Filtern
Volltext vorhanden
- nein (1030) (entfernen)
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (1030) (entfernen)
Gehört zur Bibliographie
- ja (1030)
Schlagworte
- Germany (7)
- international organizations (6)
- European Union (5)
- accountability (4)
- bicameralism (4)
- climate policy (4)
- parliamentary government (4)
- political equality (4)
- visions of democracy (4)
- COVID-19 (3)
- flexibility (3)
- institutional design (3)
- local government (3)
- presidential government (3)
- semi-parliamentarism (3)
- Austria (2)
- Carbon pricing (2)
- Denmark (2)
- Executive-legislative relations (2)
- Higher education (2)
- Measurement (2)
- Migration (2)
- Mixed methods (2)
- Paris agreement (2)
- Policy change (2)
- Quality management (2)
- Relational sociology (2)
- Trumponomics (2)
- administration (2)
- autonomy (2)
- cooperation (2)
- coordination (2)
- decentralization (2)
- decision-making (2)
- democracy (2)
- electoral systems (2)
- employment services (2)
- executives (2)
- institutional change (2)
- international bureaucracies (2)
- presidentialism (2)
- second chambers (2)
- semi-parliamentary government (2)
- (Verfahrens-)Gerechtigkeit (1)
- 2 degrees C target (1)
- Acceptance of wind energy (1)
- Accounting standards (1)
- Adaptive conjoint analysis (1)
- Afroamerikaner (1)
- Agenda Control (1)
- Agenda Powers (1)
- Agile (1)
- Agilität (1)
- Agrifood governance (1)
- Aid conditionalities (1)
- Aid diplomacy (1)
- Aid-for-trade (1)
- Algorithmen (1)
- Algorithms (1)
- Americas (1)
- Anti-Imperialismus (1)
- Appliance diffusion (1)
- Auditing standards (1)
- Australia (1)
- Beijing consensus (1)
- Belonging (1)
- Big data (1)
- Bildung (1)
- Boundary-making of work (1)
- Bourdieu (1)
- Bundesländer (1)
- Bureaucratic organization (1)
- Business participation (1)
- Candidates (1)
- Car ownership (1)
- Career Entry (1)
- Carl Schmitt (1)
- Character (1)
- Choice experiment (1)
- Cities and regions (1)
- City (1)
- Climate change (1)
- Climate governance experiments (1)
- Climate policy (1)
- Collective violence (1)
- Communication for development (1)
- Concentrating solar power (CSP) (1)
- Conceptions of social orders (1)
- Conflict dynamics (1)
- Conflicts of social orders (1)
- Consciousness regarding sustainable (1)
- Consumer typology (1)
- Control beliefs (1)
- Conversation Analysis (1)
- Coordination game (1)
- Corporate governance (1)
- Covid-19 (1)
- Culture (1)
- Cyberspace (1)
- De-globalisation Aid-not-trade (1)
- De-territorialisation Process (1)
- Decarbonisation (1)
- Decision-making (1)
- Decoloniale Theorie (1)
- Decomposition analysis (1)
- Development aid (1)
- Development aid criticism (1)
- Digital observation formats (1)
- Digital trace (1)
- Digitale Beobachtungsformate (1)
- Digitalisierung (1)
- Digitization (1)
- Directorate General (1)
- Discourse (1)
- Discourse networks (1)
- Discrimination (1)
- Distributional effect (1)
- Doctorow (1)
- Dynamics (1)
- EU (1)
- EU Council Presidency (1)
- EU directives (1)
- EU policy-making (1)
- Eastern Europe (1)
- Economics (1)
- Education (1)
- Energy conflicts (1)
- Energy policy (1)
- Energy transition (1)
- Environmental sustainability (1)
- Estimation uncertainty (1)
- Ethical accounting estimates (1)
- Eurasian Economic Union (1)
- European Commission (1)
- European Neighbourhood Policy (1)
- Evaluation (1)
- Experiment (1)
- Explanation (1)
- Fatwas (1)
- Federalism (1)
- Feministische Philosophie (1)
- Ferdinand von Schirach (1)
- Field Experiment (1)
- Finanzrisiken (1)
- Firm (1)
- Folter (1)
- Formal organization (1)
- Forschungsdesign, kausale Perspektiven, Theorietest, x-zentriert, y-zentriert, Experimente (1)
- Framing (1)
- France (1)
