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Deutsche Welle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
German international broadcaster
This article is about the international broadcaster. For the unrelated German radio company of the 1920s and 30s, seeDeutsche Welle GmbH. For the musical genre, seeNeue Deutsche Welle.

Television channel
Deutsche Welle
Headquarters in Bonn
TypeBroadcastingnews and discussions
CountryGermany
Broadcast areaWorldwide
AffiliatesWorld Radio Network
HeadquartersBonn, Germany
Programming
LanguagesGerman, English,Bengali, Spanish,Hindi,Tamil,Russian, Arabic,Persian,Dari,Pashto,Urdu,Albanian,Amharic,Bosnian,Bulgarian, Mandarin Chinese, French,Greek,Hausa,Indonesian,Kiswahili,Turkish,Macedonian,Portuguese,Romanian,Serbian,Ukrainian,Urdu
Picture format1080i (HDTV)
Ownership
OwnerFederal Government of Germany[1]
Key people
History
Launched3 May 1953; 72 years ago (1953-05-03)
Links
Websitewww.dw.comEdit this at Wikidata
Availability
Streaming media
YouTubeDW News
LivestreamDW English

Deutsche Welle (pronounced[ˈdɔʏtʃəˈvɛlə];'German Wave'[3][4]), commonly shortened toDW, is a German state-fundedtelevision network, andpublic service[1]international broadcaster funded by theFederal Government of Germany.[5] The service is available in 32 languages. DW's satellite television service consists of channels in English, Spanish, and Arabic.[6] The work of DW is regulated by theDeutsche Welle Act,[7][8] stating that content is intended to be independent ofGerman government influence. DW is a member of theEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU).[9]

DW offers regularly updated articles on its news website and runs its own centre for international media development, DW Akademie. The broadcaster's stated goals are to produce reliable news coverage, provide access to the German language, and promote understanding between peoples.[10] It is also a provider oflive streaming world news, which, like all DW programs, can be viewed and listened via its website, YouTube, satellite, rebroadcasting and various apps anddigital media players.

DW has been broadcasting since 1953. It is headquartered inBonn, where its radio programmes are produced. However, television broadcasts are produced almost entirely inBerlin. Both locations create content for DW's news website. As of 2020,Deutsche Welle had 1,668 employees (annual average).[11] In total, over 4,000 people of over 140 nationalities work in DW's offices in Bonn and Berlin, as well as at other locations worldwide.[6]

History

[edit]

Precursor

[edit]

A predecessor with a similar name wasDeutsche Welle GmbH, founded in August 1924 by German diplomat and radio pioneerErnst Ludwig Voss in Berlin and broadcast regularly from 7 January 1926. The station was initially owned by 70% byReichs-Rundfunk-Gesellschaft and 30% by theFree State of Prussia. From 1931 onwards,Deutsche Welle broadcast from theBerlin Broadcasting House. On 1 January 1933Deutsche Welle GmbH was officially transferred toDeutschlandsender GmbH.

The station sees itself in the tradition of the first German foreign broadcaster, theWeltrundfunksender [de] ('World Broadcaster') of theWeimar Republic. TheWeltrundfunksender was renamed toDeutscher Kurzwellensender [de] ('German Shortwave Broadcaster') by theNazis in 1933.

Beginnings

[edit]

DW's first shortwave broadcast took place on 3 May 1953 with an address by the then-West German President,Theodor Heuss. On 11 June 1953,ARD public broadcasters signed an agreement to share responsibility forDeutsche Welle. At first, it was controlled byNordwestdeutscher Rundfunk (NWDR). In 1955, NWDR split intoNorddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) andWestdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR), WDR assumed responsibility forDeutsche Welle programming.

Politically, the creation of a Germaninternational broadcasting station was supported byCDU chancellorKonrad Adenauer. To prevent governmental indoctrination in Germany, broadcasting is a matter of the federal states. In a years-long dispute between the Adenauer and thefederal states of Germany, the federal government was allowed to createDeutschlandfunk aimingGDR citizens andDeutsche Welle for an international audience. In 1959, Adenauer presented a bill to establish three federal broadcasting companies:Deutschlandfunk,Deutsche Welle, andDeutschland-Fernsehen ('Germany-TV'). TheFederal Constitutional Court stopped Adenauer's television plans. Radio, on the other hand, was permitted as a federal institution.[12]

In 1960,Deutsche Welle became an independent public body after a court ruled that while broadcastingto Germany was a state matter, broadcastingfrom Germany was part of the federal government's foreign affairs function.[13]

On 7 June 1962, DW joinedARD as a national broadcasting station.[14]Deutsche Welle was originally headquartered in the West German city ofCologne. Afterreunification, when much of the government relocated to Berlin, the station's headquarters moved to Bonn.

