Klaus von Dohnányi

Klaus von Dohnányi

Dohnanyi in 1978
First Mayor of Hamburg
In office
1981–1988
Preceded by Hans-Ulrich Klose
Succeeded by Henning Voscherau
Personal details
Born (1928-06-23) June 23, 1928
Hamburg, Germany
Nationality Germany German
Political party Social Democratic Party of Germany

Klaus von Dohnányi (born 23 June 1928) is a German politician (Social Democratic Party).

Life and career

He was born Hamburg. He is the son of jurist Hans von Dohnányi as well as a nephew of Lutheran theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Both his father and uncle were executed in 1945 as part of the anti-Nazi German Resistance. His younger brother Christoph is a conductor. He also has a sister, Barbara.[1]

After studying law at the University of Munich, and later in the United States at Columbia, Stanford and Yale universities, Dohnányi started his career with the Max Planck Institute for International Private Law. He then moved to Ford Motor Company, the car manufacturer, working for the company in both Detroit and Cologne where he was head of the Planning Division. From 1960–67, he was a Managing Partner of the Institute for Market Research and Management Consulting in Munich.[1]

In 1969 he was elected to the German Federal Parliament (the Bundestag) from the state of North Rhine-Westphalia and served in the Economics ministry as state secretary, and later as Federal Minister of Education and Science until 1981. That year he was elected First Mayor of his home city, and thus Minister-President of Hamburg, one of the federal States of Germany. He served two terms as First Mayor, from 24 June 1981 until 8 June 1988.[1]

After the fall of the Berlin Wall and with German unification, Dohnányi became involved with the restructuring programme in East Germany, and from 1993 to 1996 was a special adviser on Market Economy and State to the Board of the Treuhandanstalt and BvS, its successor company, responsible for privatising state-owned companies in the former East Germany.[1] Dohnányi is a member of the Konvent für Deutschland, a cross-party think-tank of conservative-liberal orientation.[2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Thies, Jochen (2004). Die Dohnanyis. Eine Familienbiographie. Berlin: Propyläen. ISBN 3-549-07190-6.
  2. http://content.stuttgarter-zeitung.de/stz/page/2418898_0_9223_-konvent-fuer-deutschland-konservativ-liberaler-beraterkreis.html

External links

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