Acta Universitatis Carolinae Iuridica (AUCI) is the main journal of the Faculty of Law of Charles University. It has been published since 1954 and is one of the traditional law journals with a theoretical focus.
As a general law journal, it publishes longer studies and shorter articles on any relevant issues in legal theory and international, European and national law. AUCI also publishes material relating to current legislative issues. AUCI is a peer-reviewed journal and accepts submissions from both Czech and international authors. Contributions by foreign authors are published in their original language – Slovak, English, German, French.
AUCI is a theoretical journal for questions of state and law. It is published by Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Law, through Karolinum Press. It is published four times a year, the dates of publication can be found here.
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AUC IURIDICA, Vol 45 No 1 (1999), 115–130
K hospodářskému nacionalismu českých Němců a jeho vztahu k Německu
[On Economic Nationalism of Czech Germans and Its Relation to Germany]
Eduard Kubů
DOI: https://doi.org/10.14712/23366478.2025.285
published online: 31. 03. 2020
abstract
The content of the paper by PhDr. Eduard Kubů, CSc., is expressed in its title “On Economic Nationalism of Czech Germans and its Relation to Germany”. The author defines economic nationalism as “thinking, behaviour, an act, which in the name of national welfare and interest strives to influence economic processes, starting from the production of goods, through the exchange of goods to consumers’ habits”. The author describes first of all the creation and development of institutions, which set as their goal to strengthen German influence in Bohemia and in Czechoslovakia by economic tools. He focuses mainly on a bank called “Landwirtschaftliche und gewerbliche Kreditanstalt der Deutschen in Boehmen”, company limited, established in 1910. Although formally just a credit cooperative, the institution in fact performed all kinds of bank transactions. Membership, employment and the more so higher positions in the “cooperative” were reserved to Germans. Language used was exclusively German. Not a single Jew had ever been employed by the institution in 25 years of its existence, let alone membership in its management. Three positions on the board of directors were reserved for “Bund der Deutschen”, and there were connections to German nationalist parties existing in our country, namely Henlein’s SdP in the thirties and later, after 1938 directly to NSDAP. In the mid-twenties the bank had more than 70 branches. However, without support from Germany, without rescue from that source it could not have survived. Not only a preference of German element was a manifestation of economic nationalism, but also a boycott of Czech and “not enough German” institutions. It is not by surprise that as a reaction to German economic nationalism Czech economic nationalism appeared.
K hospodářskému nacionalismu českých Němců a jeho vztahu k Německu is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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ISSN: 0323-0619
E-ISSN: 2336-6478