German reunification

[edit]

With theGerman reunification in 1990,Radio Berlin International (RBI),East Germany's international broadcaster ceased to exist. Some of the RBI staff joinedDeutsche Welle and DW inherited some broadcasting facilities, including transmitting facilities atNauen, as well as RBI's frequencies.

DW (TV) began asRIAS-TV, a television station launched by theWest Berlin broadcaster RIAS (Rundfunk im amerikanischen Sektor,'Radio in the American Sector') in August 1988; they also acquired the German Educational Television Network in the United States. The fall of theBerlin Wall the following year and German reunification in 1990 meant that RIAS-TV was to be closed down. On 1 April 1992,Deutsche Welle inherited the RIAS-TV broadcast facilities, using them to start a German- and English-language television channel broadcast viasatellite, DW (TV), adding a short Spanish broadcast segment the following year. In 1995, it began 24-hour operation (12 hours German, 10 hours English, 2 hours Spanish). At that time, DW (TV) introduced a new news studio and a new logo.

Deutsche Welle took some of the former independent radio broadcasting serviceDeutschlandfunk's foreign-language programming in 1993, when Deutschlandfunk was absorbed into the newDeutschlandradio.

In addition to radio and television programming, DW sponsored some published material. For example, the South-Asia Department publishedGerman Heritage: A Series Written for the South Asia Programme in 1967, and in 1984 publishedAfrican Writers on the Air. Both publications were transcripts of DW programming.

Internet presence

[edit]

In September 1994,Deutsche Welle was the first public broadcaster in Germany with an internet presence, initiallywww-dw.gmd.de, hosted by the GMD Information Technology Research Center. For its first two years, the site listed little more than contact addresses, although DW'sNews Journal was broadcast inRealAudio from Real's server beginning in 1995, andSüddeutsche Zeitung's initial web presence, which included news articles from the newspaper, shared the site. In 1996, it evolved into a news website using the URLdwelle.de; in 2001, the URL changed towww.dw-world.de, and was changed again in 2012, towww.dw.de.Deutsche Welle purchased the domaindw.com, which previously belonged toDiamondWare, in 2013; DW had attempted to claim ownership of the address in 2000, without success. DW eventually moved to thewww.dw.com domain on 22 June 2015. According to DW, their website delivers information by topic with an intuitive navigation organized to meet users' expectations. The layout offers more flexibility to feature pictures, videos, and in-depth reporting on the day's events in a multimedia and multilingual fashion. They also integrated their Media Center into the dw.de website making it easier for users to access videos, audio, and picture galleries from DW's multimedia archive of reports, programs, and coverage of special issues.[15]

DW's news site is in seven core languages (Arabic,Chinese, English, German, Spanish,Portuguese for Brazil, and Russian), as well as a mixture of news and information in 23 other languages in whichDeutsche Welle broadcasts.Persian became the site's eighth focus language in 2007.

German and European news is DW's central focus, but the site also offers background information about German and German language courses.[16]Deutsch, Warum Nicht? (literally:German, Why Not?) is a personal course for learning the German language, created byDeutsche Welle and theGoethe-Institut.[17]

In 2003, the German government passed a new "Deutsche Welle Act", which defined DW as a tri-media organization, making theDeutsche Welle website an equal partner with DW-TV and DW Radio. The website is available in 30 languages but focuses on German, English, Spanish, Russian, Brazilian Portuguese, Chinese, and Arabic. Persian became the eighth focus language in 2007.

