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Annual Report 2019 Contents
Annual Report 2019 Contents 4 Foreword 93 Report of the Supervisory Board 6 Executive Board 102 Consolidated Financial Statements 103 Consolidated Statement of 8 The Axel Springer share Financial Position 10 Combined Management Report 105 Consolidated Income Statement 106 Consolidated Statement of 13 Fundamentals of the Axel Springer Group Comprehensive Income 24 Economic Report 107 Consolidated Statement of 44 Economic Position of Axel Springer SE Cash Flows 48 Report on risks and opportunities 108 Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity 60 Forecast Report 109 Consolidated Segment Report 71 Disclosures and explanatory report on the Executive Board pursuant to takeover law 110 Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 77 Corporate Governance Report 180 Responsibility Statement 181 Independent Auditor’s Report 187 Boards 2 Group Key Figures in € millions Change yoy 2019 2018 Group Revenues – 2.2 % 3,112.1 3,180.7 Digital revenue share1) 73.3 % 70.6 % 2) EBITDA, adjusted – 14.5 % 630.6 737.9 EBITDA margin, adjusted2) 20.3 % 23.2 % 2) EBIT, adjusted – 21.5 % 414.5 527.9 EBIT margin, adjusted 2) 13.3 % 16.6 % Net income – 35.4 % 134.6 208.4 2) Net income, adjusted – 21.5 % 263.7 335.7 Segments Revenues Classifieds Media 0.1 % 1,213.8 1,212.5 News Media – 4.4 % 1,430.9 1,496.2 Marketing Media 0.8 % 421.5 418.3 Services/Holding – 14.4 % 46.0 53.7 EBITDA, adjusted2) Classifieds Media – 3.8 % 468.4 487.2 News Media – 39.3 % 138.5 228.2 Marketing Media 20.3 % 107.8 89.6 Services/Holding − – 84.1 – 67.0 EBIT, adjusted2) Classifieds Media – 7.1 % 377.9 406.7 News Media – 54.4 % 72.1 158.2 Marketing Media 26.1 % 83.3 66.0 Services/Holding − – 118.6 – 103.0 Liquidity and financial position 2) Free cash flow (FCF) – 38.1 % 214.6 346.9 2) 3) FCF excl. -
Central Europe
Central Europe West Germany FOREIGN POLICY wTHEN CHANCELLOR Ludwig Erhard's coalition government sud- denly collapsed in October 1966, none of the Federal Republic's major for- eign policy goals, such as the reunification of Germany and the improvement of relations with its Eastern neighbors, with France, NATO, the Arab coun- tries, and with the new African nations had as yet been achieved. Relations with the United States What actually brought the political and economic crisis into the open and hastened Erhard's downfall was that he returned empty-handed from his Sep- tember visit to President Lyndon B. Johnson. Erhard appealed to Johnson for an extension of the date when payment of $3 billion was due for military equipment which West Germany had bought from the United States to bal- ance dollar expenses for keeping American troops in West Germany. (By the end of 1966, Germany paid DM2.9 billion of the total DM5.4 billion, provided in the agreements between the United States government and the Germans late in 1965. The remaining DM2.5 billion were to be paid in 1967.) During these talks Erhard also expressed his government's wish that American troops in West Germany remain at their present strength. Al- though Erhard's reception in Washington and Texas was friendly, he gained no major concessions. Late in October the United States and the United Kingdom began talks with the Federal Republic on major economic and military problems. Relations with France When Erhard visited France in February, President Charles de Gaulle gave reassurances that France would not recognize the East German regime, that he would advocate the cause of Germany in Moscow, and that he would 349 350 / AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK, 1967 approve intensified political and cultural cooperation between the six Com- mon Market powers—France, Germany, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. -
THE MEANING of HITLER Cesses" Were Carried out in the Shadow of Future Renaissance Or Re-Damnation? Bloodshed
