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Campus
International Summer School Schmalkalden
An Introduction to our special International Programme at the University of Applied Sciences
Schmalkalden
Campus
IntroductionIntroduction
The International Summer School Schmalkalden 2009 focuses on the challenges confronting the world economy under the conditions of cross-cultural management. The second millennium ended by bringing a truly global dimension to economic activity: the prerogative of the market extended its reach even to those countries which had resisted it for decades;
the well-advanced internationalisation of economic relationships has resulted in significant interdependence between regions and countries and an increasing integration of previously peripheral societies into the world economy. Matching these empirical trends, theories of 'globalisation' have grown in influence in academic and public policy circles since the end of the Cold War. According to this emerging orthodoxy, long-standing conditions of time, space and territoriality have been transformed, or even made obsolete, by world-wide trends.
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The third millennium has begun in the realisation that world-wide economic activity does not necessarily entail a growing similarity between systems of economic governance or between business practices, despite the ever increasing importance of multinational companies and the free flow of capital around the globe. Instead, inherited tradition and cultural difference are said to play a more important role than ever before as global trade and investment bring once nationally-orientated economies and firms into intimate contact and hence intense competition with one another. These developments make the role of contrasting and sometimes conflicting cultural value-systems highly relevant in two regards: first, differing approaches to the means and purposes of economic activity deriving from non-Western philosophies and cultures have consequences for the way in which, for example, Asian, Latin-American or African countries understand their role in the international economy and the trade policies they adopt as a consequence. Second, individual firms interested in expanding their activities to countries where ‘western’ technocratic rationalism is confronted by religious-based value systems (e.g. Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Christianity or Islam), have to be able to adjust their market-entry, negotiating and trading strategies to ‘fit in’ with local conventions and sensibilities.
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The challenges of the new economic reality do not, however, stop there. The enormous increase in international financial transactions, especially on the currency markets, over the past decades has been one of the clearest indications of the interconnected nature of today’s world economy. Financial crises, for example, are no longer limited to one country, or even one continent, but have global implications. At the same time international capital flows and international trade act as a motor of further globalisation, linking the fates of the richest and poorest economies. With new communications techniques facilitating 24-hour round-the-world financial transactions, nation states are said to have lost much of their capacity to maintain control of, and to steer, their economies. Consequently the possibility and desirability of government intervention in pursuit of traditional goals such as stable economic growth, high levels of employment, the survival of national industries and equality via the welfare state, are increasingly called into question. The developed democratic states face competing and possibly contradictory demands: the creation of appropriate conditions for economic growth in global markets (flexibility) versus the maintenance of social cohesion (regulation). The ever-more integrated world economy is also made responsible for global ecological damage, financial and economic instability, starvation and mass migratory pressures, and the gap in wealth and health that separates the rich West from the poor rest.
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Paradoxically, it is at the very time that the market is universally recognised as the only viable form of economic and social organisation, and the challenges and alternatives to it least effective and credible, that the victory of a liberal world economic order is more likely to engender pessimism and fear than faith in a new era of growth and development. Some of the most trenchant and fundamental recent critiques of global markets have notably come from practitioners and former proponents of free market capitalism. The speculator George Soros has commented that he finds ”it easier to imagine the collapse of the global marketplace than the continuation of the present regime”, while one-time neo-liberal advisor to Margaret Thatcher, Prof. John Gray, now believes that ”by allowing ... freedom to world markets we ensure that the age of globalisation will be remembered as another turn in the history of servitude”.
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The fear of an impending economic crash as a result of the advent of international ‘turbo-capitalism’ is, however, perhaps less indicative of the state of the real economy than it appears. The exaggerated sense of a world economy out of control is encouraging the view that capitalism's problems stem from excess, from growing too fast, and that it needs to be reined back. With governments announcing action plans involving some extension of international regulation, control and containment, today's instinct for restraint in business and finance (as shown by decreasing levels of investment and the growth of ‘risk management’) is likely to be reinforced. A possible real danger in the major economies is that the hype about a global crisis will strengthen the impulse of business and political leaders to downplay the international economy’s potential for growth. The mentality which both inflates the difficulties and then reacts by saying 'hold back' could be a bigger threat to economic and social progress than either the possibility of a traditional economic crisis in the West, or the fall-out from financial disarray elsewhere.
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Guest professors from different countries and continents are invited to give us their views on these issues. The wide variety of countries, cultures and religions represented by our international students provides a timely and unique opportunity to investigate the impact of contrasting cultural-religious value systems on international business. Our goal is that students participating in the ISSS will be offered, and be able to develop through the exchange of perspectives and experiences, detailed knowledge and understanding of the complex and interwoven challenges facing economies and firms in the new millennium. In addition, the growing importance of religious values and their economic implications will be examined in multicultural classes and develop the students’ cross-cultural abilities to prevent Huntington’s “clash of civilizations”.