In March 2009, DW-TV expanded its television services in Asia with two new channels, namely DW-TV Asia and DW-TV Asia+. DW-TV Asia (DW-TV Asien in German) contains 16 hours of German programming and 8 hours in English, whilst DW-TV Asia+ contains 18 hours of English programmes plus 6 hours of German programmes.[18]

In August 2009, DW-TV's carriage in the United Kingdom onSky channel 794 ceased, although the channel continues to be available via other European satellites receivable in the UK.[19]

In 2011, DW announced a significant reduction of service including the closure of most of its FM services in the Balkans (except forRomani), but that it would expand its network of FM partners in Africa. The radio production for Hausa, Kiswahili, French, and Portuguese for Africa was optimized for FM broadcasts. DW also produces a regional radio magazine in English daily, which is to be rebroadcast by African partners.

Audio content in Arabic is distributed online, via mobile, or rebroadcast by partners.

DW announced it would focus on FM partnerships for Bengali, Urdu, Dari/Pashtu, and Indonesian for South Asia, India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.

On 1 November 2011, DW discontinued shortwave broadcasts in German, Russian, Persian, and Indonesian and ended its English service outside Africa. Chinese programming was reduced from 120 minutes to 60 minutes a week. As of November 2011, DW only broadcast radio programming via shortwave in Amharic, Chinese, Dari, English, and French for Africa, Hausa, Kiswahili, Pashtu, Portuguese for Africa and Urdu.[20]

Rebranding television news

[edit]

On 22 June 2015, DW TV launched a 24-hour English-language news channel with a new design and a new studio as part of a rebrand toDW News. Previously, DW's news programmes were calledJournal and broadcast in English in 3-, 15- and 30-minute blocks. The new channel offers 30-minute updates every hour and 60-minute programmes twice a day on weekdays. DW News broadcasts from Berlin but frequently has live social media segments hosted from a specially designed studio in Bonn. The German, Spanish, and Arabic channels also received a new design.

At the same time, DW's news website moved from a .deURL to .com and added a social media stream to its front page. The refreshed DW services were launched under the tagline 'Made for Minds'.

Plans for the future

[edit]

Deutsche Welle has developed atwo-tier approach that they are using for the future growth of their company which consists of a global approach and a regional approach. Within their global approach, DW has now made plans to boost its competitiveness market throughout the world with news and television coverage. The plan implements covering almost all regions of the world with two television channels in each region. With some exclusions, the entire world will be covered. Hours covered range throughout regions and the coverage will be in German, English, Spanish, and Arabic.[21]

The regional approach looks at marketing over the Internet to offer news coverage in languages other than the 4 being offered. With updates on DW's website news will be better tailored to each region. Over time, they plan to diversify their online coverage with more regional content being covered.[21]

The budget of theDeutsche Welle for 2016 was 301.8 million euros.[22]

On 25 February 2018,DW-TV published"The Climate Cover Up – Big Oil's Campaign of Deception" (2018)[23] after documents confirmed big oil companies have known[24] the burning of fossil fuels impacts climate since 1957.[25]

Funding

[edit]

Deutsche Welle is funded from federal grants taken from the federal tax revenue.[26]

Since the reorganisation of broadcasting as a result of German reunification,Deutsche Welle has been the only remaining broadcasting corporation under federal law. In contrast to the national public broadcasters, which are financed by the license fee the ARD state broadcasters, Deutschlandradio and ZDF, it is not financed through the broadcasting fee, but from federal taxes. The Ministry for Culture and Media is responsible for the financing, which in turn allows the DW to offer a broadcast with low to nonexistent advertising time.

Censorship

[edit]

On 10 April 2019, DW announced thatVenezuela's state telecoms regulatorConatel had halted its Spanish-language channel. By 15 April, the broadcasting service was restored.[27]

In 2019, the RussianMinistry of Foreign Affairs accused DW of calling on Russians to take part in recent anti-government protests and threatened it would take action against the outlet under domestic law if it made such calls again.[28] Shortly after, Russia's parliament accused DW of breakingelection legislation and asked the foreign ministry to consider revoking the German broadcaster's right to work in the country.[29] By November, Russian Foreign MinisterSergei Lavrov declared he did not support banning foreign media outlets.[29]

On 3 February 2022, in retaliation to Germany's broadcasting regulator's decision to ban the transmission of the Russian state-runRT Deutsch channel over a lack of a broadcasting license, the Russian foreign ministry said that it would shut down DW's Moscow bureau, strip all DW staff of their accreditation and terminate broadcasting of DW in Russia. It also stated that it would begin the procedure of designating DW as a "foreign agent".[30]

