Bernd Maelicke

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Bernd Maelicke (born April 26, 1941 ) is a German lawyer and social scientist and has been director of the German Institute for Social Economy (DISW) and honorary professor at the Leuphana University of Lüneburg since 2005 .

Life

Maelicke's father worked as an economist for the Reich Ministry of Propaganda and volunteered for the Eastern Front in March 1945 , where he died soon after. Bernd Maelicke grew up under precarious conditions in the post-war years. He lived with his mother and older brother in a half-bombed house in Berlin's Prenzlauer Berg district . In 1948 he was given to his grandfather in Göttingen , who was doing better economically. However, the boy did not feel at home there and was becoming increasingly neglected. As a 12-year-old, Bernd, who was then known as “bald”, took part in various robberies with his youth gang in Göttingen. At school he was impassive. In 1953, his mother brought him back to live after she had remarried and moved to Lake Constance . The new family situation enabled Bernd to lead a regular life. He could in singing the school visit was class president and his high school diploma.

Maelicke studied law , criminology , economics and politics at the University of Freiburg from 1964 to 1969 . He was a student member of the board of directors of the student union and is a co-founder of the student crèche and the psychotherapeutic advice center of the university. He passed his two state exams in 1969 and 1973, and in 1977 he received his doctorate in “Discharge and social rehabilitation ”.

From 1974 to 1978 Maelicke was head of the federal advanced training academy of the German Association for Public and Private Welfare in Frankfurt a. M. From 1978 to 1990 he was director of the Institute for Social Work and Social Pedagogy (ISS) in Frankfurt a. M.

From 1990 to 2005 Maelicke served as Assistant Secretary in the Ministry of Justice, Europe, youth and women in Schleswig-Holstein , the department " prison , judicial social services, offender aid pardons".

He has been the founding director of the German Institute for Social Economy (DISW) in Lüneburg since 2005 and teaches at the university there in the subjects of social management / social economy, criminology, and the penal system.

His focus is on innovations in crime and social policy; Basic, advanced and advanced training for specialists and executives, advice for social service organizations and coaching . He was and is the head of numerous national and international innovation projects.

Since 1969 he has been a lecturer in teaching at technical colleges, technical colleges, universities and further education academies in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, as well as a speaker at specialist conferences and congresses.

Maelicke has published over 200 specialist articles and over 40 specialist books. He is co-founder of the journals " Neue Kriminalpolitik ", "Sozialwirtschaft", "Seniorenwirtschaft" and the "Edition Sozialwirtschaft". From 2007 to 2013 he was the editor-in-chief of the magazine for penal enforcement and criminal assistance “ Forum Strafvollzug ”.

The German Institute for Social Economy (DISW) focuses on research and development for public and private clients in the social economy.

Honors

Fonts (selection)

  • Dismissal and rehabilitation. Research on social work with offenders . Müller, Juristischer Verlag, Heidelberg, Karlsruhe 1977, ISBN 3-8114-4677-0 (also dissertation).
  • With Renate Simmedinger: social work and criminal justice. Investigations and concepts for the reform of criminal assistance . Juventa-Verlag, Weinheim 1987, ISBN 3-7799-0472-1 .
  • Outpatient alternatives to youth arrest and juvenile detention . Deutscher Studien-Verlag, Weinheim 1988, ISBN 3-89271-097-X .
  • Leadership and collaboration . Nomos, Baden-Baden 2004, ISBN 3-8329-0343-7 .
  • Editor: Lexicon of the Social Economy . Nomos, Baden-Baden 2008, ISBN 978-3-8329-2511-6 .
  • The jail dilemma. Lock up or rehabilitate? A polemic . C. Bertelsmann, Munich 2015, ISBN 978-3-570-10219-0 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. cf. http://www.institut-sozialwirtschaft.de/
  2. ^ Federal Cross of Merit for Professor Maelicke ( Memento from June 17, 2012 in the Internet Archive )