- Franco-Prussian War (1)
- Francs-tireurs (1)
- Functional differentiation (1)
- Föderalismus (1)
- G. Bingham Powell (1)
- GHG Protocol (1)
- Gender (1)
- Gendered (1)
- Gendered Categorization (1)
- Geneva convention of 1864 (1)
- Georg Simmel (1)
- Gerald Gaus (1)
- German Bundestag (1)
- German foreign policy (1)
- German literature (1)
- Geschlechtliche Kategorisierung (1)
- Gesetzgebung (1)
- Girls' Love (1)
- Global comparison (1)
- Governmentality (1)
- Great Britain (1)
- Grenzziehungen von Arbeit (1)
- Hermeneutische Explikation (1)
- Higher Education (1)
- Historical Sociology (1)
- Horizontal Educational Inequality (1)
- Household data (1)
- Human values (1)
- Hunger (1)
- Hybridity (1)
- Hybridität (1)
- Hydropower (1)
- Hyogo (1)
- IASB accounting conceptual framework (1)
- Ideational power (1)
- Imperialismus (1)
- Inclusion (1)
- Income (1)
- Independence (1)
- Index (1)
- India (1)
- Indicator (1)
- Information (1)
- Institutional entrepreneurship (1)
- Interaction (1)
- Interaktion (1)
- International (1)
- International Labour Organization (1)
- International Relations Theory (1)
- International climate negotiations (1)
- Investment (1)
- Isomorphism (1)
- Japan (1)
- Kyoto Protocol (1)
- Labor Administration (1)
- Landtage (1)
- Landwehr (1)
- Latein (1)
- Latin (1)
- Legislative process (1)
- Legitimacy (1)
- Legitimization (1)
- Level Differentiation (1)
- Lieferkettengesetz (1)
- Lifetime income (1)
- Lisa Smirl (1)
- Lisbon Treaty (1)
- Longitudinal and panel data (1)
- Low- and middle-income countries (1)
- Luhmann (1)
- Malnutrition (1)
- Management (1)
- Managerialism (1)
- Market integration (1)
- Max Weber (1)
- Mehrebenensystem (1)
- Menschenrechte (1)
- Mercantilism (1)
- Methodology (1)
- Mixed strategy (1)
- Monetary Fund (1)
- Moralische Intuition (1)
- Multilevel system (1)
- Multivariate cointegration (1)
- Narrationen im Politikunterricht (1)
- Neoliberalism (1)
- Neoliberalism Populism theoretical framework (1)
- New South Wales (1)
- New institutionalism (1)
- Nicht-Beherrschung (1)
- Nicht-ideale Theorie (1)
- Nigeria (1)
- Niklas (1)
- Normalisierung (1)
- Normalization (1)
- Norway (1)
- Objectivation (1)
- Objektivierung (1)
- Occupational Statistics (1)
- Organisationales Lernen (1)
- Organization theory (1)
- Organizational change (1)
- Organizational learning (1)
- Organizations and society (1)
- Parliamentary Administrations (1)
- Parliaments (1)
- Partial organization (1)
- Peer-to-peer (1)
- Perceived socioeconomic status (1)
- Permanent income (1)
- Person Categories (1)
- Philosophical perspectives (1)
- Poland (1)
- Policy coordination (1)
- Political Inclusion (1)
- Political economy Socio-economic development (1)
- Political sociology (1)
- Politics of childhood (1)
- Politikdidaktik (1)
- Populism (1)
- Populism restated (1)
- Post-bureaucracy (1)
- Postbürokratie (1)
- Practice turn (1)
- President (1)
- President Trump (1)
- Presidents (1)
- Privacy (1)
- Processes (1)
- Profession (1)
- Public Broadcasters (1)
- Public organizations (1)
- Public-private partnerships (1)
- Purchasing panel data (1)
- Quality assurance (1)
- Quality-Measurement (1)
- REDD (1)
- Ragtime (1)
- Randomized controlled trial (1)
- Ranking (1)
- Rassismus (1)
- Regional states (1)
- Rekonstruktion (1)
- Religionsfreiheit (1)
- Renewable energy (1)
- Republikanismus (1)
- Residential energy demand (1)
- Review (1)
- Risikoauferlegung (1)
- Role of science (1)
- Russia (1)
- Russia and Eurasia (1)
- SDG 11 (1)
- Schülerorientierung (1)
- Secret society of torturers (1)
- Self-disclosure (1)
- Sequencing (1)
- Serene Khader (1)
- Shari'a (1)
- Simmel (1)
- Social (1)
- Social Differentiation (1)
