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Bewaffnete Intellektuelle
(2017)
Auf der Suche nach der geheimen Herrschaftslehre der Nazis begibt sich Michael Zantke in eine tiefe und umfassende Auseinandersetzung mit den geistigen Wurzeln des Nationalsozialismus. Er beleuchtet die Diskussionen in Deutschland um Machiavelli und überprüft die Texte auf ihren Bezug zur Gegenwart des Nationalsozialismus. Dabei gelingt es ihm, die politische Rolle der Intellektuellen im „Dritten Reich“ und die Unterschiede zwischen Nationalsozialismus, Faschismus und Konservativer Revolution herauszuarbeiten. Diese Nuancen sind nicht nur historisch bedeutungsvoll, sie sind auch für die heutige Diskussion über Rechtsnationalismus, Rechtsradikalismus und die Neue Rechte von Nutzen.
The category of ‘family workers’ in International Labour Organization statistics (1930s–1980s)
(2017)
This article discusses the role that statistical classifications play in creating gendered boundaries in the world of work. The term ‘family worker’ first became a statistical category in various Western national statistics around 1900. After 1945, it was established as a category of the International Labour Organization (ILO) labour force concept, and since then it has been extended to the wider world by way of the UN System of National Accounts. By investigating the term ‘family worker’ from the perspective of internationally comparable statistical classification, this article offers an empirical insight into how and why particular concepts of work become ‘globalized’. We argue that the statistical term ‘economically active people’ was extended to unpaid family workers, whereas the distinction between family work and housework was increasingly based on scientific evidence. This reclassification of work is an indication of its growing comparability within an economic observation scheme. The ILO generated and authorized that global discourse, and, as such, attested to an increasingly global form of knowledge and communication about the status of gender and work.
Over the past decade, an increasing number of public organizations involved in fisheries and marine environmental management in Europe have changed their formal coordination structures. Similar reorganizations of formal coordination structures can be observed for organizations at different administrative levels of governance with different mandates across the policy cycle.
Against the backdrop of this phenomenon, this PhD thesis is interested in exploring how these similar organizational reforms can be explained and why the formal coordination structures for fisheries and marine environmental management have been reorganized in the cases of the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), the Directorate-General for Fisheries and Maritime Affairs of the European Commission (DG FISH), the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (IMR) and the Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management (SwAM). Accordingly, the objective is to shed light on how public organizations actually “behave” or “tick” in the face of increasingly complex coordination challenges in fisheries and marine environmental management.
To address these questions, the thesis draws on different theoretical perspectives in organization theory, namely an instrumental and an institutional perspective. These theoretical perspectives provide different explanations for how organizations deal with issues of formal organizational structure and coordination. In order to evaluate the explanatory relevance of these theoretical perspectives in the cases of ICES, DG FISH, the IMR and the SwAM, a case study approach based on congruence analysis is applied. The case studies are based on document analysis, the analysis of organizational charts and their change over time, as well as expert interviews. The aim of the thesis is to contribute to the coordination debate in the marine policy and governance literature from a hitherto omitted public administration and organization theory perspective, as well as explaining coordination efforts at the organizational level with an organization theory approach.
The findings indicate that the formal coordination structures of the organizations studied have not only changed to solve coordination problems in fisheries and marine environmental management efficiently and effectively, but also to follow modern management paradigms in marine governance and to ensure the legitimacy of these organizations. Moreover, it was found that in the cases of ICES, DG FISH, the IMR and the SwAM, the organizational changes were strongly influenced by external pressures and interactions with other organizations in the organizational field of fisheries and marine environmental management in Europe. Driven by forces of isomorphism, a gradual convergence of the formal horizontal coordination structures for fisheries and marine environmental management of the organizations studied can be observed. However, the findings also indicate that although the organizational changes observed may convey a reaction to changing environments, they do not necessarily reflect actual policy change and the implementation of new management concepts.
