Hartwig von Schubert

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Hartwig von Schubert (born January 22, 1954 ) is a German theologian . From 2005 to September 2019 he was military dean in the Evangelical Military Parish Office Hamburg II at the command academy of the Bundeswehr in Hamburg.

Life

Von Schubert studied Protestant theology and did his doctorate at the University of Heidelberg on Protestant ethics and human genetics (published in extension: Protestant ethics and biotechnology). From 1982 to 1987, von Schubert was pastor of the North Elbian Evangelical Lutheran Church in the St. Georg station district of Hamburg , from 1987 to 1991 research assistant on questions of medical ethics at the research center of the Evangelical Study Community in Heidelberg, from 1992 to 2002 department head of counseling and pastoral care in the diaconal area Hamburg plant, since 1998 board member of the Evangelical Relief Organization in the Diakonisches Werk Hamburg, from 2002 to 2004 director of studies at the Evangelical Academy North Elbe in Hamburg and Bad Segeberg and since 2005 Evangelical military dean at the leadership academy of the German Armed Forces Hamburg with a focus on political and military ethics. From November 2009 to March 2010, von Schubert accompanied the 21st German ISAF contingent to northern Afghanistan.

Works

  • Evangelical ethics and biotechnology. Campus, Frankfurt 1991.
  • Talking about the soul. An empirical-qualitative study on psychotherapeutic counseling on behalf of the church , Neukirchener Verlag, Neukirchen-Vluyn 1998. (Monograph in collaboration with Wolfgang Kinzinger, Heiner Lücke-Janssen, Barbara Schneider, Dr. Wolfgang Schrödter, Wolfgang Vogelmann).
  • Co-editor of: Jürgen Hübner, Hartwig von Schubert (Ed.): Biotechnology and Protestant Ethics. The international discussion. Campus, Frankfurt 1992.
  • Biotechnology and Evangelical Ethics. The discussion in the UK, Canada and the USA. In: Jürgen Hübner, Hartwig von Schubert (Ed.): Biotechnology and Protestant Ethics. The international discussion. Campus, Frankfurt 1992, pp. 81-254.
  • Evangelical Church Office for the Federal Armed Forces (Ed.): Peace ethics in action. Gütersloh 2009. (Editorial management and extensive contributions).
  • Cyber ​​Age. Humans and cyber technology in the challenges and conflicts of the 21st century. Wolters & Kluwer, Cologne 2012. (Monograph in collaboration with Norbert Hering).
  • The ethics of law-preserving violence. Wifis aktuell, Volume 48.Barbara Budrich Verlag, Berlin 2013.
  • Integrative military ethics. Ethical judgment in the military leadership. Standpoints and Orientations, Volume 5. Miles Verlag, Berlin 2015.
  • Plowshares and swords. Plea for a realistic peace ethic , Leipzig: Evangelische Verlagsanstalt 2019.
  • Co-editors of: Matthias Rogg , Sophie Scheidt, Hartwig von Schubert (Eds.): Ethical challenges of digital change in armed conflicts , German Institute for Defense and Strategic Studies, Hamburg 2020, ISBN 978-3-948752-00-2 . ( Open Access ).