The Moscow office ofDeutsche Welle was informed that it would be shut at 9:00 on Friday, 4 February 2022.[31] DW made plans to relocate Moscow operations to the Latvian capital,Riga.[32]

In March 2022, aBelarusian court recognized the Telegram channel "DW Belarus" and theDeutsche Welle logo as extremist materials.[33] In April 2024, the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Belarus labeled DW Belarus as an extremist group.[34]

On 30 June 2022, DW was banned inTurkey upon the request ofRadio and Television Supreme Council (RTÜK). RTÜK ordered DW in February 2022 to pay the license fee or to terminate their service in Turkey.[35]

In October 2022,Iran sanctioned DW Farsi for coverage of2022 Iranian protests. Iran's Foreign Ministry announced the sanctions in a statement, accusing those listed of "supporting terrorism."[36][37]

Logos

[edit]
  • First logo (1953)
    First logo (1953)
  • Second logo (1992–1995), introduced following the start of Deutsche Welle TV in 1992
    Second logo (1992–1995), introduced following the start ofDeutsche Welle TV in 1992
  • Third logo (1995–2003)
    Third logo (1995–2003)
  • Fourth logo (2003–2012)
    Fourth logo (2003–2012)
  • Fifth and current logo (2012–present)
    Fifth and current logo (2012–present)

Interval signal

[edit]
Interval signal for Deutsche Welle

The network'sinterval signal is a version of the melody of "Es sucht der Bruder seine Brüder" fromFidelio byLudwig van Beethoven.[38]

Broadcast languages

[edit]
LanguageBeganCeasedLinear broadcast[39]
German1953[40]closed 1 January 2024[41]
English *1954[40]TV & Radio (also football)
French *Radio (also football)
SpanishTV & Radio (football)
PortugueseRadio (also football)
Arabic1959[42]TV & Radio (Iraq, Sudan and football)
Persian1962[43]
Turkish
RussianTV
Polish *
Czech *2000[44]
Slovak *2000[44]
Hungarian *2000–2021[44]
Serbo-Croatian *1992[45]
Swahili1963[43]Radio (also football)
HausaRadio (also football)
Indonesian
Bulgarian
Romanian *
Slovene2000
Modern Greek1964[43]Radio
Hindi
Bengali
Urdu
Italian *1998[46]
Chinese1965[47]
AmharicRadio
Sanskrit19661998
Japanese1969[47]2000[44]
Macedonian
Pashto1970[48]
Dari
Serbian1992[45]
Croatian
Albanian
Bosnian1997[46]
Danish *19651998[46]
Norwegian *
Swedish *
Dutch *1967
Ukrainian2000[44]
Belarusian2005[49]2011–2020
Tamil2021

 * partly byDeutschlandfunk (until 1993)

Broadcasting

[edit]

The main distribution of DW programs is by satellite transmissions, internet stream and re-broadcasting by local FM radio stations. Historically, shortwave broadcasts were the main distribution channel of international broadcasters, as forDeutsche Welle.

For parts of Africa where DW believes many people can still be reached via radio, DW broadcasts programs via shortwave.

The TV program is distributed via various satellite channels and fed into cable networks. It is also available as a live stream on the DW website and in the ARD media library. Since 2019, DW has been providing its websites as an onion service via the Tor network in order to circumvent censorship measures by non-democratic states.

Deutsche Welle was heavily involved in technological research initiatives to adapt shortwave transmission to today's standards through the use of digital technology. DW favored the technology of theDigital Radio Mondiale consortium. In 2008, it started the BBC & DW project with the British BBC. However, this was soon discontinued due to a lack of success on the listener side.

Shortwave relay stations

[edit]

In the so called 'golden era' of shortwave radio at the time of thecold war, DW had a number of shortwave relay stations in south-east Asia, Africa and Europe.

  • Trincomalee,Sri Lanka (1984 to 2013) was sold to Sri Lanka Broadcasting Cooperation
    • 3 × 250 kW short wave transmitters
    • 1 × 400 kW medium wave transmitter
    • 20 antennas (to be verified)
  • Kigali,Rwanda: A relay station in Kigali, Rwanda, was inaugurated on 30 August 1963, and provided coverage for Africa.[50] This relay station closed on 28 March 2015.
    • 4 × 250 kW shortwave transmitters
  • Sines, Portugal closed on 30 October 2011 and was due to be dismantled after a few months.
    • 3 × 250 kW shortwave transmitters
  • Radio Antilles,Montserrat[51][52]

DW used a relay station in Malta that had three SW and one 600 kW MW transmitter and gave partial coverage of the Americas, southern Asia and the far east.[53] It was inaugurated on 29 July 1974 in exchange for a grant of almost 1 million GBP. The station closed in January 1996.

