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Germany: GSGS 4480, Gartrop-Bühl
In: Germany: GSGS 4480
Germany: GSGS 4480, Klein-Rohrheim
In: Germany: GSGS 4480
IMMIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP IN GERMANY
In: German politics and society, Band 17, Heft 4, S. 1-33
ISSN: 1045-0300, 0882-7079
Hitler and Nazi Germany
In: Cambridge perspectives in history
The Left Party in Germany
In: New politics: a journal of socialist thought, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 31-36
ISSN: 0028-6494
THE LEFT PARTY IS FIGHTING for 'a society in which no child has to grow up poor, in which all men and women can live a self-determined life in peace, dignity, and social security and can democratically shape social relations.' In order to achieve this, it demands 'a different economic and social system: democratic socialism.'1 That is how the Left Party formulated its programmatic approach in its new Erfurt Party Programme of 2011. Adapted from the source document.
Bundes-Datenschutzgesetz: Textausgabe
In: GDD-Handausgabe
Germany and EU Reforms
In: Mirovaja ėkonomika i meždunarodnye otnošenija: MĖMO, Heft 11, S. 27-34
Germany is playing a key role in the resolution of the EU crisis. Berlin has not only proposed changes in the economic and finance spheres, but also the initiation of the political reform of the EU. However, for several reasons, starting from the middle of 2013 there has been a serious shift in emphasis from the creation of a political union to the construction of an EU banking union. Angela Merkel's victory in German elections increased the country's European political activity, and Berlin announced new initiatives which involved amendments to fundamental EU agreements. At the same time, German European policy aims to strengthen the position of nation states in the future European integration, and slightly reduce the role of the European Commission. Here one can see a certain level of convergence between the German and British positions. However, as Angela Merkel's visit to London in February 2014 demonstrated, the interests of the two countries in the EU are hardly compatible. To other EU countries, Germany's leadership in the EU seems to favor German interests at the expense of other partners. The questions whether EU countries will still follow Germany's European political direction and whether they are able to implement the necessary reforms in their own countries as well as in the EU remain open and foster Euroscepticism.
Right-Wing Extremism in Germany
In: Migration world: magazine, Band 21, Heft 2-3, S. 27-31
ISSN: 1058-5095