that which is found in his periodical the Hamburg Dramaturgy (1767–69), a collection of 101 essays that has since earned Lessing the moniker of “the first dramaturg.” Many are also familiar with Lessing's major plays, Miss Sara Sampson (1755), Minna von Barnhelm (1767), Emilia Galotti (1772), and Nathan the Wise (1779). Fewer, however, may be familiar with his acting theory and his long association with actors, an association that began in his college years and which so disturbed Lessing's father that the respectable pastor lured the wayward student home by falsely claiming that Lessing's mother was ill. During his time as a university student in Leipzig, Lessing translated plays for the troupe of Karoline Neuber (1697–1760) and socialized with the company's actors; over time he would continue to accrue significant firsthand knowledge of actors and the art of acting, not only through his frequent theatregoing but also through the coaching of his own plays. Lessing's familiarity with actors and acting informs both his performance and dramatic theory, including that which one finds in the Hamburg Dramaturgy; in Anglophone studies of Lessing's journal, however, one infrequently sees Lessing's dramatic theory placed in conversation with his acting theory, reception theory, or performance reviews. Due to the short and contentious life of the Hamburg National Theatre, the experimental theatre project to which the Hamburg Dramaturgy was ostensibly attached, historical narratives more often focus on Lessing's strained relations with the actors of the Hamburg acting company. If one views Lessing's writing about performance solely in terms of a frustrated critic's attempts to rein in “unruly” actors, however, one loses sight of how Lessing's acting theory supports his wider ideas about the form and function of theatre and about how the Hamburg Dramaturgy and the Hamburg theatre experiment might function as a force for social change.
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Wixforth, Harald. "Schiffsfinanzierung im Wandel – Finanzintermediäre und maritime Wirtschaft am Finanzplatz Hamburg vom Kaiserreich bis zum Ende der Weimarer Republik." Zeitschrift für Unternehmensgeschichte 64, no. 2 (2019): 217–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/zug-2018-0019.

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AbstractFor more than 30 years bank-industry relations have been one of the most important subjects of financial research and history. Despite all research we are still lacking results on this topic for several branches of German industry, e. g. shipbuilding and shipping. Therefore, the article tries to analyze the relations between financial institutions and some of the prominent enterprises of maritime industry in Hamburg – in the 19th and 20th century the most important financial center in Northern Germany as well as place for shipping and shipbuilding. Finally, the article compares the results to those of other studies on bank-industry-relations in Germany in order to show whether there were specific characteristics in financing shipbuilding and shipping. Additionally, the article wants to stimulate further intensive research on this subject.
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Dubover, Denis, and Anastasia Peniaz. "Challenge based learning in full-day schools of Germany: organization features and development factors in media pedagogical discourse." E3S Web of Conferences 175 (2020): 15020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202017515020.

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In a post-industrial society, the importance of information increases at an uncontrollable rate that leads to new challenges in the educational environment and especially in general educational institutions. The aim of the article is to analyze the successful experience of project work implementation in the field of media education in Germany in the conditions of a full-day training system for analyzing the possibilities of its implementation to domestic pedagogy. Materials and Methods Observation method, expert interviews and surveys were used for data collection and processing. The research was conducted in the framework of the implementation of DAAD Research Programme at the European University of Flensburg and full-day schools in Hamburg. A sample set of empirical research includes 350 students, 25 teachers, 12 school counselors, 12 full-day school principals in Hamburg and SchleswigHolstein. Research results. As a result of the observation, an understanding of the forms and methods of project work was obtained, various relationships were established between media education, project work and the achievement of social and personal competencies (soft skills). The analyzed documents show clear dynamics in the field of legalization of project activities and understanding of the need to achieve social and personal competencies through projectwork.
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Dill, Verena, and Uwe Jirjahn. "Foreign owners and the quality of industrial relations in Germany." Economic and Industrial Democracy 38, no. 1 (2016): 5–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0143831x14557842.

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German works councils provide a highly developed mechanism for codetermination designed to increase trust and cooperation within firms. This study examines whether or not the functioning of works councils depends on the type of ownership. Comparing domestic- and foreign-owned firms in Germany, the article finds that works councils and managers in foreign-owned firms are less likely to cooperate. The finding fits the notion that the activities of foreign multinational companies can involve tensions with the institutional framework of the host country.
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Feuchtwanger, Edgar. "Germany at the crossroads: foreign and domestic policy issues." International Affairs 69, no. 3 (1993): 600–601. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2622389.

