320 Politikwissenschaft
Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (494) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Germany (33)
- Integration (31)
- Deutschland (27)
- European Union (16)
- Migration (16)
- Poland (16)
- Bürgerschaft (14)
- Consolidation (14)
- Europäische Union (14)
- Polen (14)
- Politische Theorie (14)
- Vertiefung (14)
- Afghanistan (13)
- Friedens- und Konfliktforschung (13)
- International Politics (13)
- Internationale Politik (13)
- Peace and Conflict Studies (13)
- Außenpolitik (12)
- Climate Change Conference (11)
- Durban 2011 (11)
- Entwicklungspolitik (11)
- Interessen (11)
- Klima (11)
- Klimakonferenz (11)
- Klimapolitik (11)
- NGO (11)
- climate (11)
- climate policy (11)
- development policy (11)
- foreign Policy (11)
- national interests (11)
- Armut (10)
- Grundsicherung (10)
- Nachhaltigkeit (10)
- Ressourcen (10)
- decision-making (5)
- international organizations (5)
- Security Council (4)
- authoritarianism (4)
- democracy (4)
- discourse (4)
- governance (4)
- human rights (4)
- institutions (4)
- international organisations (4)
- parliamentary government (4)
- Coordination (3)
- Russia (3)
- United Nations (3)
- World Bank (3)
- bicameralism (3)
- civil war (3)
- counterterrorism (3)
- institutional design (3)
- local government (3)
- opposition (3)
- populism (3)
- presidential government (3)
- terrorism (3)
- Autoritarismus (2)
- BSW (2)
- China (2)
- Executive-legislative relations (2)
- Federalism (2)
- Föderalismus (2)
- International (2)
- Komparatistik (2)
- Krisenmanagement (2)
- Liberia (2)
- Local authorities (2)
- Opposition (2)
- Quality management (2)
- REDD (2)
- authority (2)
- capacity (2)
- climate change (2)
- comparative studies (2)
- crisis (2)
- crisis management (2)
- debt (2)
- digital transformation (2)
- digitalization (2)
- drug control (2)
- expertise (2)
- feminism (2)
- gender (2)
- higher education (2)
- institutional interplay (2)
- international (2)
- international non-governmental organizations (2)
- international public administration (2)
- peacebuilding (2)
- policy (2)
- policy analysis (2)
- political elites (2)
- politische Eliten (2)
- presidentialism (2)
- public administration (2)
- race (2)
- semi-parliamentary government (2)
- transitional justice (2)
- violence (2)
- visions of democracy (2)
- 2 degrees C target (1)
- AKP (1)
- Abendland (1)
- Active learning (1)
- Administration (1)
- Administrative reform (1)
- Adoption (1)
- African American literature (1)
- Aid conditionalities (1)
- Air pollution (1)
- Al-Qaida (1)
- Anti-Imperialismus (1)
- Antisemitism (1)
- Argentina (1)
- Autocratic regimes (1)
- Autokratische Regime (1)
- Bedrohungsvorstellung (1)
- Behördenrufnummer D115 (1)
- Benchmarking (1)
- Bioethik (1)
- Buenos Aires (1)
- Bundesländer (1)
- CDM (1)
- CESCR Committee (1)
- CORONA-Krise (1)
- COVID-19 (1)
- Cabinet (1)
- Carl Schmitt (1)
- Catholicism (1)
- Chancengleichheit (1)
- Character (1)
- Circular argumentation (1)
- Cities (1)
- Civil service career (1)
- Civil society (1)
- Climate change (1)
- Climate change adaptation (1)
- Climate governance (1)
- Compliance (1)
- Conseil de sécurité (1)
- Consejo de Seguridad (1)
- Constitutive Mechanism (1)
- Coordination structures (1)
- Counterterrorism (1)
- Country experience (1)
- DACH countries (1)
- DACH-Länder (1)
- Decoloniale Theorie (1)
- Development aid (1)
- Development aid End of history (1)
- Development aid criticism (1)
- Dicranopteris linearis (1)
- Digitalisierung (1)
- E-Government (1)
- Eastern Europe (1)
- Economic policy (1)
- Edouard Glissant (1)
- Education (1)
- Electoral systems (1)
- Enforcement (1)
- Erde (1)
- Erdogan (1)
- Eurasian Economic Union (1)
- Eurobarometer (1)
- Eurocentrism (1)
- European Commission (1)
- European Neighbourhood Policy (1)
- Evidence-based policy making (1)
- Evolutionary economics (1)
