Imprint
The project Co-Learning Space for Hamburg’s cluster (11/2016 - 10/2019) is affiliated to the Helmut-Schmidt-University (University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg). The research project is funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and the Ministry of Economy, Transport and Innovation of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg. In June 2020 the project's second phase started under the name "Co-Learning space for Hamburg's clusters - collective engagement with new topics and stakeholders". The project is again funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and the Ministry of Economy and Innovation of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg.
Responsible for content
Univ. – Prof. Dr. Stephan Duschek
Implementing authority
Helmut-Schmidt-Universität / Universität der Bundeswehr Hamburg
Fachbereich Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften
Professur für Betriebswirtschaftslehre, insbesondere Organisationstheorie
Holstenhofweg 85
22043 Hamburg
Project coordination:
Univ.- Prof. Dr. Stephan Duschek
Tel.: +49 40/6541-2584
EMail: sduschek@hsu-hh.de
Project contact:
Julia Alrutz
Tel.: +49 40/6541-2377
E-Mail: julia.alrutz@hsu-hh.de
Anna Vogel
Tel.: +49 40/42841-1454
E-Mail: anna.vogel@hsu-hh.de
Concept, Design & Realization

Borsteler Bogen 27c
22453 Hamburg, Germany
W3C-Compliance
This website was created in view of the current references by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).
DW3C sets standards and principles for the advancement of web-technologies to improve the interoperability of the world wide web and its progress in usabilty.
A W3C-valid source code is the basic foundation for a good search engine optimization (SEO) and barrier-free websites.
This makes the W3C-valid execution of HTML5- and CSS3-programming an important quality attribute for professional websites.
HTML5 and CSS3 – technologies of the future
To put it simply you can name HTML5 and CSS3 the standards for a future-proof structure and modern design of websites.
HTML5 is the latest standard of HTML. Its former version called HTML 4.01 was released in 1999. Since then the web has modified a lot, so this version has become dated and has been replaced by HTML5. It is even now supported by the popular browsers.
The development of CSS3 was started only a year after the former version has been published. That was in 1999, so it took the W3C 12 years to improve the technology of CSS for this version.
Even though there is a major difference between CSS2 and CSS3, all modern browsers quickly implemented the new addition of the W3C-family and now support the most CSS3-features which are currently avaiable.
Responsive Webdesign
Responsive webdesign prepares websites to fit in all screensizes.
This website does not only run on normal desktop pc's, it also considers the different requirements of other devices. Especially mobile devices like smartphones or tablets.