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Yang, Jiemian. "Managing China-U.S. Relations in the Trump Era: Approaches and Policies." China Quarterly of International Strategic Studies 03, no. 03 (2017): 357–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s237774001750021x.

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China under the leadership of President Xi Jinping has maintained strategic concentration since the election of President Donald Trump who has shown an anti-establishment approach to domestic and foreign affairs. China adheres to its diplomatic principles of preserving core national interests, making overall strategic agendas, going with the trends of the times, and seeking progress while stabilizing China-U.S. relations. China also attaches great importance to summit diplomacy and has achieved early outcomes through Xi-Trump meetings at both Mar-a-Lago and Hamburg. Nevertheless, China has yet to meet daunting challenges on its road ahead to a more stable, cooperative, and predictable relationship with the United States under President Trump.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Domestic relations – Germany – Hamburg"

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Whisnant, Clayton John. "Hamburg's gay scene in the era of family politics, 1945-1969." Access restricted to users with UT Austin EID, 2001. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/fullcit?p3033589.

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Abe, Atsuko. "Japan and the European Union : domestic politics and transnational relations /." London [u.a.] : Athlone Press, 1999. http://www.gbv.de/dms/sub-hamburg/303336153.pdf.

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Banerjee, Aditi. "Negotiating Domestic and International Pressures: France and Germany on Refugees." Oberlin College Honors Theses / OhioLINK, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=oberlin149340586962603.

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Nuyken, Mark E. "Between domestic constraints and multilateral obligations : the reform of the Bundeswehr in the context of a normalised German foreign and security policy." Thesis, University of Stirling, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1893/6511.

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This thesis seeks to understand the developments in Germany’s foreign and security policy since the end of the Cold War. Primarily, this thesis will centre on the question of whether Germany can now, after being re-unified for more than 20 years, be considered a normal actor in international relations. Although this subject has been debated extensively, the effects a possible change in foreign policy behaviour has on related fields of policy, have largely been left aside. This thesis therefore sets out to understand if there has in fact been a change in Germany’s foreign and security policy and will then apply the findings on the institution most affected by this change, i.e. Germany’s armed forces the Bundeswehr. It will therefore firstly discuss the perceived changes in German foreign policy since 1990 by analysing the academic debate on the process of normalisation and continuation. It will be argued that Germany has in fact become more normal and abandoned the constrained foreign policy of the Cold-War-era. The Bundeswehr will therefore have to be reformed accordingly to accommodate the new tasks set out by the changed foreign policy – most importantly peacekeeping and peace-enforcing out-of-area missions. This thesis will therefore analyse the reform efforts made over the last 20 years and apply them to the Bundeswehr’s large deployments in Kosovo and Afghanistan to determine how effective the reforms have been. Finally, this thesis will be able to contribute to the discussion on Germany’s status of a normal player in international relations with the added perspective from the Bundeswehr’s point of view.
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Botsch, Gideon Steinbach Peter. ""Politische Wissenschaft" im Zweiten Weltkrieg : die "Deutschen Auslandswissenschaften" im Einsatz 1940 - 1945 /." Paderborn [u.a.] : Schöningh, 2006. http://www.gbv.de/dms/sub-hamburg/479241074.pdf.

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Whisnant, Clayton John 1971. "Hamburg's gay scene in the era of family politics, 1945-1969." 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/10877.

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Kato, Kozo. "Helping others, helping oneself international positions, domestic institutions, and development cooperation policy in Japan and Germany /." 1996. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/38283744.html.

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Books on the topic "Domestic relations – Germany – Hamburg"

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Dieter, Henrich. Familienrecht. 5th ed. W. de Gruyter, 1995.

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Familienrecht. 4th ed. W. de Gruyter, 1991.

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Henrich, Dieter, Christoph Althammer, and Kurt H. Johannsen. Familienrecht: Scheidung, Unterhalt, Verfahren. 6th ed. C.H. Beck, 2015.

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Gottwald, Peter. Family and succession law in Germany. Kluwer Law International, 2001.

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Gottwald, Peter. Family and succession law in Germany. Kluwer Law International, 2001.

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Hirsch, Erika. Jüdisches Vereinsleben in Hamburg bis zum Ersten Weltkrieg: Jüdisches Selbstverständnis zwischen Antisemitismus und Assimilation. P. Lang, 1996.

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Jüdisches Vereinsleben in Hamburg bis zum Ersten Weltkrieg: Jüdisches Selbstverständnis zwischen Antisemitismus und Assimilation. P. Lang, 1996.