Formerly, DW shared a transmitting station onAntigua in theCaribbean with the BBC.[54] It was inaugurated on 1 November 1976 and closed on 31 March 2005. It had a relay-exchange with theCanadian Broadcasting Corporation that allowed DW to use two 250 kW transmitters in Sackville, New Brunswick, until that facility closed down in 2012.[55]

In July 2011,Deutsche Welle began implementing a major reform. The main changes have been a radical reduction of shortwave radio broadcasting—from a daily total of 260 to 55 hours—and an expansion of television broadcasting.[21]

Relay stations leasing transmitter time to DW

[edit]

In 2013, DW leased time on the following relay stations:[56]

Personnel

[edit]

Directors-General

[edit]
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
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The current Director-General,Peter Limbourg, in 2016

Presenters

[edit]

DW Akademie

[edit]

DW Akademie isDeutsche Welle's international center formedia development, media consulting and journalism training. It offers training and consulting services to partners around the world. It works with broadcasters, media organizations, and universities especially in developing and transitioning countries to promote free and independent media. The work is funded mainly by the GermanFederal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development.[62]Additional sponsors are theGerman Foreign Office and theEuropean Union.

DW Akademie's journalism traineeship is an 18-month program for young journalists that provides editorial training in the three areas in whichDeutsche Welle produces content: radio, television and online. It is aimed at aspiring journalists from Germany as well as from regions to whichDeutsche Welle broadcasts.[63]

The "International Media Studies" Master's Program, offered in cooperation with theUniversity of Bonn and the University Bonn-Rhein-Sieg of Applied Sciences, is based at DW Akademie. The four-semester program combines the disciplines of media development, media regulation, and communications. The seminars are held in English and German and the degree is aimed at media representatives from developing and transitioning countries.

Carsten von Nahmen became head of DW Akademie in September 2018. He had been DW's senior correspondent in Washington since February 2017 and prior to this, deputy editor-in-chief and head of DW's main news department since 2014. Christian Gramsch was director of DW Akademie from November 2013 until May 2018, and prior to this DW's regional director for multimedia. He succeeded DW Akademie director Gerda Meuer, who had previously been deputy editor-in-chief ofDeutsche Welle's radio program, and had earlier worked for various media outlets and as a correspondent for Inter News service. Ute Schaeffer has been DW Akademie's deputy head since 2014 and was previouslyDeutsche Welle's editor-in-chief.[64]

Learn German section

[edit]
This sectionrelies excessively onreferences toprimary sources. Please improve this section by addingsecondary or tertiary sources.
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Deutsche Welle's website has a section dedicated to providing material for those who are interested in learning the German language at all levels based on theCommon European Framework of Reference for Languages. They offer free video and audio courses with access to exercises and transcripts. Users can also search for suitable courses and test which level they are at.[65] Among the material available on their site, they offer free access to an animated series called "Harry Lost in Time" (Harry gefangen in der Zeit), for beginners.[66] ThroughFlash animation, the series tells the story of a fictional character named Harry Walkott, a man who is struck by lightning in theBlack Forest during his vacation in Germany and, because of this, becomes stuck in time, with the same day repeating over and over. With an English narration, the series introduces German expressions, words and grammar explanations, and also provides exercises for the user.

DW Freedom of Speech Award

[edit]

The DW Freedom of Speech Award was established in 2015, to honour "a media person or initiative that has shown outstanding promotion of freedom rights".[67] Winners include:

Controversies

[edit]

Reporting fromThe Guardian in January 2020 raised allegations of "sexual harassment, racism, antisemitism, and severe bullying" within the organization.[68]

On 5 December 2021,Deutsche Welle announced that it would suspend its partnership with a Jordanian partner,Roya TV, on account of antisemitic and anti-Israel content published on Roya's social media.[69] Guido Baumhauer, a senior executive with DW, apologized, saying: "We are truly sorry that we did not notice these disgusting images."[69] Roya TV rejected the accusation and said it was the target of a "hostile campaign" by unnamed parties.[70]

