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The essays in this volume consider the involvement of business
corporations and of individual businessmen in the politics of the
1930s and 1940s: in the move away from the market and also from
democracy, towards state control and authoritarianism, including
the massive intervention of the state in property rights. How far
did businesses attempt to guide this intervention for their own
purposes, and to what extent did they succeed? This debate deals,
centrally, with the role of German business, of banks, of
industrial corporations, and of small tradesmen in the Nazi regime.
An older discussion of how they may have facilitated the Nazi
takeover has been supplemented here by an investigation into how
they made the regime's policies possible, and the extent to which
the profit motive drove them to participate - with sometimes more,
sometimes less enthusiasm - in the politics of inhumanity. Such
discussion has been given further impetus by legal action,
initially in the United States, in the form of class action suits
on behalf of the victims of Nazism. What do such legal and
political debates mean for business history? What are the current
responsibilities of business facing the consequences of historical
action? And what lessons should be learned concerning the ethics of
business behaviour? The contributions to this volume were
originally presented as papers at a conference organised by the
Society for European Business History in Paris in November 1998.
The Swiss population is called upon to participate actively in
political decision-making processes through regular campaigns.
These campaigns are often concerned with issues that heat up the
emotions and lead to ideological battles. Swiss campaign posters,
which have influenced opinion making since the beginning of the
20th century, bear testimony to direct democracy. This special form
of political propaganda-prominently associated with Switzerland-is
a sensitive indicator of socio-political moods and reflects both
national mentalities and global tendencies. Yes! No! Posters for
Democracy reveals the visual argumentation strategies and
rhetorical approaches that have shaped the Swiss campaign poster
from 1918 to the present. Cliched exaggerations, undifferentiated
simplifications, a repertoire of drastic motifs and abridged slo-
gans correspond to the laws of the medium, which is oriented
towards a manipulative appeal to the masses. Appeals to a sense of
unity focus primarily on emotionalization, hardly on rational
enlightenment. Subtly condensed messages or a graphically
innovative language are hardly to be found in Swiss campaign
posters. And yet many renowned designers created works that have
inscribed themselves in the collective visual memory of the Swiss
population and became icons of Swiss poster design.
Ist die Freigabe der weichen oder auch der harten Drogen ein Weg
aus der Sackgasse der heutigen Drogenpolitik? Kann man den
Suchtigen helfen, indem man ihnen das Rauschgift auf Rezept oder
zumindest Ersatzdrogen wie Methadon gibt? Ein Psychiater (R.
Renggli) und ein Historiker (J. Tanner) versuchen, diese Fragen zu
beantworten, indem sie die Erfahrungen mit der Drogenprohibition in
Vergangenheit und Gegenwart untersuchen und die derzeitige
Drogentherapie auf den Prufstand stellen. Zusatzlich haben sie
einige Drogenabhangige gebeten, ihren Weg in die Sucht und ihre
Therapieerfahrungen zu schildern. Herausgekommen ist eine spannende
und kritische Bilanz des Drogenproblems und ein leidenschaftliches
Pladoyer fur eine liberalere Drogenpolitik. Zum Nachschlagen
enthalt das Buch eine Zeittafel zur Drogengeschichte und ein
Kompendium der gebrauchlichsten Rauschgifte mit Angaben zu ihren
Wirkungen und Gefahren."
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