- Social Inequality (1)
- Social change (1)
- Social class (1)
- Social movements (1)
- Social networking sites (1)
- Social order (1)
- Social relations (1)
- Sociology of Knowledge (1)
- Sociology of social facts (1)
- South Asia (1)
- Statistical technologies of ordering (1)
- Statistische Ordnungstechniken (1)
- Steam coal (1)
- Studentenbewegung (1)
- Sub-national (1)
- Super Girl (1)
- Supreme audit institutions (1)
- Survey (1)
- Survey Research Methods (1)
- Sustainability (1)
- Switzerland (1)
- Symbolic capital (1)
- Symbolisches Kapital (1)
- Systemisches Risiko (1)
- Systems theory (1)
- Systemtheorie (1)
- Technological change (1)
- Theory of social fields (1)
- Thomas theorem (1)
- Thomas-Theorem (1)
- Torture (1)
- Transnational governance (1)
- Transnational networks (1)
- Transnationalization (1)
- Trust (1)
- Turkey (1)
- UK (1)
- UN-REDD (1)
- UNFCCC (1)
- USA (1)
- Ukraine (1)
- United States (1)
- Universalismus (1)
- Urban politics (1)
- Verschwindenlassen (1)
- Voluntary global business initiatives (1)
- Weber (1)
- World Bank (1)
- World Health Organization (1)
- YouTube (1)
- acceptance (1)
- accountability dynamics (1)
- accountability mechanism (1)
- acteurs non-étatiques (1)
- action theory (1)
- activation (1)
- administración pública (1)
- administration publique (1)
- administrative reform (1)
- adolescents (1)
- affect (1)
- affective communication (1)
- agent-based modeling (1)
- agentes no estatales (1)
- aid worker (1)
- allocation policies (1)
- anthropocene (1)
- asylum (1)
- authoritarian resilience (1)
- authority (1)
- authorship attribution (1)
- automated text analysis (1)
- battlefield tourism (1)
- big data (1)
- bureaucratic politics (1)
- bureaucraties internationales (1)
- burocracias internacionales (1)
- capabilities framework (1)
- carbon pricing (1)
- categorization (1)
- causal inference (1)
- causal perspectives (1)
- causes of effects (1)
- child asylum-seekers (1)
- childcare (1)
- childrearing practices (1)
- cities (1)
- citizen participation (1)
- civil service (1)
- civil service survey (1)
- civil war (1)
- climate change (1)
- climate change mitigation (1)
- climate change policy (1)
- climate finance (1)
- climate regime (1)
- co-ordination (1)
- coercion (1)
- collective violence (1)
- comparative environmental politics (1)
- comparison (1)
- complex majoritarianism (1)
- computer-assisted text analysis (1)
- concentrating solar power (1)
- concept of the political (1)
- conduct of life (1)
- conflict knowledge (1)
- constitutions (1)
- consumption (1)
- contrastive empiricism (1)
- corruption (1)
- crisis (1)
- crisis management (1)
- criticism of social psychology (1)
- data protection (1)
- de-concentration (1)
- decarbonization (1)
- decision (1)
- decision theory (1)
- democratization (1)
- development assistance (1)
- dictionary (1)
- digital overload (1)
- digital transformation (1)
- discourse (1)
- discourse analysis (1)
- dispatchable renewable electricity (1)
- domestic politics (1)
- drivers (1)
- earth system governance (1)
- ecological modernization (1)
- educational aspirations (1)
- effectiveness (1)
- effects of causes (1)
- efficiency (1)
- emotional geography (1)
- empirical implications of theoretical models (1)
- empirical research (1)
- enabling legislation (1)
- energy decarbonization (1)
- energy efficiency (1)
- energy policy (1)
- energy system modeling (1)
- environmental degradation (1)
- environmental policy effects (1)
- environmental policy performance (1)
- environmental treaties (1)
- excessive instrumental reasoning (1)
- executive personalism (1)
- executive-legislative relations (1)
- experiments (1)
- expert survey (1)
- family workers (1)