Essays

  • Post Holocaust Theology? In: Theological contributions 11/1980/4, pp. 172–177.
  • An Islamic-Christian encounter in the district. In: Community as a place of learning. Contributions to community education from the Evangelical Center Rissen 2/1984, pp. 38–44.
  • The blood donation - gift or goods? In: Ethik in der Medizin 1993/5, pp. 60-69.
  • Co-author of: The Institute For Bioethics Maastricht (ed.): Marketing Blood? An Ethical Analysis And Legal Review Of the Tension Between a Commercial And a Non-commerical Donation System In the Common Market (Final Report Of a Concerted Action Funded By The European Commission DG-XII: Biomed 1), The Institute for Bioethics, Maastricht 1994 .
  • Donated Blood - Gift or Commodity? Some Economic And Ethical Considerations On Voluntary vs Commercial Donation Of Blood. In: Social Science and Medicine 39/1994/2, pp. 201-206.
  • Dream, metaphor and myth using the example of "Cain and Abel". In: Rudolph, E. (Ed.): Myth between philosophy and theology. Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, Darmstadt 1994, pp. 77-94.
  • Mentally disabled as research objects? On the Bioethics Convention of the Council of Europe. In: ZEE 42/1998, pp. 140-146.
  • Corporate culture in voluntary welfare - questions from an employee to the provider. In: System Familie 12/1999/3, pp. 109–119.
  • Hope for the future in biomedicine. Critical remarks by a Protestant theologian using the example of pre-implantation diagnostics. In: Berliner Republik 2/2000/4, pp. 14-21.
  • The dilemma of "applied ethics" between principle, discretion and consensus using the example of the "bioethics convention" and church statements. In: EthMed 2000/12, pp. 46-50.
  • Challenges for the supervisory board activity in the Protestant hospital . In: Wolf, Gerhard / Dörries, Andrea (ed.): Basics of good advisory practice in hospitals. Verlag für Angewandte Psychologie, Göttingen 2001. (With co-author Helmut Hildebrandt).
  • Strengthen the power to be human. Guidelines for Protestant Hospital Pastoral Care. An orientation aid of the Evangelical Church in Germany from 2004 (moderation and editorial management).
  • With Frank Rutkowsky: On the future of church pastoral care in social institutions. In: Ways to People 60/2008/5, pp. 441–452.
  • The vision of just peace in Europe and the world. In: Zeitschrift für Evangelische Ethik 53/2009/3, pp. 191–197.
  • From the honorable businessman. In: Harvard Business Manager, 2009/8, pp. 104-107.
  • With Ulrich Weber: Ethics in the medical services of the armed forces. In: Military medical monthly 53/2009/9, medical ethical questions of the medical service in action. Pp. 281-283.
  • Global Zero. Challenges to a world nuclear order. In: Volker Stümke, Matthias Gillner (ed.): Peace ethics in the 20th century . Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2011, pp. 247-258.
  • Afghanistan and the virtue of strategic patience. In: Stefan Bayer, Matthias Gillner (ed.): Soldiers in action. Social science and ethical reflections. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2011, pp. 43-64.
  • Combat drones for the Bundeswehr? - To contain cyber war. In: epd documentation December 2014, Frankfurt a. M., pp. 47-59.
  • How are soldiers supported in dealing with guilt and powerlessness? In: Matthias Gillner, Volker Stümke (Ed.): Collateral victim. Nomos, Baden-Baden 2014, pp. 157–172.
  • Peace through law. The ethics of law-preserving violence and international law. In: Jürgen Franke, Nina Leonhard (Hrsg.): Military and violence: Sociological and ethical perspectives. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2015, pp. 265-313.
  • Military chaplaincy. In: Wolfgang Engemann (Ed.): Handbook of pastoral care. Basics and profiles. 3. Edition. EVA, Leipzig 2016.
  • Legitimacy of Military Deployments Especially in Asymmetric Conflicts. In: Thomas R. Elßner, Reinhold Janke (eds.): Didactics of Military Ethics. From theory to practice. Brill & Nijhoff, Leiden 2016, pp. 184-199.
  • Limits. Theological-ethical thoughts on the criticism of violence , in: Clausewitz Gesellschaft eV Jahrbuch 2017, 78–96.
  • The kingdom of God, the idea of ​​law and international law of peace , in: Werkner, Ines-Jacqueline / Meireis, Torsten (ed.): Law-preserving violence - an ethical location. Questions on Violence Vol. 2., Wiesbaden 2018, 59–94.
  • The Freimut der Admirals und Generals and the owl of Minerva , in: To the matter BW 34/2018/2, 66-68.
  • Peace through Mercy and Peace through Justice , in: Towards a Church of Justice and Peace. A theological of peace reading book, Leipzig: Evangelische Verlagsanstalt 2019, 207–212.
  • Go to peace with Clausewitz . in: On the matter BW 35/2019/1, 34–38.

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