- Expert Authority (1)
- Extreme weather (1)
- Federal administration (1)
- Feminismus (1)
- Feministische Philosophie (1)
- Ferdinand von Schirach (1)
- Finanzrisiken (1)
- Folter (1)
- Foreign policy (1)
- Forms of government (1)
- Forschungsfreiheit (1)
- Forschungsmethoden (1)
- France (1)
- GREVIO (1)
- Galwan Valley (1)
- Game (1)
- German science council (1)
- Gesetzgebung (1)
- Global South (1)
- Global warming potential (1)
- Gobernanza de los Comités (1)
- Green infrastructure investment (1)
- HFCS (1)
- Hackathon (1)
- Higher education (1)
- Hochkommissariat für Menschenrechte (OHCHR) (1)
- IHL (1)
- IHRL (1)
- IMF (1)
- INGOs (1)
- ISIS (1)
- Impartiality (1)
- Income (1)
- India (1)
- Indo-Pacific (1)
- Infant mortality (1)
- Informal and formal (1)
- Integration strategy (1)
- Interdisciplinary research (1)
- Interdisziplinarität (1)
- International Bureaucracies (1)
- International Financial Institutions (1)
- International Practices (1)
- International bureaucrats (1)
- International cooperation (1)
- International policy (1)
- International relations (1)
- Internationalisierung (1)
- Irak (1)
- Iran (1)
- Iraq (1)
- Islam (1)
- Israeli-Palestinian conflict (1)
- Istanbul Convention (1)
- Jawaharlal Nehru (1)
- Kindersterblichkeit (1)
- Klimakrise (1)
- Kommunen (1)
- Krise (1)
- Kyrgyzstan (1)
- Landscape planning (1)
- Landtage (1)
- Law and economics (1)
- Legislative organisation (1)
- Legislative process (1)
- Legitimation strategies (1)
- Legitimationsstrategien (1)
- Legitimität (1)
- Lieferkettengesetz (1)
- Lifetime income (1)
- Local administrative systems (1)
- Local autonomy (1)
- Local government reform (1)
- Longitudinal and panel data (1)
- Lucha antiterrorista (1)
- Managerial autonomy (1)
- Market failure (1)
- Max Weber (1)
- Measurement (1)
- Measurement theory (1)
- Media (1)
- Mehrebenensystem (1)
- Meinungsbildung (1)
- Menschen- rechtserklärungen/-übereinkommen (1)
- Menschenrechte (1)
- Methane (1)
- Methodenpluralismus (1)
- Methodological pluralism (1)
- Migrants (1)
- Ministries (1)
- Missing rich (1)
- Mixed methods (1)
- Monetary Fund (1)
- Multilevel system (1)
- Multilevel-Governance (1)
- Municipalities (1)
- NATO (1)
- Nachwuchsförderung (1)
- National state communication (1)
- Negotiation (1)
- Neoliberalism (1)
- Neutrality (1)
- New public management (1)
- Nicht-Beherrschung (1)
- Nicht-ideale Theorie (1)
- Nigeria (1)
- Non-equilibrium economics (1)
- Norm collisions (1)
- Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (1)
- Open Governance (1)
- Operation Euphrates Shield (1)
- Organisations (1)
- Organizational change (1)
- Orthodoxy (1)
- P/CVE (1)
- PID (1)
- Pakistan (1)
- Palestine (1)
- Pareto distribution (1)
- Paris Agreement (1)
- Paris agreement (1)
- Parliamentary questions (1)
- Peacebuilding (1)
- Performance (1)
- Permanent income (1)
- Policy (1)
- Policy advice (1)
- Policy recommendations (1)
- Policymaking (1)
- Political civil servant (1)
- Political craft (1)
- Political economy Socio-economic development (1)
- Political establishment (1)
- Politicisation (1)
- Politikberatung (1)
- Populism (1)
- Populismus (1)
- Potassium (1)
- Precedent (1)
- President Trump (1)
- Price floor (1)
- Price review (1)
- Proceso debido (1)
- Promoting young researchers (1)
- Protestantism (1)
- Public opinion (1)
- Public-private partnerships (1)
- QCA (1)
- Quad (1)
- Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (1)
- Rankings (1)
- Ratchet Effect (1)
- Recipient performance (1)
- Reform (1)
- Regional states (1)
- Religionsfreiheit (1)
- Republikanismus (1)
- Research methods (1)
- Responsibility to Protect (1)
- Rio Conventions (1)
- Risikoauferlegung (1)
- Russland (1)
- Sanciones de la ONU (1)
- Sanktionen (1)
- Serene Khader (1)
- Short-lived climate pollutants (1)
- Sicherheitsrat (1)
- Sierra Leone (1)
- Simmel (1)
- Simulations (1)
- Social class (1)