- fan community (1)
- fan fiction (1)
- federalism (1)
- field (1)
- field trips (1)
- financial solidarity (1)
- food security governance (1)
- forecasting (1)
- functions of Presidency (1)
- gender (1)
- gender equality (1)
- gender inequality (1)
- gendered boundaries (1)
- generalizability (1)
- global climate governance (1)
- global commons (1)
- global governance (1)
- global negotiations (1)
- globalization (1)
- governance (1)
- government formation (1)
- government policymaking (1)
- government-formation (1)
- great powers (1)
- head of state (1)
- heterogeneous treatment effects (1)
- higher education (1)
- hospitals (1)
- huella ecológica (1)
- humanitarian organisations (1)
- humanitarianism; (1)
- ideal types (1)
- identity (1)
- ideological congruence (1)
- immigration (1)
- impact assessment (1)
- implementation measures (1)
- incremental reform (1)
- industry development (1)
- innocence (1)
- innovation (1)
- institutional changes (1)
- institutional reform (1)
- integration (1)
- inter-organizational order (1)
- inter-organizational relations (1)
- intergroup contacts (1)
- internal goods (1)
- internal/external locus of control development (1)
- international law (1)
- issue market (1)
- job autonomy (1)
- job satisfaction (1)
- juku (1)
- labor market (1)
- labour market administration (1)
- land use (1)
- language acquisition (1)
- language courses (1)
- legislatures (1)
- levee en masse (1)
- lifestyle (1)
- liminality (1)
- low-wage employment (1)
- machine learning (1)
- majority rule (1)
- marketization (1)
- measurement error (1)
- methodology (1)
- minister responsibility (1)
- mixed methods (1)
- modernización ecológica (1)
- monopoly of legitimate use of force (1)
- moral philosophy (1)
- moral sociology (1)
- motivation crowding (1)
- mots clés (1)
- multilateralism (1)
- multiple correspondence analysis (1)
- myth of Franktireurkrieg (1)
- national ecological footprint (1)
- non-targeted SNS activities (1)
- nonprobability sampling (1)
- nonstate actors (1)
- norm of reciprocity (1)
- on-site visits (1)
- order transition (1)
- organisations internationales (1)
- organizaciones internacionales (1)
- organizational fields (1)
- organizational reputation (1)
- palabras clave (1)
- parental leave (1)
- parenthood (1)
- parliamentarians (1)
- parliamentarism (1)
- parliamentary democracy (1)
- party competition (1)
- performance (1)
- performance appraisals (1)
- performance measurement (1)
- performance pay (1)
- performance rating (1)
- performance-related pay (1)
- personality (1)
- personnel policy (1)
- photovoltaics (1)
- planetary boundaries (1)
- policy (1)
- policy agendas (1)
- policy competition (1)
- policy cycle (1)
- policy dismantling (1)
- policy output (1)
- policy transfer (1)
- political processes (1)
- political sociology (1)
- política ambiental comparada (1)
- praxeology (1)
- prediction (1)
- preferences (1)
- prestige (1)
- privacy (1)
- privatization (1)
- public (1)
- public administration (1)
- public employment service (1)
- public justification (1)
- public service delivery (1)
- public-reason liberalism (1)
- qualitative research (1)
- quantitative research (1)
- ratification (1)
- recall accuracy (1)
- reciprocity (1)
- refugees (1)
- regional equity (1)
- regional organizations (1)
- regulación estatal (1)
- regulation (1)
- regulations (1)
- renewable energy (1)
- research design (1)
- retention (1)
- retrospective questions (1)
- revolution (1)
- rewards (1)
- rural (1)
- scaling method (1)
- school achievement (1)
- science-policy interactions (1)
- self-selection (1)
- self-sufficiency (1)
- sensory experience (1)
- sentiment analysis (1)
- separation of powers (1)
