NNDB
This is a beta version of NNDB
Search: for
German Business

BIBLIOGRAPHY

See also Business.


Volker R. Berghahn (editor). Quest for Economic Empire: European Strategies of German Big Business in the Twentieth Century. Berghahn Books. 1996. 224pp. Conference papers, Brown University.

Niall Ferguson. Paper and Iron: Hamburg Business and German Politics in the Era of Inflation, 1897-1927. Cambridge University Press. 2002. 556pp.

Philip Glouchevitch. Juggernaut: The German Way of Business: Why It Is Transforming Europe, and the World. Simon & Schuster. 1992. 239pp.

Jürgen Kocka. Industrial Culture and Bourgeois Society: Business, Labor, and Bureaucracy in Modern Germany. Berghahn Books. 1999. 325pp.

Akira Kudo. Japanese-German Business Relations: Cooperation and Rivalry in the Inter-War Period. Routledge. 1998. 286pp.

W. R. Lee (editor). German Industry and German Industrialisation: Essays in German Economic and Business History in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Taylor & Francis. 1991. 322pp.

Joachim Lund. Working for the New Order: European Business Under German Domination, 1939-1945. Copenhagen Business School Press. 2006. 192pp.

Nigel Reeves; Helen Kelly-Holmes. The European Business Environment: Germany. International Thomson Business Press. 1997. 256pp.

Carl T. Schmidt. German Business Cycles, 1924-1933. National Bureau of Economic Research. 1934. 283pp.

Henry Ashby Turner, Jr.. German Big Business and the Rise of Hitler. Oxford University Press. 1985. 504pp.

Frank Vogl. German Business After the Economic Miracle. John Wiley and Sons. 1974. 264pp.



Do you know something we don't?
Submit a correction or make a comment about this profile



Copyright ©2009 Soylent Communications

NNDB MAPPER


Corporate Power Nexus


Requires Flash 7+ and Javascript.


Bibliographies

NNDB has added thousands of bibliographies for people, organizations, schools, and general topics, listing more than 50,000 books and 120,000 other kinds of references. They may be accessed by the "Bibliography" tab at the top of most pages, or via the "Related Topics" box in the sidebar. Please feel free to suggest books that might be critical omissions.