On the way to becoming an independent discipline: the institutionalization of psychology in the universities to 1941
The potential of psychology for selecting workers and officers: diagnostics, character, and expression
Psychologists at work: the start of new professional activities in industry and the army and their expansion in the war economy
Legitimation strategies and professional policy
University courses in psychology and the development of the Diploma Examination Regulations of 1941.
The Diploma Examination Regulations nad their consequences
The disbanding of psychological services in the Luftwaffe and the army in 1942 and the reorientation of psychology during the war
Self-deception, loyalty, and solidarity: professionalization as a subjective process
Science, profession, and power.