Neue Anthropologie
Neue Anthropologie was a quarterly anthropology journal. It was published in Hamburg, West Germany by the, whose chairman, Jürgen Rieger, was also the journal's editor. It served as a platform for neo-Nazi psychological and anthropological pseudoscience, with a particular focus on scientific racism.
History
Neue Anthropologie was established in 1973. It followed several similar journals published by the Society for Biological Anthropology, Eugenics and Behavioural Science, the first of which, Erbe und Verantwortung, was established in 1964. The journal's first issue contained a tribute to Fritz Lenz, as well as an interview with Arthur Jensen that had previously been published in Nouvelle École. Jensen went on to contribute articles for the journal on a regular basis. In 1976, Neue Anthropologie published a bibliography of Jensen's work from 1967 until then; Jensen joined the journal's "board of scientific advisers" two years later. Other board members included Donald A. Swan, an anthropologist and Mankind Quarterly editor who had received grants from the Pioneer Fund, and Alain de Benoist, who also wrote for the journal under the pseudonym Fabrice Laroche.Content
Neue Anthropologie published content supporting eugenics and scientific racism. This included articles focusing on race and intelligence, as well as polemics attacking "race-mixing". According to Michael Billig, the content published in Neue Anthropologie "...is racist and it is preserving the racial philosophy of Nazi theorist Hans Günther."In 1978–79, they referred to a need to sterilize those like alcoholics, "who are often Haltlose psychopaths", from bearing children, to reduce crime.