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Bernd Liske
Bernd Liske, born in 1956, studied mathematics in Chemnitz and is the owner of Liske information management systems. From its founding in 1998 until May 2015, Bernd Liske was a member of the main board of BITKOM, where he worked in the defense, education and knowledge management working groups. In the course of his efforts to deal with the revelations of Edward Snowden in the NSA affair, he was expelled from BITKOM in 2015. From 1998 to 2003 he was a member of the board of the Association of Organizations and Information Systems (VOI). Bernd Liske has been dealing with socio-political issues for many years. In his analyzes and concepts, he deals with social, political and economic problems in our society in order to make contributions to maintaining Germany as a business location. His book “PRISM A Lesson for our Democracy”, published in September, grew out of this. The diversity of the topics he deals with as well as the systemic principles used for their treatment can be followed on his homepage at and on his TWITTER channels @BerndLiske, @LiskeAphorismen and @LiskeZitate. He now regards his aphorisms as an open source operating system for the analysis and design of social processes and has been using them successfully for years.
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Promoted ContentHumanities & Social SciencesSeptember 2001
Railways and culture in Britain
The epitome of modernity
by Ian Carter, Jeffrey Richards
The nineteenth-century's steam railway epitomised modernity's relentlessly onrushing advance. In Railways and culture in Britain Ian Carter delves into the cultural impact of train technology, and how this was represented in British society. Why, for example, did Britain possess no great railway novel? The book's first half tests that assertion by comparing fiction and images by some canonical British figures (Turner, Dickens, Arnold Bennett) with selected French and Russian competitors: Tolstoy, Zola, Monet, Manet. The second half proposes that if high cultural work on the British steam railway is thin, then this does not mean that all British culture ignored this revolutionary artefact. Detailed discussions of comic fiction, crime fiction and cartoons reveal a popular fascination with railways tumbling from vast (and hitherto unexplored) stores of critically overlooked genres. A final chapter contemplates cultural correlations of the steam railway's eclipse. If this was the epitome of modernity, then does the triumph of diesel and electric trains, of cars and planes, signal a decisive shift to postmodernity? ;
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Trusted PartnerHumanities & Social SciencesJuly 2005
The extreme Right in Western Europe
Success or failure?
by Elisabeth Carter
Parties of the extreme Right have experienced a dramatic rise in electoral support in many countries in Western Europe over the last two and a half decades. This phenomenon has been far from uniform, however, and the considerable attention that the more successful Right-wing extremist parties have received has sometimes obscured the fact that these parties have not recorded high electoral results in all West European democracies. Furthermore, their electoral scores have also varied over time, with the same party recording low electoral scores in one election but securing high electoral scores in another. This book examines the reasons behind the variation in the electoral fortunes of the West European parties of the extreme Right in the period since the late 1970s. It proposes a number of different explanations as to why certain parties of the extreme Right have performed better than others at the polls and it investigates each of these different explanations systematically and in depth. ;
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Trusted PartnerJune 2019
Marlborough Man
Thriller | Britischer Undercover Cop muss abtauchen, doch auch in Neuseeland gibt es Killer
by Alan Carter, Karen Witthuhn
Nick Chester hat als undercover cop in seiner englischen Heimat eine Gangsterorganisation auffliegen lassen, die ihn daraufhin auf ihre Abschussliste setzte. Bei der neuseeländischen Polizei, an den landschaftlich grandiosen, rauen Marlborough Sounds versucht er nun, mit seiner Familie ein neues Leben zu beginnen. Aber auch die abgelegene Provinz hat ihre Tücken. Ohne seine ortskundige Kollegin, Constable Latifa Rapata, wäre er hilflos. In der dünnbesiedelten Gegend treibt ein unheimlicher Mörder sein Unwesen. Chester und Rapata müssen sich mit der örtlichen Nomenklatura anlegen, Rassenkonflikte werden sichtbar, und Chester darf nie vergessen, dass die britischen Gangster ihn überall auf der Welt finden können. Jederzeit ...
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Trusted PartnerMay 2019
Otto John
Patriot oder Verräter: Eine deutsche Biographie
by Benjamin Carter Hett Michael Wala
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Trusted PartnerHumanities & Social SciencesJanuary 2021
Vienna’s ‘respectable’ antisemites
by Michael Carter-Sinclair
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Trusted PartnerHumanities & Social SciencesDecember 2020
This is your hour
Christian intellectuals in Britain and the Crisis of Europe, 1937–49
by John Carter Wood
In the 1930s and 1940s - amid the crises of totalitarianism, war and a perceived cultural collapse in the democratic West - a high-profile group of mostly Christian intellectuals met to map out 'middle ways' through the 'age of extremes'. Led by the missionary and ecumenist Joseph H. Oldham, the group included prominent writers, thinkers and activists such as T. S. Eliot, John Middleton Murry, Karl Mannheim, John Baillie, Alec Vidler, H. A. Hodges, Christopher Dawson, Kathleen Bliss and Michael Polanyi. The 'Oldham group' saw faith as a uniquely powerful resource for social and cultural renewal, and it represents a fascinating case study of efforts to renew freedom in a dramatic confrontation with totalitarianism. The group's story will appeal to those interested in the cultural history of the Second World War and the issue of applying faith to the 'modern' social order.
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Trusted PartnerHumanities & Social SciencesOctober 2017
British railway enthusiasm
by Ian Carter, Jeffrey Richards
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