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In this article I examine the context for the British bank Barclays’ decision to disinvest from South Africa in 1986, with special attention to the impact of the Anti-Apartheid Movement’s campaign against the bank. The 18-year long campaign against Barclays – the largest bank in South Africa at the time and the fourth largest foreign-owned corporation – points to significant developments within the fields of corporate social responsibility and the potential influence of social movements on multinational corporations. Applying the theoretical approach of subpolitics as developed by Ulrich Beck in combination with the later subdivision by Boris Holzer and Mads P. Sørensen into a passive and an active form, it is possible to analyse the decisions of both anti-apartheid activists and Barclays on similar terms. The conclusions drawn in this article emphasise the idea that economic decisions taken by multinational corporations may have unintended political consequences and, furthermore, that the awareness of this phenomenon has contributed to the development of corporate social responsibility. Finally, I suggest that the campaign against Barclays generated public attentiveness towards the social responsibility of businesses.
In the aftermath of World War II, the political and geographical isolation of the Western parts of the former German capital also cut economic hinterland ties and caused an exodus of industrial companies. In consequence, West Berlin soon became dependent on West German transfer payments to balance the city’s budget. At the same time, a system of tax preferences was created to foster private investment and employment in the isolated city. The complex of subsidies was maintained and even expanded during the following decades though its negative economic effects became obvious in the second half of the 1960s. The article focuses the conceptual significance of subsidies in industrial policy as well as their factual impact on Berlin’s economic development from the early 1960s to the late 1980s, i.e. in a period of massive structural change. It comes to the conclusion that the persistence of subsidization should be explained primarily by its symbolic political value and by a lack of alternatives.
Die große Bedeutung des Pflegens und Reparierens in der Automobilkultur der DDR hatte Rahmenbedingungen wie etwa Versorgungs- und geplante Infrastrukturmängel, Eigenarbeit im Sozialismus und spezifische Fahrzeugeigenschaften. Selbermachen wird aber auch als möglicherweise universellere, nicht systemspezifische Form der Automobilnutzung und der Mensch-Technik-Beziehung interpretiert, wobei die Kontexte von Nutzerqualifikationen, Freizeitverhalten, Bildung, skills und deren Prestige eine Rolle spielen. Im Rahmen der automobilgeschichtlichen Periodisierung wird Eigenarbeit als Möglichkeit sloanistischer Modifikation fordistischer Einheitsfahrzeuge durch Nutzer gesehen, wobei technische Kreativität ‚von unten‘ zum Tragen kam.