Hans-Jürgen Schulke

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Hans-Jürgen Schulke

Hans-Jürgen "Hajo" Schulke (born August 28, 1945 in Naumburg (Saale) ) is a German sports sociologist , sports official and university professor .

Life

Family and sport

H.-J. Schulke is the fifth son of the housekeeping manager Maria Schulke (née Groth) and the businessman Hans Schulke. Shortly after his birth, the family moved to the North Sea island of Föhr and in 1949 to Hamburg-Bergedorf , where his mother was born. Schulke graduated from high school there.

He became a member of the Bergedorfer Gymnastics Association from 1860 . He played handball in the Hamburg selection and won numerous state championships as a middle-distance runner as well as a German championship in the forest run (1966). In 1985/86 he was Bremen national champion in the marathon several times with a best time of 2.20.30. He coached numerous youth and women's teams in handball. Schulke studied educational science , sport and sociology at the University of Hamburg from 1967 to 1971 and founded the sports department with Willi Lemke and Peter Weinberg and the nationwide AG for Sensorimotor Students (ASS). Schulke deals with the history of gymnastics and sport in Hamburg and has written numerous publications on sports politics, the Olympics, health sports, running, disabled sports and university sports.

He is married for the second time and has six children.

Profession and honorary positions

During his studies youth education officer at the Hamburger Sportbund from 1969 to 1971. Assistant professor at the University of Bremen since 1971. From 1972 to 1973 he was on the board of the AG Sports Science University Institutions (ASH), after which he was for nine years, from 1973 to 1982 member of the board of the General German University Sports Association. He was a research assistant for sports sociology and adult sports at the University of Bremen from 1979 to 1991.

Schulke became co-founder and chairman of FSG Seebergen in 1982 and remained so until 2005 (since then honorary chairman). He was race director of the Bremen City Marathon from 1986/87. He founded the Institute for Health, Sport and Nutrition in 1986. From 1991 to 1995 he was Secretary General for the German Gymnastics Festival in Hamburg . He became treasurer of the Federal Association for Health in 1994 and remained so for 13 years. In 1995 he founded the Institute for Sport Management and was a professor at the University of Bremen. In 1995 he was also elected Vice President of the Bremen Gymnastics Association.

Schulke became director of the sports department and state sports officer of the Hamburg Senate in 2000. From 2001 he was responsible for Hamburg's application for the Olympic Games 2012 with the concept "Games in the heart of the city" (it failed at the DSB general meeting; in 2003 Leipzig received the Award for the German application. This was rejected by the IOC in advance). During his time, the extensive expansion of the Olympic base and an elite sports school began, the LA hall was built, a competitive sports foundation established, new major international sports events such as triathlon and judo world cups established, the expansion of the Volksparkstadion and today's Barclay Arena completed , formulated a cooperation concept between schools and clubs in the construction of sports facilities, started a series of congresses on the management of major sporting events ("Science meets Practice") and decided on a comprehensive development concept for the "Sports City of Hamburg". He has created several publications for this purpose. From 2000 to 2005 Schulke headed the “ Health Sports ” working group at the Conference of Sports Ministers ; there he also became head of the “ 2006 World Cup ” working group and initiated the fan festivals and public viewing, which he also dealt with in scientific analyzes.

Since 2001 he has been an initiator and then a member of the organizing committee of the International Hamburg Symposium on Sport, Economy and Media (today the Congress), which has been taking place annually since then and is published in a series of publications. In addition, he was a board member since 1994, a member of the executive committee from 2004 to 2010 and most recently Vice President of the German Gymnastics Federation ; There also member of the scientific advisory board and initiator of the gymnastics academy in 1998 (today the largest training event in sport). In 2005 he became a lecturer at the University of Bremen. In 2007 he received a professorship for sports and event management at the Macromedia University in Hamburg and was a lecturer at the University of Bremen until 2008 and was a member of the executive committee of the International German Gymnastics Festival in Frankfurt in 2009. From 2006 to the completion of the stadium in 2017 he worked as Shareholder of the Millerntor stadium and operating company of FC St. Pauli.

