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BusinessWeek February 28, 2005 Ewing & Boston |
Suddenly, Germany's Far Right Isn't So Far Out Germany's conservative parties have a well-rehearsed strategy for dealing with periodic surges in far-right sentiment. |
InternetNews December 30, 2004 Erin Joyce |
Spinning Microsoft's EU Troubles Microsoft retains a group of lawyers in Brussels whose only job is to paint its recent legal setback in more positive light. |
InternetNews December 22, 2004 Tim Gray |
Wi-Fi on the Autobahn? The German government hopes Wi-Fi will pave the way for safer and less congested roads, but first it is looking for a little help from the automobile industry. |
Reason December 2004 Dave Copeland |
Poor, Sexy Berlin The top-down, five-year city planning agenda has failed to overcome the culture that Berlin built up during the first 750 years of its explosive history. |
BusinessWeek December 6, 2004 William Boston |
Germany's Very Public Battle Over Public TV Private rivals complain that tax-financed networks are competing unfairly |
BusinessWeek November 15, 2004 Gail Edmondson |
Cut Labor's Clout On German Boards Supporters of co-determination say it has brought Germany unparalleled labor peace over the past three decades. But an increasing number of employers say the price paid in soaring labor costs and postponed restructuring has been too high. |
BusinessWeek October 25, 2004 Gail Edmondson |
Germany Inc.: Come Clean Or Else If German companies don't improve governance, new laws will force change. |
BusinessWeek October 4, 2004 Ewing & Boston |
Germany: A Brighter Sun In The East Even as labor unrest builds, East Germany's economy is growing fast. |
BusinessWeek October 4, 2004 William Boston |
Off The Dole -- And On The Assembly Line In 2001, BMW decided to build a manufacturing plant in Leipzig, Germany and in the process put hundreds of unemployed people back to work. |
BusinessWeek September 20, 2004 |
Germany: A Setback For Schroder The recent State Parliament elections in Germany's Saarland were a disaster for the Chancellor's Social Democratic Party. But it wasn't necessarily a popular outcry against economic reform. |
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