In November 2021,Süddeutsche Zeitung published an investigation into social media comments allegedly made by members of DW's Arabic service, including posts that appeared to downplay the Holocaust or perpetuate anti-Jewish stereotypes.[71][72] On 3 December 2021, DW announced during an external investigation into the allegations, led by former German Justice MinisterSabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger and psychologist Ahmad Mansour, that it was suspending four employees and one freelancer.[69][71] On 7 February, this investigation concluded that DW was correct to suspend these five employees, and recommended further action against eight other employees; it also recommended ending cooperation agreements with some Middle East-based news outlets, but concluded that there was no "structural antisemitism" at DW.[72] Following the report, DW terminated the contracts of several other employees, including the former bureau chief in Beirut, who advocated the execution of "anyone who has to do with the Israelis", an employee who claimed that Israel controls people's brains "through art, media and music", and a third journalist had posted "the Holocaust is a lie."[73][74] Several of those fired stated that they had not been given a chance to defend their case, criticized DW's lack of clarity regarding guidelines for what constituted antisemitism, and said they felt they were being censored in what they could write about theIsraeli-Palestinian conflict.[75][73]

In September 2022, Farah Maraqa, one of seven Arab employees of DW fired[75] in February, subsequently sued DW and won her case. The court ruled that her dismissal on charges of anti-semitism was "legally unjustified". A former colleague, Maram Salem, won her case in July against DW for unlawful termination, ruling that her Facebook posts were not anti-semitic.[76]

Also in September 2022,Deutsche Welle updated itsCode of Conduct to include "Germany's historical responsibility for the Holocaust is also a reason for which we support the right of Israel to exist" among their values and noted that antisemitism is grounds for dismissal.[77] The updated code of conduct is thought to improveDeutsche Welle's chances of successfully terminating antisemitic employees in the future.[78]