Volume XXXV No. I January 1980 INFORMATION iSSUfD By THE ASSOOAim OF JEWBH RBIKECS IN tREAT BRITJUH Eva G. Reichman extent his own. Intent on recording first the posi tive accomplishments, if possible without their darker implications, he chooses to ignore in this context that all these "Achievements and Suc THE MEANING OF HITLER cesses" were carried out in the shadow of future Renaissance or Re-Damnation? bloodshed. He enthuses, e.g. about Hitler's "econo mic miracle" his "positive achievement" "out shining all others". "The term did not then exist," Another Hitler-Book in Germany? Yet another orator of an almost hypnotic potency, his uncanny he writes. "It was coined much later for the product of that ominous Nazi Renaissance in gift to play with the collective unconscious where- astonishingly rapid reconstruction feat of the Germany of which we have heard too much ever he gets hold of it, and his total lack of self- Erhard era after the Second World War, but it already? criticism which is a great help in achieving the applies even better to what was taking place under Don't let us be rash, dear readers: another unthinkable. Hitler during the mid thirties. There was then a Hitler book all right (Sebastian Haffner, The Not surprisingly, decisive importance is given to Meaning of Hitler, Weidenfeld & Nicholson, much deeper and stronger impression that a real Hitler's antisemitism which will have to be men miracle was being accomplished, and that the London 1979, £5.95, translated by Ewald Osers tioned in several contexts. Sceptical though Haffner from: .^nmerkungen zu Hitler, Munich 1978). -
Die Hessischen Lizenzträger Und Ihre Zeitungen
Die hessischen Lizenzträger und ihre Zeitungen Inauguraldissertation zur Erlangung des Doktorgrades in der Fakultät für Kulturwissenschaften der Universität Dortmund vorgelegt von Eva-Juliane Welsch aus Spenge 2002 Erstgutachter: Prof. Dr. Hans Bohrmann Zweitgutachter: Prof. Dr. Gerd G. Kopper - 1 - Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 EINLEITUNG 1.1 Problemstellung ............................................................................................................7 1.2 Literatur und Datenlage................................................................................................8 1.3 Vorgehensweise...........................................................................................................10 TEIL I 2 DER AUFBAU EINER NEUEN PRESSE NACH 1945 ...............................................12 2.1 Die Organisation der amerikanischen Militärregierung und ihre Aufgabe als Besatzungsmacht in Deutschland zwischen 1945 und 1949 unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Massenmedien..........................................................................12 2.2 Pläne zur Schaffung einer neuen Presse in der amerikanischen Zone .........................14 2.3 Die Aufgaben der Abteilung für Psychologische Kriegsführung..................................17 2.4 Die Herausgabe alliierter Mitteilungsblätter gemäß der Phase II................................20 2.4.1 Die Gründung der “Aachener Nachrichten“ als Testfall der Phase III................................ 21 2.4.2 Ursachen für die Verzögerung einer Lizenzvergabe an deutsche Zeitungen...................... -
Bbm:978-3-322-95484-8/1.Pdf
Anmerkungen Vgl. hierzu: Winfried Steffani, Monistische oder pluralistische Demokratie?, in: Günter Doeker, Winfried Steffani (Hrsg.), Klassenjustiz und Pluralismus. Festschrift ftir Ernst Fraenkel, Ham burg 1973, S. 482-514, insb. S. 503. 2 Da es im folgenden um die Untersuchung eines speziellen Ausschnittes des bundesdeutschen Regierungssystems geht, kann unter dem Aspekt arbeitsteiliger Wissenschaft auf die Entwick lung eines eigenständigen ausgewiesenen Konzepts parlamentarischer Herrschaft verzichtet werden. Grundlegend ftir diese Untersuchung ist die von Winfried Steffani entwickelte Parla mentarismustheorie, vgl. zuletzt: ders., Parlamentarische und präsidentielle Demokratie, Opla den 1979, S. 160-163. 3 Steffani, Parlamentarische und präsidenticlle Demokratie, a.a.O., S. 92f. 4 Theodor Eschenburg, Zur politischen Praxis in der Bundesrepublik, Bd. 1, 2. überarbeitete und mit Nachträgen versehene Auflage, München 1967, Vorwort, S. 10. 5 Zur Bedeutung des Amtsgedankens für die politische Theorie vgl. Wilhelm Hennis, Amtsgedanke und Demokratiebegriff, in: ders., Die mißverstandene Demokratie, Freiburg im Breisgau 1973, S.9-25. 6 Ein Amtseid für Parlamentspräsidenten, so wie er von Wolfgang Härth gefordert wird, würde dieser Verpflichtung des Bundestagspräsidenten öffentlichen Ausdruck verleihen und sie damit zusätzlich unterstreichen. Eine Vereidigung des Bundestagspräsidenten wäre schon allein aus diesem Grunde sinnvoll und erforderlich. Vgl. Wolfgang Härth, Parlamentspräsidenten und Amtseid, in: Zeitschrift ftir Parlamentsfragen, Jg. 11 (1980), S. 497·503. 7 Vgl. Aristoteles, Nikomachische Ethik, übersetzt und herausgegeben von Franz Dirlmeier, 5. Aufl. Berlin (Akademie-Verlag) 1969, 1094b (S. 6f): "Die Darlegung wird dann befriedigen, wenn sie jenen Klarheitsgrad erreicht, den der gegebene Stoff gestattet. Der Exaktheitsanspruch darf nämlich nicht bei allen wissenschaftlichen Problemen in gleicher Weise erhoben werden " 8 Vgl. als Kritik aus neuerer Zeit z. -
