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Deutsche Außenpolitik zu Beginn des 21. Jahrhunderts und die Linke im Spannungsfeld zwischen Nation und Internationalismus: Für Erhard Crome geht es um nicht weniger als die Frage, wie deutsche Außenpolitik von links gedacht und konzipiert werden sollte. In der vorliegenden Festschrift gehen Kolleginnen und Kollegen dieser Frage gemeinsam mit dem Jubilar nach. Ein Plädoyer für eine nicht-hegemoniale Verantwortung Deutschlands.
www.BrAnD2. Wille.
(2016)
2014 fand der Potsdamer Lateintag zum 10. Mal statt. Das Jubiläum war ein angemessener Anlass, unser neues Projekt vorzustellen. Die Robert Bosch-Stiftung fördert wieder für drei Jahre die Zusammenarbeit der Klassischen Philologie der Universität Potsdam mit Schulen aus Brandenburg. Der Titel lautet: www.BrAnD2. Wille. Würde. Wissen. Zweites Brandenburger Antike-Denkwerk. Zur Auftaktveranstaltung zum Thema „Wille“ erschienen wieder über 500 Teilnehmerinnen und Teilnehmer. Der Band versammelt einen Projektbericht, die Vorträge von Frau Prof. Dr. Christiane Kunst und Herrn Prof. Dr. Christoph Horn sowie eine Auswahl an Materialen der betreuenden Studierenden.
Writing-between-worlds
(2016)
Wettbewerbsrecht
(2016)
Das Wettbewerbsrecht ist vor allem im Gesetz gegen den unlauteren Wettbewerb (UWG) geregelt, das den Begriff der "Lauterkeit" zur Feststellung der Zulässigkeit eines Geschäftsgebahrens verwendet. Das Rechtsgebiet wird daher in Abgrenzung zum europäischen Wettbewerbsrecht, das kartellrechtliche Fragen betrifft, auch als Lauterkeitsrecht bezeichnet.
Von besonderer Bedeutung sind die Vorgaben der europäischen Richtlinie über unlautere Geschäftspraktiken (2005/29/EG), die es bei der Auslegung des UWG stets zu beachten gilt. Diese Richtlinie hat bereits 2008 zu einer Novellierung des UWG geführt. Zur weiteren klarstellenden Richtlinienumsetzung steht derzeit eine grundlegende Novellierung des UWG bevor.
Das Wettbewerbsrecht ist Gegenstand des Schwerpunktbereichsstudiums. Da sich die Materie vor allem aufgrund europäischer Einflüsse im ständigen Wandel befindet, ist das Bedürfnis an einem aktuellen, aber zugleich konsequent auf Studienbedürfnisse zugeschnittenen Lehrbuch groß.
Der Grundriss stellt das aktuelle Wettbewerbsrecht studiengerecht mit vielen Übersichten, Schemata, Beispielen und einer Übungsklausur mit Lösung dar.
Vorteile auf einen Blick
- kompakte Darstellung des geltenden Rechts
- mit vielen Einstiegsfällen und Beispielen
- vom Autor des Parallelwerks Kartellrecht in der Grundriss-Reihe
Zielgruppe
Für Studierende und alle, die sich auf einfache Weise in das Wettbewerbsrecht einarbeiten wollen.
Völkerrecht
(2016)
Transmorphic
(2016)
Defining Graphical User Interfaces (GUIs) through functional abstractions can reduce the complexity that arises from mutable abstractions. Recent examples, such as Facebook's React GUI framework have shown, how modelling the view as a functional projection from the application state to a visual representation can reduce the number of interacting objects and thus help to improve the reliabiliy of the system. This however comes at the price of a more rigid, functional framework where programmers are forced to express visual entities with functional abstractions, detached from the way one intuitively thinks about the physical world.
