Kuno evil

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Kuno Böse (born March 1, 1949 in Börgitz ) is a German historian and politician ( FDP , later CDU ). He was State Secretary for the Interior in Berlin , State Councilor for Interior and Senator for Interior, Culture and Sport of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen and political advisor to the President of Madagascar .

Life

education and profession

After his family fled the GDR to the Federal Republic of Germany in 1960, Böse attended grammar school Lehrte / Hanover, Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium in Wolfenbüttel and the Albert-Schweitzer-Schule in Nienburg / Weser, where he graduated from high school in 1968. After completing his military service (reserve officer in the Air Force), he studied history , Romance studies and political science at the Free University of Berlin, the University of Bordeaux III and the University of Paris XII from the 1970 summer semester and graduated in 1976 with the state examination for the office of student council. After studying and researching at the École normal supérieure (rue d'Ulm) and the German Historical Institute in Paris, he became a research assistant for history at the Berlin University of Education and the Friedrich Meinecke Institute of the Free University of Berlin in 1978. In 1984 he received his doctorate from the Free University of Berlin with an extensive thesis on the social and institutional history of France in the Ancien Régime with the title “Office and social status. The élus of the Election Troyes in the 16th and 17th centuries ”. After working as a speaker and deputy head of the Presidential Office of the Free University of Berlin, he became head of the Foreign Affairs department and representative of the Chancellor of the Free University. In 1992, the Berlin Senator for the Interior brought Dieter Heckelmann Böse to the Berlin Senate Department for the Interior as head of staff.

Political career in Berlin

Böse was a member of the FDP from 1970 to the end of 1995, for which he was a candidate in the 1975 elections to the Berlin House of Representatives. In January 1995, under Senator Heckelmann , Böse was appointed State Secretary for Security and Order in the Senate Department for the Interior and remained in office under Interior Senators Jörg Schönbohm and Eckart Werthebach until the beginning of 2000. In 1996, Böse joined the Berlin CDU, for which he ran for the 1999 parliamentary elections.

Political career in Bremen

In July 2000, Böse was appointed State Councilor for the Interior in the Senate Department for Interior, Culture and Sport of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen under Senator Bernt Schulte . After his resignation in the summer of 2001, the Bremen citizenship elected him Senator for the Interior, Culture and Sport. In 2002 Böse became chairman of the German Conference of Interior Ministers (IMK) and was delegated by the Federal Council to the European Union's Ministerial Conference for Home Affairs and Justice in Brussels for 2002/2003 as a representative of the federal states. After the attacks of September 11, 2001 in New York and Washington, both functions focused on developing and coordinating anti-terror and security regulations. As the Senator of Culture, Böse pushed Bremen's application to become the European Capital of Culture and on January 23, 2003 laid the foundation stone for the new central library of the Bremen City Library , which, according to him, "as ... a guarantee of a special quality of life and contributes to the identity of the city and its residents ( shall)! ”Despite his election to the Bremen citizenship in May 2003, Böse renounced his mandate and senatorial office a little later and returned to Berlin.

Advisor to the President of Madagascar

After Böse had set up and headed the transdisciplinary cluster “Security Research” at the Free University of Berlin, in 2007 he became political advisor to the President of Madagascar . In particular, he worked on reforming the security sector ( military , gendarmerie , police and disaster control ) and was responsible for decentralization and administrative reform. In the run-up to the coup in March 2009 , Böse had to leave the country.

marital status

Böse has been married to the university professor Margot Böse since 1972. In 1980 the son Timon was born.

criticism

Of all things , the central term for the work (la classe) by Marc Bloch was systematically reproduced in a German book translation by Böse and Eberhard Bohm (Blochs Feudalgesellschaft ) from 1999 as “stand” or “shift”. In some places, any reference to social differences has even been deleted. While in the original a chapter heading reads: “Les nobles comme classe de fait” (= the nobility as a factual class), Böse-Bohm only says: “The nobility through the ages”. This deliberately falsifies the analytical approach presented by Bloch for a reader who is ignorant of French.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. https://www.senatspressestelle.bremen.de/detail.php?gsid=bremen146.c.13920.de&asl=bremen146.c.25714.de
  2. ( Page no longer available , search in web archives: Source by Peter Schöttler, Sozial.Geschichte Online, 1, 2009, p. 21 )@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / duepublico.uni-duisburg-essen.de