- Social development (1)
- Soziale Entwicklung (1)
- Staatliche Leistungsfähigkeit (1)
- Stammzellforschung (1)
- Sub-Sahara Africa (1)
- Sudan (1)
- Supervision (1)
- Survey (1)
- Sustainability indicators (1)
- Sweden (1)
- System failure (1)
- Systemisches Risiko (1)
- Terrorismus (1)
- Transformation (1)
- Trump phenomenon (1)
- Turkish military in Syria (1)
- Turkish politics (1)
- Types of democracy (1)
- UN (1)
- UN Security Council (1)
- UN human rights treaty bodies (1)
- UN sanctions (1)
- UN-REDD (1)
- Ukraine (1)
- Ukraine war (1)
- Ultimatum (1)
- United Kingdom (1)
- Universalismus (1)
- Vergleich (1)
- Verschwindenlassen (1)
- Verwaltungsmodernisierung (1)
- Verwaltungsreform (1)
- Weak and strong sustainability (1)
- Wealth distribution (1)
- Weber (1)
- Weberian bureaucracy (1)
- West Africa (1)
- Wicked problems (1)
- Wissenschaftsrat (1)
- Yiddish culturalism (1)
- academic disengagement (1)
- acteurs non-étatiques (1)
- administración pública (1)
- administration (1)
- administration publique (1)
- administrative culture (1)
- administrative reform (1)
- advocacy coalitions (1)
- agency (1)
- agent-based modeling (1)
- agentes no estatales (1)
- al-Bab Battle (1)
- anthropocene (1)
- antifeminist (1)
- authoritarian resilience (1)
- authoritarian rule (1)
- balancing (1)
- bias (1)
- border regime (1)
- borders (1)
- boundary spanning (1)
- bullying (1)
- burden of disease (1)
- bureaucracy (1)
- bureaucraties internationales (1)
- burocracias internacionales (1)
- capabilities framework (1)
- child labour (1)
- childcare (1)
- citizen participation (1)
- citizenship (1)
- civil service survey (1)
- climate and energy policy (1)
- climate change mitigation (1)
- climate mitigation (1)
- climate politics (1)
- closing civic space (1)
- collaboration (1)
- collective memory (1)
- committee governance (1)
- comparative (1)
- comparative case study (1)
- comparative development (1)
- comparative environmental politics (1)
- competition (1)
- competitiveness (1)
- complex problems (1)
- concept of the political (1)
- conduct of life (1)
- conflict (1)
- conflict management (1)
- conflict resolution (1)
- consensus democracy (1)
- constitution-making (1)
- containment (1)
- contentious politics (1)
- contestation (1)
- contractor/provider split (1)
- cooperation (1)
- crises (1)
- cross-national (1)
- culture (1)
- cyber-attack (1)
- cyberwar (1)
- data and methods (1)
- de facto authority (1)
- de jure authority (1)
- death (1)
- death penalty (1)
- decadence (1)
- decarbonization (1)
- decentralization (1)
- delegation (1)
- democratic performance (1)
- democratization (1)
- depression (1)
- developing countries (1)
- dictatorship (1)
- difference-in-differences (1)
- digital overload (1)
- digitalisation (1)
- direct democracy (1)
- disability-adjusted life years (1)
- discrimination (1)
- discriminatory dimensions of forced evictions (1)
- diversified quality production (1)
- doctrine (1)
- domestic politics (1)
- due process (1)
- e-government (1)
- earth system governance (1)
- ecological modernization (1)
- effective district magnitude (1)
- elections (1)
- electoral systems (1)
- employment (1)
- energy (1)
- ensuring state (1)
- environmental agreements (1)
- environmental degradation (1)
- environmental governance (1)
- environmental mainstreaming (1)
- environmental policy (1)
- environmental policy effects (1)
- environmental policy performance (1)
- epistemic injustice (1)
- executive head (1)
- executive personalism (1)
- executive-parties dimension (1)
- executives (1)
- experiment (1)
- expert authority (1)
- expert recommendations (1)
- far right (1)
- fern (1)
- field experiment (1)
- financial policy (1)
- fisheries policy (1)
- flexibility (1)
- food security governance (1)
- forced evictions (1)
- foreign policy (1)
- gender equality (1)
- gender mainstreaming (1)
- genre (1)