- shadow education (1)
- siege of Paris 1870 (1)
- simple majoritarianism (1)
- simulation (1)
- situationally-specific habitus (1)
- smart CCTV (1)
- social and environmental administration (1)
- social functional approach to positive emotions (1)
- social policy (1)
- socialization conditions (1)
- sociology of knowledge (1)
- sociology of social forms (1)
- spaces of aid (1)
- staff turnover (1)
- stakeholder involvement concepts (1)
- state (1)
- statistical categorization (1)
- strong structuration theory (SST) (1)
- subjective well-being (1)
- subnational authorities (1)
- survival analysis (1)
- sustainability science (1)
- sustainable development (1)
- symbolic boundaries (1)
- symbolic representation (1)
- technological change (1)
- technological learning (1)
- term limits (1)
- terrorist behavior (1)
- text based classification methods (1)
- theory test (1)
- theory testing (1)
- thermal energy storage (1)
- three-tier approach (1)
- trade (1)
- transmission (1)
- transnational actors (1)
- transnational governance arrangements (1)
- transnormative sociology (1)
- transposition (1)
- treadmill of production (1)
- unqual power (1)
- urban riots (1)
- urban sustainability (1)
- utility-scale batteries (1)
- validity (1)
- value chain analysis (1)
- varieties of capitalism (1)
- veto player theory (1)
- veto players (1)
- veto point (1)
- video surveillance (1)
- violence (1)
- welfare markets (1)
- welfare state (1)
- welfare state reform (1)
- welfare state retrenchment (1)
- word embeddings (1)
- work (1)
- work-family policies (1)
- working hours (1)
- working time (1)
- Öffentliche Organisationen (1)
- Überlegungsgleichgewicht (1)
Institut
- Sozialwissenschaften (1030) (entfernen)
Since the adoption of the Paris Agreement, the focus of the United Nations climate regime has shifted from forging consensus among national governments toward animating implementation activity across multiple levels.
Based on a case study of the Global Climate Action Portal-an online database designed to document nonstate actor climate commitments and implementation efforts-we trace, conceptualize, and assess how the roles of data, data infrastructures, and actor constellations have changed as a result of this shift.
We argue that in the pre-COP21 negotiation phase, the United Nations Climate Secretariat strategically used the database to orchestrate and leverage nonstate actor commitments to exert pressure on intergovernmental negotiations.
By contrast, in the post-COP21 implementation phase, the Secretariat, in collaboration with climate data specialists, is seeking to develop the portal to track and animate implementation activity.
Given these developments, we discuss the potential and limitations of data-driven climate governance and set out avenues for future research.
Migration and democracy
(2021)
In the last few years, we have been increasingly experiencing a discursive and practical use of the existing democratic structures as an instrument of anti-immigration anxiety and sentiment, from electoral support to right-wing populist parties to anti-immigrant, xenophobic, and/or racist mobilizations in and beyond the Western world. This article argues that the origins and political histories that the concepts of demos and democracy stand on provide a firm ground to resist the attempts at their current nativist/nationalist closure. Contesting the attempts to reduce the concepts of democracy and demos to strictly limited or ethnically defined populations, the article develops a political argument that relates democracy and migration, which have been represented as opposite poles within the current political map defined by the populist surge.