Introduction
Notes Introduction 1. Richard Brett-Smith, Berlin ’45: The Grey City (London: Macmillan, 1966), 54. 2. Anke Pinkert, Film and Memory in East Germany (Bloomington: Indiana Uni- versity Press, 2008); Robert R. Shandley, Rubble Films: German Cinema in the Shadow of the Third Reich (Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 2001); Eric Rentschler, “The Place of Rubble in the Trümmerfilm,” in Julia Hell and Andreas Schönle (eds.), Ruins of Modernity (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2010), 418–39; Wilfried Wilms and William Rasch, German Postwar Films: Life and Love in the Ruins (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008). 3. Histories of the Aftermath: The Cultural Legacies of the Second World War in Europe, ed. Frank Biess and Robert Moeller (New York: Berghahn Books, 2010). 4. Dagmar Herzog, Sex After Fascism: Memory and Morality in Twentieth-Century Germany (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2005), 1. 5. On this point, see the essays in Hell and Schönle (eds.), Ruins of Modernity, especially Andreas Huyssen, “Authentic Ruins: Products of Modernity” and Todd Samuel Presner, “Hegel’s Philosophy of World History via Sebald’s Imaginary of Ruins: A Contrapuntal Critique of the “New Space’ of Modernity,” pp. 17–28 and 193–211. 6. Dorothy Rowe, Representing Berlin: Sexuality and the City in Imperial and Weimar Germany (Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing Ltd, 2003); Eric D. Weitz, Weimar Germany: Promise and Tragedy (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2007). 7. Paul Rutherford draws on Bruno Latour’s We Have Never Been Modern (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1993) in A World Made Sexy: Freud to Madonna (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2007), 9. -
Mary Benson's at the Still Point and the South African Political Trial
Safundi The Journal of South African and American Studies ISSN: 1753-3171 (Print) 1543-1304 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rsaf20 Stenographic fictions: Mary Benson’s At the Still Point and the South African political trial Louise Bethlehem To cite this article: Louise Bethlehem (2019) Stenographic fictions: Mary Benson’s AttheStillPoint and the South African political trial, Safundi, 20:2, 193-212, DOI: 10.1080/17533171.2019.1576963 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/17533171.2019.1576963 © 2019 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Published online: 08 May 2019. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 38 View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=rsaf20 SAFUNDI: THE JOURNAL OF SOUTH AFRICAN AND AMERICAN STUDIES 2019, VOL. 20, NO. 2, 193–212 https://doi.org/10.1080/17533171.2019.1576963 Stenographic fictions: Mary Benson’s At the Still Point and the South African political trial Louise Bethlehem Principal Investigator, European Research Council Project APARTHEID-STOPS, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel ABSTRACT KEYWORDS From the mid-1960s onward, compilations of the speeches and trial South African political trials; addresses of South African opponents of apartheid focused atten- Mary Benson; the Holocaust; tion on the apartheid regime despite intensified repression in the Eichmann trial; wake of the Rivonia Trial. Mary Benson’s novel, At the Still Point, multidirectional memory transposes the political trial into fiction. Its “stenographic” codes of representation open Benson’s text to what Paul Gready, following Foucault, has analyzed as the state’s “power of writing”: one that entangles the political trialist in a coercive intertextual negotiation with the legal apparatus of the apartheid regime. -
Erdverbunden Und Einfallsreich Lebenserinnerungen Des Sozialdemokraten Hans „Lumpi“ Lemp
