Refine
Year of publication
- 2020 (33) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (18)
- Part of a Book (5)
- Doctoral Thesis (5)
- Bachelor Thesis (1)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (1)
- Master's Thesis (1)
- Postprint (1)
- Review (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (33)
Keywords
- COVID-19 (2)
- climate policy (2)
- decarbonization (2)
- transmission (2)
- 2 degrees C target (1)
- Aid Effectiveness (1)
- Americas (1)
- Appliance diffusion (1)
- Austria (1)
- Beratung (1)
- Beschaffungswesen (1)
- Campaign finance (1)
- Car ownership (1)
- Colombia (1)
- Corruption risks (1)
- Covid-19 (1)
- Development Aid (1)
- Digitalisierung (1)
- EU (1)
- Energy policy (1)
- Entwicklungszusammenarbeit (1)
- European Union (1)
- Fahrkompetenz (1)
- Filmbildung (1)
- Frame Analyse; Französische Entwicklungsagentur (1)
- Frame Analysis (1)
- French Development Agency (1)
- Führung (1)
- Gemeindem (1)
- Geometric Data Analysis (1)
- Geometrische Datenanalyse (1)
- Institutional Complexity (1)
- Institutionelle Komplexität (1)
- International Relations Theory (1)
- Kolumbien (1)
- Korruptionsrisiken (1)
- Leistungsrückmeldung (1)
- Mayoralty (1)
- Meaning Structure (1)
- Medienbildung (1)
- Multiple Correspondence Analysis (1)
- Multiple Korrespondenzanalyse (1)
- Neoliberalismus (1)
- Organisationssoziologie (1)
- Paris agreement (1)
- Perceived socioeconomic status (1)
- Politikdidaktische Potenziale (1)
- Politische Bildung (1)
- Postbürokratie (1)
- Postfeminismus (1)
- Praxisrelevanz (1)
- President Trump (1)
- Procurement (1)
- Rassismus (1)
- Residential energy demand (1)
- Results-Based Management (1)
- Russia and Eurasia (1)
- Social (1)
- South Asia (1)
- Spielfilme im Unterricht (1)
- Survey Research Methods (1)
- Theorie-Praxis-Problem (1)
- Translation (1)
- Translationstheorie (1)
- Wahlkampffinanzierung (1)
- Wirksamkeit von Entwicklungszusammenarbeit (1)
- Wirkungsorientiertes Management (1)
- Zoomania (1)
- Zootopia (1)
- Zootropolis (1)
- acceptance (1)
- agent-based modeling (1)
- carbon pricing (1)
- climate change (1)
- concentrating solar power (1)
- cooperation (1)
- deployment (1)
- drivers (1)
- driving competence (1)
- energy decarbonization (1)
- energy efficiency (1)
- energy policy (1)
- energy-system (1)
- excessive instrumental reasoning (1)
- feature films in class (1)
- film education (1)
- financial solidarity (1)
- flexibility (1)
- industry development (1)
- integration (1)
- internal goods (1)
- land use (1)
- levelized cost (1)
- media literacy (1)
- moral philosophy (1)
- neoliberalism (1)
- performance feedback (1)
- policy competition (1)
- policy cycle (1)
- political didactics potentials (1)
- political education (1)
- postfeminism (1)
- power-system (1)
- practical driving (1)
- praktische Fahrerlaubnisprüfung (1)
- racism (1)
- reanalysis (1)
- recall accuracy (1)
- reciprocity (1)
- regional equity (1)
- renewable energy (1)
- retrospective questions (1)
- self-sufficiency (1)
- situationally-specific habitus (1)
- storage (1)
- strong structuration theory (SST) (1)
- technological change (1)
- technological learning (1)
- trade (1)
- value chain analysis (1)
- wind (1)
Institute
- Sozialwissenschaften (33) (remove)
Hauptanliegen dieser Bachelorarbeit ist es, verschiedene Interpretationsmöglichkeiten des Films „Zoomania“ aufzuzeigen und für dessen politikdidaktische Potenziale im Rahmen eines kompetenzorientierten Politikunterrichts zu sensibilisieren. Außerdem werden allgemeine Aspekte des didaktisch-reflektierten Einsatzes von Spielfilmen im Politikunterricht diskutiert.
Dazu wurde die zum Themenbereich vorhandene fachwissenschaftliche, fach- und mediendidaktische Literatur interdisziplinär aufgearbeitet und der Film „Zoomania“ erstmalig politikdidaktisch analysiert sowie hinsichtlich seiner Eignung für den Unterricht beurteilt.
Das Ergebnis dieses Vorgehens sind die folgenden vier inhaltlichen politikdidaktischen Potenziale, die die exemplarische Bedeutung von „Zoomania“ für ebendiese allgemeinen und potenziell unterrichtsrelevanten Sachverhalte versinnbildlichen: Rassismus, Vorurteile und Toleranz; Macht; Female Empowerment; Neoliberalismus und Promotion neoliberaler Werte.
Insbesondere durch die enthaltenen unterrichtspraktischen Schlussfolgerungen richtet sich diese Arbeit vordergründig an Politiklehrerinnen und -lehrer, die dazu ermuntert werden sollen, „Zoomania“ als motivierendes Unterrichtsmedium zum Erschließen des Politischen zu nutzen. Dies verlangt jedoch auch nach der Lektüre der vorliegenden Thesis, dass der Film vertiefend didaktisch analysiert und daraufhin zielgerichtet eingesetzt wird.