Clubs of autocrats
(2021)
While scholars have argued that membership in Regional Organizations (ROs) can increase the likelihood of democratization, we see many autocratic regimes surviving in power albeit being members of several ROs. This article argues that this is the case because these regimes are often members in "Clubs of Autocrats" that supply material and ideational resources to strengthen domestic survival politics and shield members from external interference during moments of political turmoil. The argument is supported by survival analysis testing the effect of membership in autocratic ROs on regime survival between 1946 to 2010. It finds that membership in ROs composed of more autocratic member states does in fact raise the likelihood of regime survival by protecting incumbents against democratic challenges such as civil unrest or political dissent. However, autocratic RO membership does not help to prevent regime breakdown due to autocratic challenges like military coups, potentially because these types of threats are less likely to diffuse to other member states. The article thereby adds to our understanding of the limits of democratization and potential reverse effects of international cooperation, and contributes to the literature addressing interdependences of international and domestic politics in autocratic regimes.
International organizations (IOs) experience significant variation in their decision-making performance, or the extent to which they produce policy output. While some IOs are efficient decision-making machineries, others are plagued by deadlock. How can such variation be explained? Examining this question, the article makes three central contributions. First, we approach performance by looking at IO decision-making in terms of policy output and introduce an original measure of decision-making performance that captures annual growth rates in IO output. Second, we offer a novel theoretical explanation for decision-making performance. This account highlights the role of institutional design, pointing to how majoritarian decision rules, delegation of authority to supranational institutions, and access for transnational actors (TNAs) interact to affect decision-making. Third, we offer the first comparative assessment of the decision-making performance of IOs. While previous literature addresses single IOs, we explore decision-making across a broad spectrum of 30 IOs from 1980 to 2011. Our analysis indicates that IO decision-making performance varies across and within IOs. We find broad support for our theoretical account, showing the combined effect of institutional design features in shaping decision-making performance. Notably, TNA access has a positive effect on decision-making performance when pooling is greater, and delegation has a positive effect when TNA access is higher. We also find that pooling has an independent, positive effect on decision-making performance. All-in-all, these findings suggest that the institutional design of IOs matters for their decision-making performance, primarily in more complex ways than expected in earlier research.
There is a growing recognition that international organizations (IOs) formulate and adopt policy in a wide range of areas. IOs have emerged as key venues for states seeking joint solutions to contemporary challenges such as climate change or COVID-19, and to establish frameworks to bolster trade, development, security, and more. In this capacity, IOs produce both extraordinary and routine policy output with a multitude of purposes, ranging from policies of historic significance like admitting new members to the more mundane tasks of administering IO staff. This article introduces the Intergovernmental Policy Output Dataset (IPOD), which covers close to 37,000 individual policy acts of 13 multi-issue IOs in the 1980–2015 period. The dataset fills a gap in the growing body of literature on the comparative study of IOs, providing researchers with a fine-grained perspective on the structure of IO policy output and data for comparisons across time, policy areas, and organizations. This article describes the construction and coverage of the dataset and identifies key temporal and cross-sectional patterns revealed by the data. In a concise illustration of the dataset’s utility, we apply models of punctuated equilibria in a comparative study of the relationship between institutional features and broad policy agenda dynamics. Overall, the Intergovernmental Policy Output Dataset offers a unique resource for researchers to analyze IO policy output in a granular manner and to explore questions of responsiveness, performance, and legitimacy of IOs.
When are international organizations (IOs) responsive to the policy problems that motivated their establishment? While it is a conventional assumption that IOs exist to address transnational challenges, the question of whether and when IO policy-making is responsive to shifts in underlying problems has not been systematically explored. This study investigates the responsiveness of IOs from a large-n, comparative approach. Theoretically, we develop three alternative models of IO responsiveness, emphasizing severeness, dependence, and power differentials. Empirically, we focus on the domain of security, examining the responsiveness of eight multi-issue IOs to armed conflict between 1980 and 2015, using a novel and expansive dataset on IO policy decisions. Our findings suggest, first, that IOs are responsive to security problems and, second, that responsiveness is not primarily driven by dependence or power differentials but by problem severity. An in-depth study of the responsiveness of the UN Security Council using more granular data confirms these findings. As the first comparative study of whether and when IO policy adapts to problem severity, the article has implications for debates about IO responsiveness, performance, and legitimacy.