- geographical proximity (1)
- global (1)
- global commons (1)
- global environmental governance (1)
- global governance (1)
- global health (1)
- global public policy (1)
- global south (1)
- globalization (1)
- gouvernance de comité (1)
- government formation (1)
- government policymaking (1)
- green finance (1)
- hackathon (1)
- health security (1)
- health services (1)
- hermeneutical capability (1)
- hermeneutical injustice (1)
- heterogeneity (1)
- hierarchy (1)
- history (1)
- huella ecológica (1)
- human rights treaty monitoring bodies (1)
- human trafficking (1)
- identity (1)
- impact evaluation (1)
- incels (1)
- individual complaints procedures (1)
- industrial organization (1)
- industrial relations (1)
- industrial restructuring (1)
- innovation (1)
- institutional investors (1)
- institutional processes (1)
- institutional theory (1)
- inter-governmental relations (1)
- inter-organizational control (1)
- inter-organizational order (1)
- inter-organizational relations (1)
- intergovernmental relations (1)
- intergovernmental treaty secretariats (1)
- international administration (1)
- international bureaucracies (1)
- international bureaucracy (1)
- international development (1)
- international human rights (1)
- international humanitarian law (1)
- international institutions (1)
- international law (1)
- international organisation (1)
- interpretative declarations (1)
- intertextuality (1)
- job autonomy (1)
- job demands-resources model (1)
- job satisfaction (1)
- knowledge (1)
- land management (1)
- law and technology (1)
- legislatures (1)
- legitimacy (1)
- lifestyle (1)
- lutte contre le terrorisme (1)
- male supremacy (1)
- manosphere (1)
- manufacturing (1)
- marginality (1)
- margins of error (1)
- marine governance (1)
- marketization (1)
- men's rights (1)
- micro-credit (1)
- minority rights (1)
- misogyny (1)
- mixed methods (1)
- modernización ecológica (1)
- monopoly of legitimate use of force (1)
- mots clés (1)
- multi-level government (1)
- multi-level study (1)
- multi-level system (1)
- multi-party systems (1)
- multilateral (1)
- multilateralism (1)
- multiplicity (1)
- municipally owned corporation (1)
- narratives (1)
- national ecological footprint (1)
- nationalism (1)
- nativism (1)
- natural climate solutions (1)
- neo-liberalism (1)
- neue Parteien (1)
- new democracies (1)
- new parties (1)
- new technologies (1)
- nineteenth and twentieth century (1)
- non-alignment; (1)
- non-state actors (1)
- nonstate actors (1)
- norm collisions (1)
- norms (1)
- open governance (1)
- orchestration (1)
- organisations internationales (1)
- organizaciones internacionales (1)
- organization theory (1)
- organizational fields (1)
- organizational reform (1)
- organizational reputation (1)
- organizations (1)
- palabras clave (1)
- pandemic (1)
- parental leave (1)
- parenthood (1)
- parliamentarism (1)
- parliamentary democracy (1)
- parliamentary opposition (1)
- party competition (1)
- peace (1)
- peace process (1)
- peacekeeping (1)
- performance (1)
- peripherality (1)
- personal data (1)
- personality (1)
- phytolith (1)
- planetarity (1)
- planetary boundaries (1)
- planning (1)
- policy advice (1)
- policy agendas (1)
- policy output (1)
- policy reform (1)
- policy scope (1)
- policy signals (1)
- policy strategy (1)
- policy substitutes (1)
- policy-making (1)
- policy-profession conflict (1)
- political campaigns (1)
- political equality (1)
- political preferences (1)
- political repression (1)
- political sociology (1)
- political stability (1)
- political symbols (1)
- politics of relation (1)
- politische Bildung (1)
- politische Einstellung (1)
- politische Kultur (1)
- polycrisis (1)
- política ambiental comparada (1)
- pooling (1)
- post-Soviet (1)
- post-conflict peace (1)
- post-new public management (1)
- power (1)
- precedent (1)
- preferences (1)
- privacy (1)