Unter Verschluss
(2020)
The European potential for renewable electricity is sufficient to enable fully renewable supply on different scales, from self-sufficient, subnational regions to an interconnected continent. We not only show that a continental-scale system is the cheapest, but also that systems on the national scale and below are possible at cost penalties of 20% or less. Transmission is key to low cost, but it is not necessary to vastly expand the transmission system. When electricity is transmitted only to balance fluctuations, the transmission grid size is comparable to today's, albeit with expanded cross-border capacities. The largest differences across scales concern land use and thus social acceptance: in the continental system, generation capacity is concentrated on the European periphery, where the best resources are. Regional systems, in contrast, have more dispersed generation. The key trade-off is therefore not between geographic scale and cost, but between scale and the spatial distribution of required generation and transmission infrastructure.
The European potential for renewable electricity is sufficient to enable fully renewable supply on different scales, from self-sufficient, subnational regions to an interconnected continent. We not only show that a continental-scale system is the cheapest, but also that systems on the national scale and below are possible at cost penalties of 20% or less. Transmission is key to low cost, but it is not necessary to vastly expand the transmission system. When electricity is transmitted only to balance fluctuations, the transmission grid size is comparable to today's, albeit with expanded cross-border capacities. The largest differences across scales concern land use and thus social acceptance: in the continental system, generation capacity is concentrated on the European periphery, where the best resources are. Regional systems, in contrast, have more dispersed generation. The key trade-off is therefore not between geographic scale and cost, but between scale and the spatial distribution of required generation and transmission infrastructure.
Conclusion
(2020)
Does political repression work for authoritarian rule? On the one hand, repression is a hallmark of authoritarian governance. It denotes any action governments take to increase the costs of collective action. Autocrats consciously apply repression to curb popular opposition within their territorial jurisdiction. They repress in order to protect their policies, personnel, or other interests against challenges from below. Repression is, thus, a means to the end of political survival in non-democratic contexts. A useful means lives up to its promises. Does repression do that? This project started on the suspicion that we do not yet know the answer. This concluding chapter recalls the key theoretical ideas developed along the way, highlights the main findings of the book, and concludes with opportunities for future research.
Using a novel agent-based model, we study how US withdrawal might influence the political process established by the Paris Agreement, and hence the prospects for reaching the collective goal to limit warming below 2 degrees C. Our model enables us to analyze to what extent reaching this goal despite US withdrawal would place more stringent requirements on other core elements of the Paris cooperation process. We find, first, that the effect of a US withdrawal depends critically on the extent to which member countries reciprocate others' promises and contributions. Second, while the 2 degrees C goal will likely be reached only under a very small set of conditions in any event, even temporary US withdrawal will further narrow this set significantly. Reaching this goal will then require other countries to step up their ambition at the first opportunity and to comply nearly 100% with their pledges, while maintaining high confidence in the Paris Agreements institutions. Third, although a US withdrawal will first primarily affect the United States' own emissions, it will eventually prove even more detrimental to other countries' emissions.
Successful societies
(2020)
Combining moral philosophy with sociological theory to build on themes introduced in Hall and Lamont’s Successful Societies (2009), the paper outlines a distinctive perspective. It holds that a necessary condition of successful societies is that decision-makers base their decisions on a high level of attentiveness (concern and comprehension) towards subjectively valued and morally legitimate forms of life. Late modern societies consist of a plurality of forms of life, each providing grounds for what Alasdair MacIntyre has called internal goods—valued and morally valuable practices. The status of such goods is examined, and distinctions are drawn between their manifest and latent, and transposable and situationally specific, characteristics. We integrate this refined idea of internal goods into a developed conception of habitus that is both morally informed and situationally embedded. The sociological approach of strong structuration theory (SST) is employed to demonstrate how this conception of habitus can guide the critique of decision-making that damages internal goods. We identify the most pervasive and invidious forms of damaging decision-making in contemporary societies as those involving excessive forms of instrumental reasoning. We argue that our developed conception of habitus, anchored in the collectively valued practices of specific worlds, can be a powerful focus for resistance. Accounts of scholarship in higher education and of the white working class in America illustrate the specificities of singular, particular, social worlds and illuminate critical challenges raised by the perspective we advocate.
Women's rights are a core part of a global consensus on human rights. However, we are currently experiencing an increasing popularity of anti-feminist and misogynist politics threatening to override feminist gains. In order to help explain this current revival and appeal, in this article I analyse how anti-feminist communities construct their collective identities at the intersection of local and global trends and affiliations. Through an in-depth analysis of representations in the collective identities of six popular online anti-feminist communities based in India, Russia and the United States, I shed light on how anti-feminists discursively construct their anti-feminist 'self' and the feminist 'other' between narratives of localized resistance to change and backlash against the results of broader societal developments associated with globalization. The results expose a complex set of global-local dynamics, which provide a nuanced understanding of the differences and commonalities of anti-feminist collective identity-building and mobilization processes across contexts. By explicitly focusing on the role of discursively produced locations for anti-feminist identity-building and providing new evidence on anti-feminist communities across three different continents, the article contributes to current discussions on transnational anti-feminist mobilizations in both social movement studies and feminist International Relations.