In August 2023,The New Arab published the results of a year long internal investigation by the pro-Palestinian activist publicationArab48 which opined that Arab employees were unfairly dismissed over largely spurious antisemitism charges.[79][80]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^abJohnson, Ian (21 August 2014)."German Broadcaster Fires Chinese Blogger".The New York Times.Archived from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved4 November 2020.Deutsche Welle is owned by the government, much like the British Broadcasting Corporation or the Voice of America.
  2. ^"Who finances Deutsche Welle?". Deutsche Welle. 18 November 2021. Archived fromthe original on 5 February 2022. Retrieved5 February 2022.
  3. ^Rinke, Eike Marke (31 March 2022)."Deutsche Welle". In Borchard, Gregory A. (ed.).Deutsche Welle.The SAGE Encyclopedia of Journalism (2nd ed.). pp. 459–462.doi:10.4135/9781544391199.n115.ISBN 9781544391199. Retrieved27 July 2025.
  4. ^Vaughan, Don; Schepp, David (20 March 2025)."Deutsche Welle".Encyclopædia Britannica. Britannica Money (Online ed.). Chicago:Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.ISSN 1085-9721. Retrieved27 July 2025.
  5. ^"What kind of company is Deutsche Welle?". Deutsche Welle. 25 June 2015. Archived fromthe original on 4 February 2022. Retrieved5 February 2022.
  6. ^ab"About DW". Deutsche Welle. Archived fromthe original on 15 December 2021. Retrieved8 November 2022.
  7. ^Gesetz über die Rundfunkanstalt des Bundesrechts "Deutsche Welle" (Deutsche-Welle-Gesetz – dwg) [Deutsche Welle Act (DW Act)] (in German)
  8. ^"DW Act: Foundations for independent journalism". Deutsche Welle. 18 January 2013. Retrieved27 July 2025.
  9. ^"Members".EBU.ch.European Broadcasting Union. 28 February 2019.Archived from the original on 19 October 2017. Retrieved4 July 2020.
  10. ^"Profile".DW.com. Archived fromthe original on 5 July 2015. Retrieved5 July 2015.
  11. ^Notes to the annual financial statements for the financial year from 01 January 2020 to 31 December 2020(PDF) (Report). Bonn: Deutsche Welle. 7 May 2021.
  12. ^Goege, Hartmut (1 January 2012)."Senden aus dem Provisorium".Deutschlandfunk (in German). Retrieved31 October 2024.
  13. ^Sjurts, I. (2010).Gabler Kompakt-Lexikon Medien: 1.000 Begriffe nachschlagen, verstehen und anwenden (in German). Gabler Verlag. p. 43.ISBN 978-3-8349-9180-5. Retrieved10 January 2021.
  14. ^Ausarbeitung: Vergleich der Sender CNN, Deutsche Welle, BBC and CCTV [Elaboration: Comparison of the channels CNN, Deutsche Welle, BBC and CCTV](PDF) (Report) (in German). Research Services of the Administration of theGerman Bundestag. 24 February 2014.Archived(PDF) from the original on 29 August 2017.
  15. ^"DW introduces new website and TV program". Deutsche Welle. 5 February 2012.Archived from the original on 1 June 2020. Retrieved26 March 2020.
  16. ^"Learn German". Deutsche Welle.Archived from the original on 5 August 2017. Retrieved5 August 2017.
  17. ^Deutsch, Warum Nicht?Archived 21 June 2015 at theWayback Machine.Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  18. ^Two New Dedicated Channels Provide Gateway to Europe: Two DW-TV channel launched in AsiaArchived 9 July 2017 at theWayback MachineDeutsche Welle.
  19. ^"No more DW-TV on Sky/Astra".Boards. 18 November 2001.Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved15 May 2015.
  20. ^"Changes in radio broadcasts starting this summer". Deutsche Welle.Archived from the original on 22 July 2015. Retrieved19 July 2015.
  21. ^abcMasayuki, Saito (March 2014)."International Broadcasters Confronted with Great Changes: Their Strategies amid Streamlining Part II: Deutsche Welle (Germany)"(PDF).Archived(PDF) from the original on 26 March 2020.
  22. ^"Etataufstockung: Deutsche Welle erhält mehr als zehn Millionen zusätzlich".Archived from the original on 29 August 2017. Retrieved29 August 2017.
  23. ^"The climate cover-up – big oil's deception | All media content | DW | 25 February 2018". Deutsche Welle. Archived fromthe original on 25 February 2018. Retrieved26 February 2018.
  24. ^Supran, Geoffrey;Oreskes, Naomi (2017)."Assessing ExxonMobil's climate change communications (1977–2014)".Environmental Research Letters.12 (8): 084019.Bibcode:2017ERL....12h4019S.doi:10.1088/1748-9326/aa815f.ISSN 1748-9326.
  25. ^DW Documentary (25 February 2018),The climate cover up – big oil's campaign of deception | DW Documentary,archived from the original on 4 March 2018, retrieved26 February 2018
  26. ^"wer finanziert die deutsche welle". Deutsche Welle. February 2012.Archived from the original on 18 February 2022. Retrieved25 February 2022.
  27. ^Vivian Sequera and Andrea Shalal (15 April 2019),German state-owned TV says it returns to Venezuela screensArchived 16 April 2019 at theWayback MachineReuters.
  28. ^Ostroukh, Andrey; Balmforth, Tom (8 August 2019). Lawson, Hugh (ed.)."Russia accuses Deutsche Welle of urging Russians to take part in protests".Reuters. Moscow.Archived from the original on 17 April 2021. Retrieved15 December 2020.
  29. ^abKiselyova, Maria; Balmforth, Tom (6 November 2019). Heavens, Andrew (ed.)."Russia's foreign ministry opposes call to ban Deutsche Welle: Ifax".Reuters. Moscow.Archived from the original on 17 April 2021. Retrieved15 December 2020.
  30. ^"Russia Shuts Down German Broadcaster Deutsche Welle's Moscow Office".themoscowtimes.com. 3 February 2022.Archived from the original on 7 April 2022. Retrieved3 February 2022.
  31. ^"German anger as Russia shuts international broadcaster Deutsche Welle".BBC News. 4 February 2022. p. 1.Archived from the original on 4 February 2022. Retrieved4 February 2022.
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Sources

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • McPhail, Thomas L.Global Communication: Theories, Stakeholders, and Trends. 2006, Blackwell Publishing.ISBN 1-4051-3427-5.
  • Wallis, Roger, and Stanley J. Baran.The Known World of Broadcast News: International News and the Electronic Media. 1990,Routledge.ISBN 0-415-03604-6.

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