- problem-solving (1)
- process tracing (1)
- procédure officielle (1)
- production concepts (1)
- proportionality analysis (1)
- protection (1)
- protest (1)
- proxy force (1)
- public (1)
- public good (1)
- public health (1)
- public opinion (1)
- public opinion polls (1)
- public participation (1)
- public value (1)
- public values (1)
- quality management (1)
- racial discrimination (1)
- racism (1)
- radical (1)
- radicalization (1)
- rationalism (1)
- re-municipalization (1)
- reasonableness (1)
- reciprocity (1)
- regime complexity (1)
- regional organizations (1)
- regulación estatal (1)
- regulation (1)
- regulations (1)
- renewable energy (1)
- representation (1)
- research (1)
- research communication (1)
- reservations to human rights treaties (1)
- resilience (1)
- resistance (1)
- responsibility (1)
- restoration (1)
- restrictions to civil society (1)
- revolution (1)
- right parties and movements (1)
- right to housing (1)
- romance (1)
- sanctions (1)
- sanctions committee (1)
- sanctions de l’ONU (1)
- scholar-practitioners (1)
- second chambers (1)
- second-order compliance (1)
- security–development nexus (1)
- selection (1)
- self-employed women (1)
- semi-parliamentarism (1)
- separation of powers (1)
- service provider strategies (1)
- set theory (1)
- single mothers (1)
- skills (1)
- social epistemology (1)
- societal impact of research (1)
- space (1)
- start-up subsidies (1)
- state (1)
- state repression (1)
- state security (1)
- stochastic uncertainty (1)
- strategic uncertainty (1)
- structural change (1)
- survey (1)
- survey experiment (1)
- survival analysis (1)
- sustainable economy (1)
- symbolic representation (1)
- teaching (1)
- telework (1)
- termination (1)
- trade-offs (1)
- transdisciplinarity (1)
- transition economies (1)
- transition policy (1)
- transnational city networks (1)
- transnational governance (1)
- transnational institutional interplay (1)
- treadmill of production (1)
- triple nexus (1)
- trust (1)
- turnout (1)
- un-cancelling the future (1)
- urban warfare (1)
- veto players (1)
- vote choice (1)
- vote switching (1)
- voting potential (1)
- welfare state benefits (1)
- weo-weberian State (1)
- wicked problems (1)
- window of opportunity (1)
- women's empowerment (1)
- work (1)
- work-family policies (1)
- work-place behavior (1)
- working hours (1)
- working time (1)
- world bank (1)
- world literature (1)
- world-makers (1)
- Öffentliche Verwaltung (1)
Institut
- WeltTrends e.V. Potsdam (187)
- Fachgruppe Politik- & Verwaltungswissenschaft (152)
- Sozialwissenschaften (45)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (38)
- Fachgruppe Betriebswirtschaftslehre (14)
- Moses Mendelssohn Zentrum für europäisch-jüdische Studien e. V. (14)
- Fachgruppe Soziologie (10)
- Extern (8)
- Historisches Institut (8)
- MenschenRechtsZentrum (8)
Comparative vote switching
(2024)
Large literatures focus on voter reactions to parties’ policy strategies, agency, or legislative performance. While many inquiries make explicit assumptions about the direction and magnitude of voter flows between parties, comparative empirical analyses of vote switching remain rare. In this article, we overcome three challenges that have previously impeded the comparative study of dynamic party competition based on voter flows: we present a novel conceptual framework for studying voter retention, defection, and attraction in multiparty systems, showcase a newly compiled data infrastructure that marries comparative vote switching data with information on party behavior and party systems in over 250 electoral contexts, and introduce a statistical model that renders our conceptual framework operable. These innovations enable first-time inquiries into the polyadic vote switching patterns underlying multiparty competition and unlock major research potentials on party competition and party system change.