Die vorliegende Dissertation thematisiert den Unterschied zwischen Einstellungen, die auf der persönlichen Ebene im Rahmen demoskopischer Interviews erfragt und zu einem „Meinungsbild“ aggregiert werden und der öffentlichen Meinung, dem wahrgenommenen Meinungsklima zu einer Thematik. Die Daten der langjährigen Bevölkerungsbefragung des Zentrums für Militärgeschichte und Sozialwissenschaften der Bundeswehr (ZMSBw) weisen, hinsichtlich der persönlichen Einstellung der Bundesbürger zu den Streitkräften, seit vielen Jahren beständig darauf hin, dass die Mehrheit der Bürgerinnen und Bürger der Bundeswehr positiv gegenübersteht. Gleichzeitig existiert in Teilen der Bevölkerung die Meinungsklima-wahrnehmung, dass die Bundeswehr auf gesamtgesellschaftlicher Ebene eher kritisch gesehen wird. Der im Rahmen dieser Arbeit erstmalig entwickelte medienzentrierte Untersuchungsansatz des Phänomens, welches als Ausprägung pluralistischer Ignoranz theoretisch hergeleitet wurde, fokussiert, neben dem Einfluss eines doppelten Meinungsklimas, auf die Wirkung medienspezifischer Wahrnehmungsphänomene (Hostile-Media-Phänomen und Third-Person-Wahrnehmung), um die beobachtete Diskrepanz zwischen persönlicher Einstellung und Meinungsklimawahrnehmung zum Thema Ansehen der Bundeswehr zu erklären.
Im Rahmen einer quantitativen Bevölkerungsbefragung wurden Indikatoren entwickelt, um die aufgestellten Hypothesen einer empirischen Überprüfung zu unterziehen. Die deskriptiven Analysen zur Richtung und Ausprägung der Diskrepanzwahrnehmung ergaben, dass sich die Bürgerinnen und Bürger eher in der Weise irren, dass sie das Meinungsklima zum Thema Ansehen der Bundeswehr negativer einschätzen als das Ansehen, welches sie den Streitkräften persönlich entgegenbringen (negative Diskrepanz-wahrnehmung). Außerdem zeigte sich, dass die Diskrepanzwahrnehmung zurückging, wenn dem Untersuchungsthema ein emotionales Potenzial zugesprochen wurde. In einem solchen Fall tendieren die Probanden dazu, die eigene Meinung dicht an der antizipierten Mehrheitsmeinung zu positionieren, um sich keinem Rechtfertigungsdruck oder schlimmstenfalls sozialer Isolation auszusetzen.
Die Ergebnisse der Analysen der vier zentralen erklärenden Variablen zeigten auf, dass sich alle formulierten Hypothesen zur Richtung der Diskrepanzwahrnehmung bestätigten. Eine vermehrte Mediennutzung, eine negative Wahrnehmung der generellen bundeswehrbezogenen Medienberichterstattung, eine persönlich positive Einstellung zur Bundeswehr und die Wahrnehmung, dass die Medien auf Dritte stärker wirken als auf die eigene Person trugen jeweils zu einem Anstieg der negativen Diskrepanzwahrnehmung zum Thema Ansehen der Bundeswehr bei. Personen, die diese Merkmale aufwiesen, schätzten das Meinungsklima zum Thema Ansehen der Bundeswehr negativer ein als das Ansehen, welches sie den Streitkräften persönlich entgegenbrachten. Die Analyse der Stärke der jeweiligen Effekte verdeutlichte jedoch, dass die verwendeten Erklärungsansätze jeweils nur einen kleinen oder mittleren Beitrag zur Erklärung der Diskrepanzwahrnehmung leisten konnten.
Dieses Ergebnis kann dadurch begründet werden, dass sich das Untersuchungsthema, neben der Ermangelung einer kontinuierlichen Medienberichterstattung und eines breiten öffentlichen Diskurses zum Thema Ansehen der Bundeswehr sowie fehlender persönlicher Bezüge zu den Streitkräften, in der Analyse insbesondere als zu wenig konfliktträchtig erwies. Ob die Bundeswehr gesellschaftliches Ansehen erfährt, besitzt für den Großteil der Bevölkerung nur eine geringe persönliche Relevanz. Aus diesen Gründen scheint dieses Thema nicht dazu geeignet zu sein, um die in dieser Dissertation als Erklärungsfaktoren herangezogenen medienspezifischen Wahrnehmungsphänomene auszubilden. Dieses Ergebnis impliziert, dass die Diskrepanz zwischen persönlicher Einstellung und Meinungs-klimawahrnehmung zum Thema Ansehen der Bundeswehr von einer Reihe weiterer Faktoren beeinflusst wird, die es im Rahmen zukünftiger Forschungsarbeiten aufzuspüren und zu untersuchen gilt.
