Manuela Kasper-Claridge

Manuela Kasper-Claridge
Moderating a discussion for the Federation of German Industry (BDI)
Interview with Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel laureate in economics
In debate with Lee Hsien Loong, Prime Minister Singapore
With Yingluck Shinawatra, prime minister of Thailand
Moderating a debate at the Hanover Trade Fair

Manuela Kasper-Claridge (born 26 October 1959 in Berlin, Germany) is a German journalist.

Manuela Kasper-Claridge is the head of the department "Business & Science"[1] of Germany's international broadcaster Deutsche Welle (DW). Around 3,000 employees and freelancers from 60 countries work in DW’s headquarters in Bonn and main studio in Berlin. The international broadcaster has developed regional television lineups in English, German, Spanish and Arabic, with radio and online content available in 30 different languages.[2][3]

The department "Business & Science" produces business news as well as the weekly business magazine Made in Germany[4] and the globalization program Global 3000. Further on, there is a business news bulletin called Business that is broadcast several times a day.[5] Produced in three different languages, it offers reports, business news and analysis from the world’s most important financial centers, key markets and leading producers. Kasper-Claridge is also in charge of the weekly produced science magazine Tomorrow Today.

The department Business & Science of DW is responsible for the websites “Business”[6] and “Sci-Tech”.[7] These web pages include daily updated multimedia news and reports (text, picture, video, audio). Further on, the department is producing four radio programs, to be broadcast weekly: Living Planet, Spectrum, World Link, World in Progress.

Since 2016 the department "Business & Science" produces "In Good Shape", the weekly health show on DW and "eco@Afrika" - an environment magazine that is co-produced by Deutsche Welle in Berlin and Channels TV in Nigeria.[8]

Early Life and Career

Kasper-Claridge is the daughter of Dieter and Carmen Kasper.

In 2005 Kasper-Claridge was given responsibility for the “Einstein Year“ - a special project in co-operation with DW-TV’s science magazine Projekt Zukunft/Tomorrow Today, leading German scientists and the Max Planck Institute.

Kasper-Claridge introduced a series of "mini-soaps" (e.g. Managers of Tomorrow) to DW-TV's award-winning Made in Germany.

Kasper Claridge was also responsible for introducing the program Global 3000 in April 2008. The motto is "We give globalisation a face," and the United Nations is the cooperation partner. This magazine is also aired by thousands of rebroadcasters around the world.

In 2009 Kasper-Claridge started Global Ideas, an award winning multimedia-based climate project for Deutsche Welle[9] which is available in 5 different languages, climate projects showing best practice are featured - with a focus on emerging nations and developing countries. This worldwide project is supported by the International Climate Initiative.

Kasper-Claridge has regularly attended the World Economic Forum in Davos.[10] She initiated partnerships with the WEF and the Schwab Foundation and is producing regional debates for DW in cooperation with the WEF (e.g. debates about Latin America and South-East Asia). She is also a member of the German Chambers of Industry and Commerce's (DIHK) committee on media and communication. Kasper-Claridge is on the board of trustees of Germany’s Ifo institute and in the advisory board of TecTV, the webbased TV, by the Association of German Engineers (VDI). She has also served as a jury member for a variety of award programs (e.g. Empowering Award, Mid-Market Awards) and has also moderated various podium discussions in German and English.[11]

Manuela Kasper-Claridge initialized a cooperation with the "Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings".[12] DW reported with special editions of the science magazine Tomorrow Today about the annual meeting.[13] Kasper-Claridge exclusively interviewed various Nobel laureates like Stephen Chu (physics), Mario Molina (chemistry), Barry Marshall (medicine) and Alvin Roth (economy).[14]

Within the last years, Manuela Kasper-Claridge joined several times the Fortune conference "Most Powerful Women" in London, which brought together the most prominent European women leaders in business, along with selected leaders form government, media, philanthropy and the arts. Since June 2016 she is a member of the board of the association “Gesellschaft der Freunde und Förderer des HWWI gGmbH e.V.”.[15]

Kasper-Claridge is the mother of three children. She lives in Berlin.

References

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