This article analyses the institutional design variants of local crisis governance responses to the COVID-19 pandemic and their entanglement with other locally impactful crises from a cross-country comparative perspective (France, Germany, Poland, Sweden, and the UK/England). The pandemic offers an excellent empirical lens for scrutinizing the phenomenon of polycrises governance because it occurred while European countries were struggling with the impacts of several prior, ongoing, or newly arrived crises. Our major focus is on institutional design variants of crisis governance (dependent variable) and the influence of different administrative cultures on it (independent variable). Furthermore, we analyze the entanglement and interaction of institutional responses to other (previous or parallel) crises (polycrisis dynamics). Our findings reveal a huge variance of institutional designs, largely evoked by country-specific administrative cultures and profiles. The degree of de-/centralization and the intensity of coordination or decoupling across levels of government differs significantly by country. Simultaneously, all countries were affected by interrelated and entangled crises, resulting in various patterns of polycrisis dynamics. While policy failures and “fatal remedies” from previous crises have partially impaired the resilience and crisis preparedness of local governments, we have also found some learning effects from previous crises.
Dieser Beitrag vergleicht die kommunale Verwaltungsdigitalisierung in Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz (DACH-Länder) als Vertreter der kontinentaleuropäisch-föderalen Verwaltungstradition bei zugleich unterschiedlichen Digitalisierungsansätzen und -fortschritten. Basierend auf Interviews mit 22 Expert*innen und Beobachtungen in je einer Kommune pro Land sowie Dokumenten-, Literatur- und Sekundärdatenanalysen untersucht die Studie, wie Verwaltungsdigitalisierung im Mehrebenensystem organisiert ist und welche Rolle dabei das Verwaltungsprofil spielt sowie welche Innovationsschwerpunkte die Kommunen im Hinblick auf die Leistungserbringung und die internen Prozesse setzen. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass der hohe Grad lokaler Autonomie den Kommunen ermöglicht, eigene Akzente in der Verwaltungsdigitalisierung zu setzen. Zugleich wirken die stark verflochtenen komplexen Entscheidungsstrukturen und hohen Koordinationsbedarfe in verwaltungsföderalen Systemen, die in Deutschland am stärksten, in Österreich etwas schwächer und in der Schweiz am geringsten ausgeprägt sind, als Digitalisierungshemmnisse. Ferner weisen die Befunde auf eine unitarisierende Wirkung der Verwaltungsdigitalisierung als Reformbereich hin. Insgesamt trägt die Studie zu einem besseren Verständnis dafür bei, welche Problematik die Verwaltungsdigitalisierung für föderal-dezentrale Verwaltungsmodelle mit sich bringt.
Back to bureaucracy?
(2024)
In this contribution, the emergence of the neo-Weberian state (NWS) is analyzed with regard to German public administration. Drawing on the concept of a governance space, which consists of a hierarchy, markets, and networks, we distinguish between four empirical manifestations of the NWS, namely, the NWS as (1) come back of the public/ re-municipalization; (2) re-hierarchization; (3) de-agencification; (4) de-escalation in performance management. These movements can, on the one hand, be interpreted as a (partial) reversal of New Public Management (NPM) approaches and a “swinging back of the pendulum” (see Kuhlmann & Wollmann, 2019) toward public and classical Weberian principles (e.g., hierarchy, regulation, institutional re-aggregation). This reversal re-strengthened the hierarchy within the overall governance space to the detriment of, but without completely replacing, market mechanisms and networks. NPM’s failure to deliver what it promised and its inappropriateness as a response to more recent challenges connected to crises and wicked problems have engendered a partial return of the public and a move away from the economization logic of NPM. On the other hand, post-NPM reversals and managerial de-escalation gave rise to hybrid models that merge NPM and classic Weberian administration. While some well-functioning combinations of NPM and Weberianism exist, the hybridization of “old” and “neo” elements has also provoked ambivalent and negative assessments regarding the actual functioning of the NWS in Germany. Our analysis suggests that the NWS is only partially suitable as a model for reform and future administrative modernization, largely depending on the context surrounding reform and implementation practices.