Since 2004 he has been Vice President Sport of Special Olympics Germany for sport development, major events and education. Schulke was President of the Organizing Committee of the Special Olympics National Games 2008 Karlsruhe, 2010 Bremen, 2011 Altenberg, 2012 Munich and founder and head of the Special Olympics Academy from 2008 (SODA).

Honors

Scientific and organizational activities

HJ Schulke got into leadership roles in organized sport as a teenager. This has accompanied him for life, and he has tried again and again to introduce future-oriented innovations in various fields (including graded youth leader training, opening of university sports to the population, marathon as a cultural festival, expansion of the gymnastics festival to include an extensive gymnastics festival, public viewing at the 2006 World Cup , inner-city triathlon in Hamburg, regional Special Olympics for people with intellectual disabilities, including game festivals in Bundesliga stadiums, etc.). The focus was increasingly on the organization of major sporting events, which he was able to deepen with a professorship for sport and event management in 2007. He often combined his activities in sports management with scientific activities. In his organizational fields of university sports, city marathon, gymnastics association, disabled sports, public sports administration, he has initiated congresses, scientific advisory boards, academies, magazines and series of publications (including Pahl-Rugenstein, Putty, Meyer & Meyer, SOD-Eigendruck) as well as research projects. His management fields are diverse scientific publications. These were - based on Jürgen Habermas' theory of communicative action - mostly designed as invitations to a dialogue about future developments, and often took the form of essays, features, thesis papers, polemics and comments. In the analyzes of university sports, running movement, health sports, the gymnastics movement, the Olympic Games, sports-related educational reporting, disabled sports and, more recently, the consequences of global digitalization for the club sports movement, he tries dialectically to grasp the dynamics and the direction of development of the subject area in order to gain strategic information Enable action.

Works (selection)

Hans-Jürgen Schulke has written or (co) edited over 40 books and more than 300 essays on various sports topics. He often writes comments for the DOSB press and essays on sports politics in the magazine Olympisches Feuer, as well as for daily newspapers and association publications.

  • Reform of University Sports: Problems of University Sports at Univ. Bremen , series of publications on university sports; No. 7. General German University Sports Association , Darmstadt 1974.
  • School sport on the sidelines (co-editor). Rowohlt, Reinbek 1975
  • University sports and university adult education, series of publications on university sports; No. 13. General German University Sports Association, Darmstadt 1976.
  • Adult sport as further training. Pahl-Rugenstein , Cologne 1976.
  • The future of the Olympic Games Pahl-Rugenstein Cologne 1976.
  • Reform of university sports. Darmstadt 1982.
  • Independence and regularity in popular sport. Hamburg 1982.
  • Critical keywords on sports in Munich 1983.
  • Health on the move . Aachen 1989.
  • Sport - everyday life - culture: viewpoints on the sport movement . Meyer & Meyer , Aachen 1990.
  • Health sport in the DTB . Frankfurt 1997.
  • Health Sport and Public Health Freiburg 1997.
  • Sport on TV (co-editor) Cologne 2004.
  • Education report of the DTB (editor) Frankfurt 2008
  • Brother Jahn Freyburg 2009.
  • Sports financing - tensions between state and market (co-editor) Hamburg 2009.
  • 200 years of Hasenheide - departure into the modern age . Freyburg 2011.
  • Sport and inclusion - pretty much best friends (co-editor) Aachen 2014.
  • Sport as a stage (co-editor) Aachen 2016.
  • Göttingen started moving as clubs in 2016.
  • The first German. Hildesheim 2017

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ The new head of the sports department , Hamburger Abendblatt , October 6, 2000.
  2. ^ Prof. Hans-Jürgen Schulke on his 70th birthday , gymmedia.de, August 26, 2015.
  3. Motor and moderator - Prof. Hans-Jürgen Schulke turns 70  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.dosb.de   , German Olympic Sports Confederation , August 26, 2015.
  4. ^ DTB Vice President resigned , Deutscher Turner-Bund, February 10, 2010.
  5. Hans-Jürgen Schulke receives the Cross of Merit , Hamburger Abendblatt, May 26, 2009.
  6. Honors - Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Ehrenbecher , Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Gesellschaft.