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A journey through the music and culture of Africa

Experience the African zest for life: the spotlight is on music stars from the Cape Verde Islands and Senegal at the...more

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59% of German exports going to other EU Member States in 2011

In 2011, 59.2% of the German exports went to other Member States of the European Union (EU). As also reported by the...more

Germany transporting its exports to other EU countries by road

In 2011, 57% of all exports (in terms of quantity) to other Member States of the European Union (EU) were transported...more

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Reaching the Top with a German Degree: Four Success Stories

What are the benefits of studying in Germany? Four prominent personalities from abroad and their success stories

Dr. Aleksi Vuorinen

Physicist at the University of Bielefeld, winner of the Sofja Kovalevskaja Award 2008

Helsinki, Washington, Vienna, Geneva and now Bielefeld: at just 30 years of age the Finn has a remarkable research career behind him. Two years ago he received the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation’s renowned Sofja Kovalevskaja Award for outstanding young researchers from outside Germany. Vuorinen says: “Compared with most other countries, research support in Germany is generous and, thanks to organizations like the Humboldt Foundation and the DFG, extraordinarily good.”

Dr. Kazuaki Tarumi

Physicist, team leader at Merck and winner of the 2003 Future Prize

The Japanese physicist revolutionized television technology – and received the Future Prize, Germany’s research Oscar, for his work. Tarumi, who has worked for the Merck chemicals and pharmaceuticals group in Darmstadt since 1990, developed liquid crystals that very significantly improve the quality of the displays used in flat-screen televisions. “Luck and persistence are what a researcher needs,” says Tarumi who studied in Bremen as a DAAD scholarship-holder and then completed a doctorate there.

Prof. Dr. Wangari Maathai

Scientist, politician and 2004 Nobel Peace Prize laureate

“We have a special responsibility for the ecosystem of this planet.” This is the maxim of the Kenyan woman who championed environmental protection and nature conservation – and became the first woman in East Africa with a doctorate in biology, the founder of the environmental organization Green Belt Movement and Kenya’s assistant environment minister. The Nobel Peace Prize laureate, who also worked as professor at the University of Nairobi, was a DAAD scholarship-holder and studied veterinary medicine in Germany.

Prof. Dr. Vassilios Skouris

Legal scholar and President of the European Court of Justice

He is the European Union’s top judge. The Greek legal expert has been President of the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg, which interprets EU law, since 2003. Skouris completed most of his legal training in Germany. He studied law in Berlin with support from the DAAD and then completed a doctorate at Hamburg University. “A German doctorate is definitely advantageous for your subsequent professional career,” says the judge who also taught at Bielefeld.

08.07.2010
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