A new challenger seeks to enter the German party system: Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW). With her new party, former Die Linke politician Sahra Wagenknecht combines a left-authoritarian profile (economically left-leaning, but culturally conservative) with anti-US, pro-Russia and anti-elitist stances. This article provides the first large-n academic study of the voter potential of this new party by using a quasi-representative sample (n = 6,000) drawn from a Voting Advice Application-like dataset that comes from a website designed to explore the Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht’s positions. The results show that congruence with foreign policy positions and anti-elitism are strong predictors of the propensity to vote for the Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht. In contrast, social/welfare and immigration policies are less predictive for assessing the party’s potential. Among the different socio-demographic groups, the Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht has a strong potential among baby boomers, the less educated and East Germans. Regarding party voters, the Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht is favoured by supporters of some minor parties like dieBasis, Freie Wähler and Die PARTEI, but also non-voters. Among the established parties, the party’s potential is high among Die Linke voters and, to a lesser extent, voters of the Social democrats (SPD) and Alternative for Germany (AfD). A potential below the average is reported for the supporters of the Liberals (FDP) and Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) and most clearly for Green and Volt voters.
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.
We study the effect of energy and transport policies on pollution in two developing country cities. We use a quantitative equilibrium model with choice of housing, energy use, residential location, transport mode, and energy technology. Pollution comes from commuting and residential energy use. The model parameters are calibrated to replicate key variables for two developing country cities, Maputo, Mozambique, and Yogyakarta, Indonesia. In the counterfactual simulations, we study how various transport and energy policies affect equilibrium pollution. Policies may induce rebound effects from increasing residential energy use or switching to high emission modes or locations. In general, these rebound effects tend to be largest for subsidies to public transport or modern residential energy technology.
Der untenstehende Text ist eine recht spontane Reaktion auf Bemerkungen, die jüngst von den Kollegen Armin Engländer und Christian Rückert zu einem Kodifizierungsvorschlag für die Regelungsthemen Notwehr, Notwehrexzess und subjektives Rechtfertigungselement in der Zeitschrift „Goltdammer’s Archiv für Strafrecht“ präsentiert wurden. Den Entwurfstext hat eine – kleine – Gruppe von Strafrechtslehrern erarbeitet. Er wurde letztes Jahr mittels eines Aufsatzes von Elisa Hoven und Wolfgang Mitsch – ebenfalls im „Goltdammer’s Archiv“ − vorgestellt und erläutert. Engländer und Rückert äußern stellenweise Zustimmung, üben aber auch zu vielen Punkten des Entwurfs und seiner Begründung Kritik. Da der hiesige Verfasser sowohl an der Entwicklung des Entwurfstextes als auch an dem genannten GA-Aufsatz als Ko-Autor beteiligt war, möchte er − im Folgenden: ich − zu einigen der Kritiken Stellung nehmen.
Germany’s relatively stable party system faces a new left-authoritarian challenger: Sahra Wagenknecht’s Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW) party. First polls indicate that for the BSW, election results above 10% are within reach. While Wagenknecht’s positions in economic and cultural terms have already been discussed, this article elaborates on another highly relevant feature of Wagenknecht, namely her populist communication. Exploring Wagenknecht’s and BSW’s populist appeal helps us to understand why the party is said to also have potential among seemingly different voter groups coming from the far right Alternative for Germany (AfD) and far left Die Linke, which share high levels of populist attitudes. To analyse the role that populist communication plays for Wagenknecht and the BSW, this article combines quantitative and qualitative methods. The quantitative analysis covers all speeches (10,000) and press releases (19,000) published by Die Linke members of Parliament (MPs; 2005–2023). The results show that Wagenknecht is the (former) Die Linke MP with the highest share of populist communication. Furthermore, she was also able to convince a group of populist MPs to join the BSW. The article closes with a qualitative analysis of BSW’s manifesto that reveals how populist framing plays a major role in this document, in which the political and economic elites are accused of working against the interest of “the majority”. Based on this analysis, the classification of the BSW as a populist party seems to be appropriate.