Walter Thoms

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Walter Thoms (born August 16, 1899 in Schippenbeil (East Prussia); † August 7, 1994 in Bammental ) was a German business economist and Nazi functionary .

Life

Walter Thoms joined the NSDAP in December 1932 , completed his habilitation in 1933 at the University of Heidelberg and became an assistant there. In 1936 he became associate professor, in 1939 dean of the faculty and in 1940 full professor of business administration (dismissed in 1946). He was the confidante of the Reichsdozentenführer as well as SD expert and played a leading role in the Nazi lecturers' association. In 1941, in conformity with the Nazi regime, he suggested the establishment of an institute for large-scale economy, which was to deal with the economic integration of the territories occupied during World War II into the German Reich.

From 1957 to 1966 he had a teaching position at the Mannheim Business School . Thoms was active in the Humboldt Society and helped shape the 1974 colloquium. In 1976 he became Vice President of the Humboldt Society for Science, Art and Education , and in 1979 he was made an honorary member. In 1972 he co-founded the Socratic Society .

Walter Thoms was a member of the Corps Franco-Guestphalia Cologne. In 1955 he became an honorary member of the Hansea Mannheim fraternity .

Fonts

  • National Socialist Business Administration , in: The practical business economist 18, 1938
  • The functional account bill , 1959
  • The future of the company: overcoming d. Capitalism in the industrial working world of a democratic order , Stuttgart 1975
  • The “third order” of the economy: Laborism , Munich 1988 ISBN 3-7844-7231-1
  • Ecosophy : the science of normative economy in its complex form and multipolar structure; at the same time the refutation and replacement of the theory of capitalism , Sankt Augustin 1994

literature

  • Peter Mantel: Business Administration and National Socialism , Gabler, Wiesbaden 2009
  • Ernst Klee: The dictionary of persons on the Third Reich. Who was what before and after 1945? , Frankfurt a. M. 2003, p. 624

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Directory of Weinheimer Corps Students 1990, p. 474
  2. Burschenschafter Stammrolle 1991. P. 183.