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Familienrecht in der Rechtssprache: Die historische Entwicklung zentraler Ausdrücke des geltenden Familienrechts. P. Lang, 1991.

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Borth, Helmut. Praxis des Unterhaltsrechts: Das UÄndG und seine Folgen. 2nd ed. Gieseking, 2011.

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Franzius, Christine. Bonner Grundgesetz und Familienrecht: Die Diskussion um die Gleichberechtigung von Mann und Frau in der westdeutschen Zivilrechtslehre der Nachkriegszeit (1945-1957). Vittorio Klostermann, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Domestic relations – Germany – Hamburg"

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König, Thomas, and Lars Mäder. "Does Europeanization Change Executive–Parliament Relations? Executive Dominance and Parliamentary Responses in Germany." In The Europeanization of Domestic Legislatures. Springer New York, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-1502-2_6.

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Körs, Anna. "Congregations in Germany: Mapping of Organizations, Beliefs, Activities, and Relations: The Case Study of Hamburg." In Congregations in Europe. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-77261-5_7.

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Young, John W., and John Kent. "6. Maintaining the Spheres of Influence." In International Relations Since 1945. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780199693061.003.0008.

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This chapter examines how the United States and the Soviet Union tried to main their respective spheres of influence during the Cold War, especially in three regions: Eastern Europe, Western Europe, and Latin America. The death of Joseph Stalin and the assumption of power by the triumvirate of Lavrenti Beria, Nikita Khrushchev, and Georgi Malenkov resulted in a fresh approach to domestic issues and to the nature of Soviet control over its European satellites. The apparent change produced a new Soviet approach to East–West relations. The chapter first considers how the new Soviet leadership addressed the crisis in East Germany before analysing American influence in Western Europe and US relations with Latin America. The discussion covers themes and events such as the Soviet policy on Hungary and Poland, the Messina Conference and the Spaak Committee, nuclear cooperation and multilateral force, and the US response to the Cuban Revolution.
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Young, John W., and John Kent. "6. Maintaining the Spheres of Influence." In International Relations Since 1945. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780198807612.003.0006.

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This chapter examines how the United States and the Soviet Union tried to maintain their respective spheres of influence during the Cold War, especially in three regions: Eastern Europe, Western Europe, and Latin America. The death of Joseph Stalin and the assumption of power by the triumvirate of Lavrenti Beria, Nikita Khrushchev, and Georgi Malenkov resulted in a fresh approach to domestic issues and to the nature of Soviet control over its European satellites. The apparent change produced a new Soviet approach to East–West relations. The chapter first considers how the new Soviet leadership addressed the crisis in East Germany before analysing American influence in Western Europe and US relations with Latin America. The discussion covers themes and events such as the Soviet policy on Hungary and Poland, the Messina Conference and the Spaak Committee, nuclear cooperation and multilateral force, and the US response to the Cuban Revolution.
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Bachleitner, Kathrin. "Memory as Political Strategy." In Collective Memory in International Relations. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192895363.003.0003.

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This chapter locates the origins of collective memory in international strategy. To that end it first looks at existing sociological and political works which situate collective memory’s beginnings in the domestic sphere. However, in the immediate aftermath of an often-traumatic event to be remembered, publics remain predominantly silent, leaving policymakers with little to gain from making politics with memory, at least at home. In the international sphere, incentive structures, on the other hand, are different. As such, this chapter moves the emerging struggle over the formation of collective memory from the domestic to the international sphere; and with it, away from its origins in a country’s public and into the hands of its foreign policy officials. The new assumptions on collective memory’s beginnings are then demonstrated in the cases of West Germany and Austria. The empirical study illustrates that the two successor states to the Third Reich started to confront their Nazi legacy first in the international, post-war environment. The question of reparation payments to the State of Israel in 1952 forms the ‘critical situation’ for qualitative analysis and demonstrates how West German and Austrian officials initially constructed collective memory as a political strategy directed at an international audience.
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Dyson, Kenneth. "Economic Policies: From Pace-Setter to Beleaguered Player." In Germany, Europe, and the Politics of Constraint. British Academy, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197262955.003.0010.

