Therese




At a DNVP party conference in Königsberg, from the left: Elsa Hielscher-Panten, Else von Sperber, Annagrete Lehmann, behind it Magdalene von Tiling, Margarete Behm, behind Therese German, Helene Freifrau von Watter, Paula Müller-Otfried, behind Ulrike Scheidel

Therese Deutsch (* 11 May 1870 in Pilzen, † after 1932) was a German politician (DNVP). Edit LifeQualtext

Therese Deutsch visited the secondary daughters' school and subsequently received private lessons. Later she worked as an educator in Königsberg. During the Weimar Republic she joined the DNVP and became Managing Director of the DNVP East Prussia. From 1921 to 1932 she was a member of the Prussian Landtag, with a brief interruption in 1928. Edit source text r modern agricultural technologies and their low dissemination in developing countries. In Starved for Science: How Biotechnology in Being Kept Out of Africa, he makes the p of consumers in industries responsible for the lack of political support for the urgently needed improved seed, plant protection products and fertilizer in developing countries. The main reason is the lack of benefits for Western consumers of these technologies, which have already overcome long-term rural poverty and lack of nutrition. In particular, the Europeans are playing a key role in the export of their ideas (for example, precautionary principle, neglect or rejection of modern agriculture and the transformation of small-scale farming as an idyll) to development aid, international organizations and non-governmental organizations. Many Asian countries also have a culturally close bond with Europe. In India, the sluggish introduction and massive regulation of green genetic engineering is due to a traditional rejection and a general mistrust of technology and imports from the West. Edit BooksQualtext Weblinks Edit sourcetext Standard data (person): GND: 141431407 (PICA, AKS) | LCCN: n81119369 VIAF: 56675696 | Wikipedia People Search

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