Erdverbunden und einfallsreich Lebenserinnerungen des Sozialdemokraten Hans „Lumpi“ Lemp Lebenserinnerungen des Sozialdemokraten Hans „Lumpi“ Lemp ISBN 978-3-95861-499-4 Reihe Gesprächskreis Geschichte ISSN 0941-6862 und einfallsreich Erdverbunden Heft 106 Erdverbunden und einfallsreich Lebenserinnerungen des Sozialdemokraten Hans „Lumpi“ Lemp Gesprächskreis Geschichte Heft 106 Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Archiv der sozialen Demokratie GESPRÄCHSKREIS GESCHICHTE | HEFT 106 Herausgegeben von Anja Kruke und Meik Woyke Archiv der sozialen Demokratie Kostenloser Bezug beim Archiv der sozialen Demokratie der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Email: [email protected] <http://library.fes.de/history/pub-history.html> © 2017 by Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Bonn Eine gewerbliche Nutzung der von der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung herausgegebenen Medien ist ohne schriftliche Zustimmung der Herausgeberin nicht gestattet. Redaktion: Jens Hettmann, Patrick Böhm unter Mitarbeit von Helmut Herles Gestaltung und Satz: PAPYRUS – Lektorat + Textdesign, Buxtehude Umschlag: Pellens Kommunikationsdesign GmbH Druck: bub Bonner Universitäts-Buchdruckerei Bildmaterial: Soweit nicht anders vermerkt, stammen die hier verwendeten Fotos aus dem Familienbesitz Lemp; die Coverabbildung und die Abbildung auf S. 40 wurden uns von Volker Ernsting freundlicherweise kostenlos zur Verfügung gestellt; das Foto auf S. 22 haben wir unentgelt- lich von der Rechteinhaberin Nordphoto Vechta (Ferdinand Kokenge) erhalten. Eventuelle Rechte weiterer Dritter konnten nicht ermittelt werden. Für aufklärende -
The Foreign Service Journal, September 1940
9L AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE VOL. 17, NO. 9 JOURNAL SEPTEMBER, 1940 CARIBBEAN NUMBER ' WSHf ■■■ ■ . .. " This is what we call FOREIGN SERVICE! * After checking up, frankly, we were surprised that our staff of interpreters master no fewer than 22 languages, including Esperanto. This is just another reason why the men and women in the Foreign Service experience no hesitancy about sending us their New York- bound friends and acquaintances. The Hotel New Yorker has long been Foreign Service Headquarters in New York because of its convenient location—handy to every¬ thing you want to see or do in this fascinating town of ours. Make it your home when you are again on leave in New York. This is the nearest large hotel to all the principal piers and is con¬ nected by private tunnel to Pennsylvania Station. Four popular priced restaurants. ★ 2500 Rooms from $3.50 Hotel NEW YORKER 34TH STREET AT EIGHTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Frank L. Andrews, President Leo A. Molony, Manager CONTENTS SEPTEMBER, 1940 For Prize Contest Notice See Page 501 Cover Picture Army Planes Near the Panama Canal See Page 531 The Relation of the Panama Canal to the De¬ fense of the Western Hemisphere Prepared by the War Department 481 Foreign Service Refugees 485 Miami—Gateway of the Americas By Cecil Warren 487 Who’s a Gringo? 491 Britain’s Minor Isles By Sarah Hayward Draper 492 Guns, Rice and Beans By Daisy Reck 495 Editors’ Column 498 MOUTH AMERICA News from the Department By Reginald P. Mitchell.. 499 SOUTH AMERICA News from the Field 502 CENTRAL AMERICA The Bookshelf ]. -
German Historical Institute London Bulletin Vol 34 (2012), No. 2
German Historical Institute London Bulletin Volume XXXIV, No. 2 November 2012 CONTENTS Articles Artistic Encounters: British Perspectives on Bavaria and Saxony in the Vormärz (Hannelore Putz) 3 ‘De-Industrialization’: A Research Project on the Societal History of Economic Change in Britain (1970–90) (Jörg Arnold) 34 Review Article The Hidden Transcript: The Deformation of the Self in Germany’s Dictatorial Regimes (Bernd Weisbrod) 61 Book Reviews David Rollason, Conrad Leyser, and Hannah Williams (eds.), England and the Continent in the Tenth Century: Studies in Honour of Wilhelm Levison (1876–1947) (Benjamin Pohl) 73 Craig Koslofsky, Evening’s Empire: A History of the Night in Early Modern Europe (Andreas Bähr) 78 Jerrold Seigel, Modernity and Bourgeois Life: Society, Politics, and Culture in England, France and Germany since 1750 (Andreas Fahrmeir) 84 Frank Lorenz Müller, Our Fritz: Emperor Frederick III and the Pol itical Culture of Imperial Germany (Martin Kohlrausch) 89 (cont.) Contents Anne Friedrichs, Das Empire als Aufgabe des Historikers. Historio graphie in imperialen Nationalstaaten: Großbritannien und Frankreich 1919–1968 (Roger Chickering) 94 J. A. S. Grenville, The Jews and Germans of Hamburg: The De - struc tion of a Civilization 1790–1945 (Moshe Zimmermann) 97 Ian Kershaw, The End: Hitler’s Germany, 1944–45 (Lothar Kettenacker) 103 Antje Robrecht, ‘Diplomaten in Hemdsärmeln?’ Auslands korre - s pon denten als Akteure in den deutsch-britischen Beziehungen 1945–1962 (Christian Haase) 107 Conference Reports Diverging Paths? -