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This chapter traces how rapidly evolving mechanisms of EU governance have affected German economic policy since the Treaty of Maastricht was agreed in 1991. Its central theme is the transition of Germany from ‘pace-setter’ in the constitutive politics of designing EMU to ‘beleaguered player’ in the regulative politics of its implementation, from Germany as policy model to Germany as the main problem. Europeanization has both reinforced traditional policy beliefs in ‘sound’ finance and acted as a catalyst for domestic policy reforms by strengthening the domestic discourse of competitiveness. It has also led to significant pressures for institutional reconfiguration, notably within the federal executive, federal-state relations, and the Bundesbank. The chapter questions the traditional assumption of a goodness of ‘fit’ between German and EU economic policies, in part because of unintended effects from the EMU and in part because, despite emphasis on a consensus about the ‘social market’ economy, Germany lacks a unitary economic policy model.
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Barany, Zoltan. "After World War II: Germany, Japan, and Hungary." In The Soldier and the Changing State. Princeton University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691137681.003.0003.

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This chapter examines the democratization of civil–military relations in two former fascist dictatorships, postwar Germany and Japan, whose armies had destroyed and terrorized large swathes of the surrounding territory. The creation of lasting democratic regimes on the ashes of these dictatorships stands as the signal achievement of democracy promotion. An important part of this process was the building of the new West German and Japanese armed forces. On the other hand, Hungary after World War II illustrates the trajectory of military politics in numerous European states where domestic political forces were defeated by the Soviet Union and its native communist puppets. The chapter then considers the evolution of Hungarian civil–military relations from the end of the war until the March 1953 death of Joseph Stalin, which is a suitable point to mark the consolidation of the Soviet-controlled communist regime and the completion of the armed forces' transformation.
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Bachleitner, Kathrin. "Memory as Public Identity." In Collective Memory in International Relations. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192895363.003.0004.

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This chapter places collective memory at the basis of a country’s identity and posits that memory returns from the international sphere to the domestic environment. In the course of this process, memory moves from being an official strategy to becoming part of the wider public identity. Memory’s impact thus transforms from a direct, active opportunity to an indirect, passive constraint for policymakers. Notably, as identity, collective memory is unexamined, and assumed to underwrite the mindset of a country’s public and its representatives. To illustrate this transformation, this chapter looks to the cases of West Germany and Austria in the second post-war decade. The ‘critical situation’ for analysis arrived in 1961 in the form of Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann’s trial in Jerusalem. The West German and Austrian reactions to the trial demonstrate that by the early 1960s these countries had come to view their role in World War II through the lens of a pre-existing national narrative in almost entirely unexamined ways.
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Boysen, Jens. "Not Quite “Brothers in Arms”: East Germany and People’s Poland between Mutual Dependency and Mutual Distrust, 1975–1990." In Trust, but Verify. Stanford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.11126/stanford/9780804798099.003.0009.

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This chapter assesses the relationship between East Germany and Poland during the last phase of the Cold War. It explains how the historical legacy of German–Polish relations infused the relationship of both countries with mistrust, despite the officially proclaimed brotherhood of a “socialist community” mandated from Moscow. Personal enmity between communist leaders Walter Ulbricht and Władysław Gomułka, conceptual differences of notions of statehood, and rivaling foreign policy goals and ideas about tolerance for domestic opposition since the end of the 1970s only exacerbated these tensions, which not even successful military cooperation under the Warsaw Pact umbrella was able to alleviate. Held together by their relationship to the Soviet hegemon, the officially required “trust” between the two countries fully disintegrated in the second half of the 1980s.
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Conference papers on the topic "Domestic relations – Germany – Hamburg"

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van der Werff, Solange, Andrea Haase, René Huijsmans, and Qin Zhang. "Influence of the Ice Concentration on the Ice Loads on the Hull of a Ship in a Managed Ice Field." In ASME 2012 31st International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2012-83927.

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The research and development project DYPIC (Dynamic Positioning in Ice) focuses on the challenges related to DP operations in Arctic environment. At the HSVA (Hamburg Ship Model Basin, Germany), model tests in ice were carried out using two configurations; one where the model was fixed to the towing carriage, and a free floating configuration, where the model ship was controlled by a DP system scaled to model parameters. During the model tests a number of parameters were systematically varied. Model ship velocity and yaw angle were the parameters related to the controlling of the model. In addition, the ice field characteristics were varied by applying two variations in ice floe size and two variations in concentration, resulting in four different ice field descriptions. The ice thickness was remained constant for all test implementations. Every test run with a particular controlling (velocity and heading) profile was executed in each of the four ice fields. In order to develop a DP controller which is optimally adjusted to the environment in which the system operates, it is important to find relations between the characteristics of the ice field and the forces they apply on the hull of the vessel or construction. An assessment of the measurements and observations during the testing is the basis of a study which has the objective to find how the ice field appearance and the ice loads on a structure relate to each other.
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