ISSS 09 ISSS 09 ProgrammeProgramme 1st week 1st week13th International Summer School Schmalkalden (ISSS):
International Economics and Cross-Cultural Management08 June – 14 June 2009
1st week
week Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
08.06.-14.06. 8:00-20:00 arrival at
Schmalkalden
room C 301building CFaculty of
Business andEconomics
(“Wirtschaft“)Blechhammer
98574Schmalkalden
11:00-12:00C 201Richert
Obligatory Registration
12-14 C 201Wymer
12-14 C 207 Vallejo
14-16 C 201Ward
14-16 C 207Castañeda
16:45-17:30
SchmalkaldenTour
18:00-22:00Opening
CeremonyWilhelmsburg
Castle
22:00-2:00Opening PartyStudents’ Club
10-14 C 201Wymer
10-14 C 207Vallejo
14-18 C 201Ward
14-18 C 207Castañeda
10-13 C 201Wymer
10-13 C 207Vallejo
14-17 C 201Ward
14-17 CCastañeda
W10-12 C 201 Wymer
10-12 C 207Vallejo
12-14 C 201Ward
12-14 C 207Castañeda
16:00-17:00C 201 exam
Wymer
16:00-17:00C 207 exam
Vallejo
18:00-19:00C 201 exam
Ward
18:00-19:00C 207 examCastañeda
09:55 – 20:00Trip to Weimar
and Erfurt
bus stop Näherstiller
Straße(opposite
to Aldisupermarket)
09:55 – 16:00Trip to
WartburgCastle
bus stop Näherstiller
Straße(opposite
to Aldisupermarket)
ISSS 09 Programme 2nd weekISSS 09 Programme 2nd week13th International Summer School Schmalkalden (ISSS):
International Economics and Cross-Cultural Management15 June – 21 June 2009
2nd week
week Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
15.06.-21.06. 10-14 C 104Schmidt
10-14 C 201Luther
14-18 C 201García
14-18 C 207Herbert
10-14 C 201García
10-14 C 207Herbert
14-18 C 104Schmidt
14-18 C 201Luther
20-22Schmalympics
OpeningCeremonyon Campus
22-24Schmalympics
Party on Campus
10-20Schmalympicssports events
20-2Schmalympics
VictoryCeremony
22-1Midnight-Sun
Lecturein the forest
10-14 C 104Schmidt
10-14 C 201Luther
14-18 C 201García
14-18 C 207Herbert
21-22Schmalympics
Closing Ceremony
22-1Schmalympics
Party on Campus
10:00-11:00C 104 exam
Schmidt
10:00-11:00C 201 exam
Luther
11:30-12:30 C 201 exam
García
11:30-12:30C 201 exam
Herbert
Trip to Berlinand Potsdam
13:25 departure
NäherstillerStraße
opposite to Aldi
ca. 18:30 arrival at Berlin
Berlin Potsdam
ISSS 09 Programme 3rd weekISSS 09 Programme 3rd week13th International Summer School Schmalkalden (ISSS):
International Economics and Cross-Cultural Management22 June – 27 June 2009
3rd week
week Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
22.06.-27.06. 10-14 C 201Chittick
10-14 C 207Luther
14-18 C 201Gordon
14-18 C 207Barbosa
10-14 C 201Chittick
10-14 C 207Luther
14-18 C 201Gordon
14-18 C 207Barbosa
21-2International
PartyStudents‘ Club
10-13 C 201Chittick
10-13 C 207Luther
14-17 C 201Gordon
14-17 C 207Barbosa
10:00-11:00C 201 exam
Chittick
10:00-11:00C 207 exam
Luther
12:00-13:00C 201 exam
Gordon
12:00-13:00C 207 exam
Barbosa
18:00-6:00Thuringian
ForestMidnight-Sun
LectureRichert
meeting point:C 101
14:00-16:00accommodation
check(please stay
at home)
17:30photo of all
ISSS studentsat
WilhelmsburgCastle
18-22Graduation Ceremony
at Wilhelmsburg
Castle
22-lateGood-by PartyStudents‘ Club
:9:00
check out & departure
(early morning)
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The campus & its buildingsThe campus & its buildings
Klick on the buildings on the map to get further information
Building D
Building C
Building S
Building A
Building F
Building E
Building B
Building H
Building I
Building K
Building G
Building R
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Building A – Office BuildingBuilding A – Office Building
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Building B – Computer Science & Building B – Computer Science & Electrical EngineeringElectrical Engineering
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Building C – Business & EconomicsBuilding C – Business & Economics
• basement– StuRa office– lavatories
• ground floor:– PC room– class rooms– information boards
• first floor– class rooms– Aula
• second floor– Professors‘ offices– ISSS offices C 301 and 307
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Building C -inside-Building C -inside-
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Building D – Business LawBuilding D – Business Law
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Building E – Mechanical EngineeringBuilding E – Mechanical Engineering
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Building F – Computer ScienceBuilding F – Computer Science
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Building G - GymBuilding G - Gym
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Building H - AuditoriaBuilding H - Auditoria
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Building I - LibraryBuilding I - Library
• opening hours:http://fh-sm.de/Oeffnungszeiten.html
• outside reading area• meeting & multimedia rooms• single studying rooms• several PCs and workplaces• WLAN available in all rooms
& LAN access in single studying rooms
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Building K - Building K - RectorateRectorate
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Building R – Mensa & CafeteriaBuilding R – Mensa & Cafeteria• Mensa
– opening hours:Mon – Thu: 7 a.m. – 2 p.m.Fri: 7 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.