Abstract This Paper Explores the Under-Appreciated Role of Business
Business and the South African Transition Itumeleng Makgetla and Ian Shapiro Draft: February 20, 2016 Abstract This paper explores the under-appreciated role of business in negotiated transitions to democracy. Drawing on our interviews of key South African business leaders and political elites, we show how business played a vital role in enabling politicians to break out of the prisoners’ dilemma in which they had been trapped since the 1960s and move the country toward the democratic transition that took place in 1994. Business leaders were uniquely positioned to play this role, but it was not easy because they were internally divided and deeply implicated in Apartheid’s injustices. We explain how they overcame these challenges, how they facilitated negotiations, and how they helped keep them back on track when the going got rough. We also look at business in other transitional settings, drawing on South Africa’s experience to illuminate why business efforts to play a comparable role in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict have failed. We end by drawing out the implications of our findings for debates about democratic transitions and the role of business interests in them. Department of Political Science, P.O. Box 208301, New Haven, CT 06520-830. Phone:(203) 432-3415; Fax: (203): 432- 93-83. Email: [email protected] or [email protected] On March 21, 1960, police opened fire on a demonstration against South Africa’s pass laws in Sharpeville, fifty miles south of Johannesburg, killing 69 people. The callousness of the massacre – many victims were shot in the back while fleeing – triggered a major escalation in the conflict between the African National Congress (ANC) and the National Party (NP) government. -
Germany Long Form
10/3/93 (Final alterations: 6/11/99) GERMANY Data on Party Leadership Change (from Leader A to Leader B) First Form for Party Party: Christian Democratic Union Party Founding Date: October, 1950 Long Record #: G.C.0 Change#: 0 A. Venue of Leadership Position(s) of leadership involved: Chancellor or Party Chairman B. Identification/Characteristics of Leaders Leader A: Konrad Adenauer Characteristics of Leader A at time of leadership change: Birthdate: January, 1876 (Former) occupation: Assistant state prosecutor, city administrator, deputy for the city of Cologne, Chairman of the British Zone. Faction/tendency identified with (if any): None Other relevant information on the new leader's character, orientation, leadership style, etc.: Strongly anti-utopian and was fundamental in pushing for a more pragmatic platform. Highly influential party leader. 10/3/93 (Final alterations: 6/11/99) GERMANY Data on Party Leadership Change (from Leader A to Leader B) Party: Christian Democratic Union Long Record #: G.C.1 Change #: 1 Date of Change: October, 1963 A. Venue of Leadership Position(s) of leadership involved: Chancellor or Party Chairman B. Identification/Characteristics of Leaders Leader A: Konrad Adenauer (See previous record for detailed information on Leader A) Leader B: Ludwig Erhard Characteristics of Leader B at time of leadership change: Birthdate: February 4, 1897 (Former) occupation: Trained in economics and sociology, he joined the staff of Nuremberg Business school from 1928-1942. Removed by Nazis for refusal to join party. After war, he joined the government as an economist. Faction/tendency identified with (if any): None Other relevant information on the new leader's character, orientation, leadership style, etc.: Promoted a "social market economy," favored free markets, but controls on monopoly, cartels and labor unions.