In contrast to that, the GUI Framework Morphic allows interactions in the graphical domain, such as grabbing, dragging or resizing of elements to evolve an application at runtime, providing liveness and directness in the development workflow. Modelling each visual entity through mutable abstractions however makes it difficult to ensure correctness when GUIs start to grow more complex. Furthermore, by evolving morphs at runtime through direct manipulation we diverge more and more from the symbolic description that corresponds to the morph. Given that both of these approaches have their merits and problems, is there a way to combine them in a meaningful way that preserves their respective benefits?
As a solution for this problem, we propose to lift Morphic's concept of direct manipulation from the mutation of state to the transformation of source code. In particular, we will explore the design, implementation and integration of a bidirectional mapping between the graphical representation and a functional and declarative symbolic description of a graphical user interface within a self hosted development environment. We will present Transmorphic, a functional take on the Morphic GUI Framework, where the visual and structural properties of morphs are defined in a purely functional, declarative fashion. In Transmorphic, the developer is able to assemble different morphs at runtime through direct manipulation which is automatically translated into changes in the code of the application. In this way, the comprehensiveness and predictability of direct manipulation can be used in the context of a purely functional GUI, while the effects of the manipulation are reflected in a medium that is always in reach for the programmer and can even be used to incorporate the source transformations into the source files of the application.
When realizing a programming language as VM, implementing behavior as part of the VM, as primitive, usually results in reduced execution times. But supporting and developing primitive functions requires more effort than maintaining and using code in the hosted language since debugging is harder, and the turn-around times for VM parts are higher. Furthermore, source artifacts of primitive functions are seldom reused in new implementations of the same language. And if they are reused, the existing API usually is emulated, reducing the performance gains. Because of recent results in tracing dynamic compilation, the trade-off between performance and ease of implementation, reuse, and changeability might now be decided adversely.
In this work, we investigate the trade-offs when creating primitives, and in particular how large a difference remains between primitive and hosted function run times in VMs with tracing just-in-time compiler. To that end, we implemented the algorithmic primitive BitBlt three times for RSqueak/VM. RSqueak/VM is a Smalltalk VM utilizing the PyPy RPython toolchain. We compare primitive implementations in C, RPython, and Smalltalk, showing that due to the tracing just-in-time compiler, the performance gap has lessened by one magnitude to one magnitude.
Touring Katutura!
(2016)
Guided sightseeing tours of the former township of Katutura have been offered in Windhoek since the mid-1990s. City tourism in the Namibian capital had thus become, at quite an early point in time, part of the trend towards utilising poor urban areas for purposes of tourism – a trend that set in at the beginning of the same decade. Frequently referred to as “slum tourism” or “poverty tourism”, the phenomenon of guided tours around places of poverty has not only been causing some media sensation and much public outrage since its emergence; in the past few years, it has developed into a vital field of scientific research, too. “Global Slumming” provides the grounds for a rethinking of the relationship between poverty and tourism in world society.
This book is the outcome of a study project of the Institute of Geography at the School of Cultural Studies and Social Science of the University of Osnabrueck, Germany. It represents the first empirical case study on township tourism in Namibia. It focuses on four aspects:
1. Emergence, development and (market) structure of township tourism in Windhoek
2. Expectations/imaginations, representations as well as perceptions of the township and its inhabitants from the tourist’s perspective
3. Perception and assessment of township tourism from the residents’ perspective
4. Local economic effects and the poverty-alleviating impact of township tourism
The aim is to make an empirical contribution to the discussion around the tourism-poverty nexus and to an understanding of the global phenomenon of urban poverty tourism.
Since spring 2014 the relations between the EU and Russia are stuck in an Ice Age. From a Western point of view, especially the annexation of Crimea by Russia and the intervention in the conflict in Ukraine are responsible. The EU has frozen their relations to Russia and applied sanctions against it. Russia reacted in the same way. Can this vicious circle be broken without betraying the values of the EU? This book presents the analysis and ideas of social scientists from Germany, Poland and Russia. The reasons for this crisis are seen quite differently but all try to find a way out of the current confrontation.