The limitations and possibilities of the state in solving societal problems are perennial issues in the political and policy sciences and increasingly so in studies of environmental politics. With the aim of better understanding the role of the state in addressing environmental degradation through policy making, this article investigates the nexus between the environmental policy outputs and the environmental performance. Drawing on three theoretical perspectives on the state and market nexus in the environmental dilemma, we identify five distinct pathways. We then examine the extent to which these pathways are manifested in the real world. Our empirical investigation covers up to 37 countries for the period 1970–2010. While we see no global pattern of linkages between policy outputs and performance, our exploratory analysis finds evidence of policy effects, which suggest that the state can, under certain circumstances, improve the environment through policy making.
The planetary commons
(2024)
The Anthropocene signifies the start of a no- analogue trajectory of the Earth system that is fundamentally different from the Holocene. This new trajectory is characterized by rising risks of triggering irreversible and unmanageable shifts in Earth system functioning. We urgently need a new global approach to safeguard critical Earth system regulating functions more effectively and comprehensively. The global commons framework is the closest example of an existing approach with the aim of governing biophysical systems on Earth upon which the world collectively depends. Derived during stable Holocene conditions, the global commons framework must now evolve in the light of new Anthropocene dynamics. This requires a fundamental shift from a focus only on governing shared resources beyond national jurisdiction, to one that secures critical functions of the Earth system irrespective of national boundaries. We propose a new framework—the planetary commons—which differs from the global commons framework by including not only globally shared geographic regions but also critical biophysical systems that regulate the resilience and state, and therefore livability, on Earth. The new planetary commons should articulate and create comprehensive stewardship obligations through Earth system governance aimed at restoring and strengthening planetary resilience and justice.
Obwohl seit der Finanzkrise 2008 systemische Finanzrisiken das Objekt zahlreicher wissenschaftlicher Studien waren, hat die Frage, unter welchen Bedingungen und Umständen die Auferlegung eines systemischen Finanzrisikos moralisch unzulässig ist, bisher kaum Beachtung gefunden. Ziel dieses Aufsatzes ist es, eine Reihe von normativen Kriterien für die Einschätzung der moralischen Unzulässigkeit von systemischen Risiken zu entwickeln. Darüber hinaus wird argumentiert, dass staatliche und andere relevante Institutionen zwei zentrale Pflichten hinsichtlich des Umgangs mit systemischen Finanzrisiken haben: eine Schutzpflicht gegenüber allen Bürger*innen und eine Sorgfaltspflicht, um die diesen Institutionen obliegenden Kontroll- und Aufsichtsfunktionen verantwortungsvoll auszuüben.
Serene Khader ist eine der wenigen feministischen Philosoph:innen in der anglosächsischen Philosophie, die sich gezielt mit globaler Ungerechtigkeit und Imperialismus aus Sicht jener Frauen beschäftigen, die von kolonialer und kultureller Herrschaft betroffen sind. Hierbei entlarvt sie eindrucksvoll die oftmals westliche Prägung von Feminismus, Gleichstellungspolitik und Philosophie und verfolgt so das Ziel, die Autonomie und Entscheidungskraft aller Frauen anzuerkennen. So zielt Khader in Decolonizing Universalism: A Transnational Feminist Ethic auf eine Neuausrichtung der feministischen Perspektive, welche es schafft, dekolonial und anti-imperialistisch zu sein, ohne gleichzeitig dem Universalismus komplett abzuschwören. Die folgende Buchdiskussion begibt sich in eine kritische Auseinandersetzung mit Khaders interessanter wie wichtiger Theorie. Einleitend werden wir einen Überblick über Khaders Grundgedanken geben. Es schließen sich kritische Kommentare von Tamara Jugov, Mirjam Müller, Kerstin Reibold sowie Hilkje C. Hänel und Fabian Schuppert an, auf die Serene Khader abschließend antwortet.