– breakfast buffet– lunch menu
– 4-6 different meals– including vegetarian meal– salat buffet– plan of menus on web:http://www.studentenwerk-erfurt-ilmenau.de/mensen/speiseplan.php?mensaid=4
• Cafeteria– opening hours:
Mon-Thu 14 p.m. - 10 p.m.
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Building S - DormitoryBuilding S - Dormitory• ground floor:
– BAföG - office– Studentenwerk – officewashing cards 5€ or 10€(each washing or drying 2,20€)– washing machines & dryer– students‘ club opening hours:
Mo + Wed – Fri: 8 – 12 p.m.Tuesday: 8 p.m. – 2 a.m.
• 1st – 5th floor: apartments;rooms in student communities up to three people– own room– shared bathroom & kitchen
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Schmalkalden – The citySchmalkalden – The city
city information:http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://
www.stadt.schmalkalden.de&langpair=de|en&hl=de&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&prev=/language_tools
webcam Schmalkalden:http://www.antenne-sm.de/Webcam/Webcam.html
weather in Schmalkalden:http://weather.yahoo.com/forecast/GMXX4082_c.html?force_units=1
picture: Touristinformation Schmalkalden©www.schmalkalden.de/(blick_durch_die_altstadt_zum_schloss_wilhelmsburg.jpg)
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Church “St. Georg“Church “St. Georg“
Schmalkalden is on the 'GermanTimber-Framed Houses Trail'. The listed buildings in the historic town centre, with their air of medieval romance, are particularly attractive, as are the late-gothictown church of St. George and the Wilhelmsburg Castle.
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Castle “Wilhelmsburg“Castle “Wilhelmsburg“
This is the only Hessian castle in Thuringia and was built between1585 and 1590. It exhibits wonderful wall paintings and stucco work. In thecastle church there is a small,still playable organ which countsamong the most impressivelisted musical instruments northof the Alps.
picture: Touristinformation Schmalkalden©www.schmalkalden.de/ ( 1.schloss_wilhelmsburg.jpg; 2.schlossanlage_wilhelmsburg.jpg)
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The historical centre of SchmalkaldenThe historical centre of Schmalkalden
Schmalkalden is one of the oldest and most beautiful towns in Thuringia, situated between steep,romantic hills and woods. The town was first officiallymentioned in 874 and has had an eventful history since then.
picture: Touristinformation Schmalkalden©www.schmalkalden.de/(fachwerkensemble_mohrengasse.jpg)
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Martin Luther‘s house in the historical centreMartin Luther‘s house in the historical centre
In 1531 the protestant nobilityformed the 'League of Schmalkalden' against the emperor Charles V.Subsequently Martin Lutherpublished the ‘SchmalkaldenArticles’, one of the foundingdocuments of the Protestantreligion, here in 1537.
picture: Touristinformation Schmalkalden©www.schmalkalden.de/(lutherhaus.jpg)
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Partneruniversities worldwidePartneruniversities worldwide
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Partneruniversities - EuropePartneruniversities - Europe
Klick on the stars on the map to get further information
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Partneruniversities – AmericaPartneruniversities – America
Klick on the stars on the map to get further information
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Partneruniversities – Asia & AustraliaPartneruniversities – Asia & Australia
Klick on the stars on the map to get further information
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ISSS – IMPRESSIONSISSS – IMPRESSIONS
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See you soon in Schmalkalden!
Enroll now and enjoy a great time at the ISSS