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Rezensionen zu: Christa Geissler, Monika Held : Generation plus. Von der Lüge, dass Altwerden Spaß macht ; Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf Verlag, 3.Auflage, Berlin 2004, 320 Seiten, ISBN 3-89602-433-7, 12,90 Euro. Christa Geissler, Monika Held : Die Generation plus lebt ihre Zukunft. Der Aufbruch der Alten – Interviews, Porträts und Reportagen ; Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf Verlag, Berlin 2007, 334 Seiten, ISBN 987-3-89602-755-9, 12,90 Euro.
Rezensionen zu: Markus Breitscheidel : Abgezockt und totgepflegt. Alltag in deutschen Pflegeheimen Berlin 2005, Econ Verlag, Ullstein Buchverlage, ISBN 978-3-548-36901-3, 240 Seiten, 16,95 Euro. Markus Breitscheidel : Gesund gepflegt statt abgezockt. Wege zur würdigen Altenbetreuung ; Berlin 2006, Econ Verlag, Ullstein Buchverlage, ISBN-13: 978-3430-30011-7, ISBN-10: 3-430-30011-8, 175 Seiten, 16,95 Euro.
Jonathan Wagner has written a monograph on a migration movement that was in many ways a peripheral one. From a Canadian perspective, Germans accounted for a relatively minor share of immigrants, compared to former residents of the British Isles, of eastern or southern Europe. Seen from Germany, Canada was one of many destinations for migrants who wished to leave the country and were prepared to travel over long distances, but were, for whatever reason, not attracted by the United States, the destination for the overwhelming majority of transcontinental emigrants. Nevertheless, the movement from Germany to Canada was significant in absolute and often symbolic terms. The way Wagner tells it, the story of German-Canadian migration was a tale of parallel experiences: both Germany and Canada experienced federation and increasing international autonomy from the 1860s; both were ruled by domineering conservative figures presiding over de facto liberalization in the 1870s; both participated in the First World War, and both went through traumatic economic crises in the interwar period. ...