Lawyers, economists and citizens: the impact of neo-liberal European governance on citizenship
(2017)
Feigning Democracy
(2017)
Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation plus the sustainable management of forest and enhancement of carbon stocks (REDD+) is a global climate change mitigation initiative. The United Nations REDD Programme (UN-REDD) is training governments in developing countries, including Nigeria, to implement REDD+. To protect local people, UN-REDD has developed social safeguards including a commitment to strengthen local democracy to prevent an elite capture of REDD+ benefits. This study examines local participation and representation in the UN-REDD international policy board and in the national-level design process for the Nigeria-REDD proposal, to see if practices are congruent with the UN-REDD commitment to local democracy. It is based on research in Nigeria in 2012 and 2013, and finds that local representation in the UN-REDD policy board and in Nigeria-REDD is not substantive. Participation is merely symbolic. For example, elected local government authorities, who ostensibly represent rural people, are neither present in the UN-REDD board nor were they invited to the participatory forums that vetted the Nigeria-REDD. They were excluded because they were politically weak. However, UN-REDD approved the Nigeria-REDD proposal without a strategy to include or strengthen elected local governments. The study concludes with recommendations to help the UN-REDD strengthen elected local government authority in Nigeria in support of democratic local representation.
The design of embedded systems is becoming continuously more complex such that efficient system-level design methods are becoming crucial. Recently, combined Answer Set Programming (ASP) and Quantifier Free Integer Difference Logic (QF-IDL) solving has been shown to be a promising approach in system synthesis. However, this approach still has several restrictions limiting its applicability. In the paper at hand, we propose a novel ASP modulo Theories (ASPmT) system synthesis approach, which (i) supports more sophisticated system models, (ii) tightly integrates the QF-IDL solving into the ASP solving, and (iii) makes use of partial assignment checking. As a result, more realistic systems are considered and an early exclusion of infeasible solutions improves the entire system synthesis.
Becoming a Student of Reform
(2017)
In October 2016, following a campaign led by Labour Peer Lord Alfred Dubs, the first child asylum-seekers allowed entry to the UK under new legislation (the ‘Dubs amendment’) arrived in England. Their arrival was captured by a heavy media presence, and very quickly doubts were raised by right-wing tabloids and politicians about their age. In this article, I explore the arguments underpinning the Dubs campaign and the media coverage of the children’s arrival as a starting point for interrogating representational practices around children who seek asylum. I illustrate how the campaign was premised on a universal politics of childhood that inadvertently laid down the terms on which these children would be given protection, namely their innocence.
The universality of childhood fuels public sympathy for child asylum-seekers, underlies the ‘child first, migrant second’ approach advocated by humanitarian organisations, and it was a key argument in the ‘Dubs amendment’. Yet the campaign highlights how representations of child asylum-seekers rely on codes that operate to identify ‘unchildlike’ children. As I show, in the context of the criminalisation of undocumented migrants‘, childhood is no longer a stable category which guarantees protection, but is subject to scrutiny and suspicion and can, ultimately, be disproved.
Introduction
(2017)
In the course of the last four decades, neo-liberalism has established itself as the dominant form of governing both national societies and global affairs. On the foundation of both Keynesian economic policies and the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates among currencies, the world economy recovered. The classical sociological meaning and concept of citizenship as defined by T. H. Marshall and others after World War II rests on an analysis of the relationship between the capitalist economy and political democracy against the background of 'embedded liberalism'. Today, however, the enforcement of neo-liberal principles in order to turn modern democracies into 'market societies' impinges heavily on our idea of citizenship. The critical aspects of a flawed citizenship go directly to the heart of the idea of citizenship itself, as both democratic and social participation and a substantial conception of individual liberty all seem to be under attack from the global politico-economic regime.
Introduction
(2017)
The history of citizenship is one of social struggle against pre-modern authorities, nobles and aristocracies, of class struggles and the demands of social movements, and no less of cultural, ethnic, indigenous protests against the long history of colonialism. Paths to citizenship in Europe have taken very different directions, as Charles Tilly has shown with regard to England, the Netherlands, Russia or Prussia. Max Weber's dictum of defining the state by the accomplishment of the monopolisation of the legitimate means of violence is of utmost significance for the history of citizenship. There can be no doubt that the experience of World War II prepared the ground for the twentieth-century idea of citizenship. Consequently the Western concept of citizenship has been promoted as a role model in the march towards modernity as peaceful, democratic and universalistic. Finally, this chapter presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of this book.
Introduction
(2017)
This introduction presents an overview of the concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of this book. The book examines the role of Frontex in the European Union as an agency to protect its external borders in the Mediterranean from irregular or 'illegal' migration. It discusses that Europe is an arrangement for European citizens only – and for some privileged non-citizens as in the Swiss case. The book explains the points to the possibility of a transnational membership regime that, however, bears certain antinomies that also point to unresolved problems. It offers an interesting view on the symbolic boundary between the citizen and the consumer, discussing this nexus from the perspective of citizenship studies, consumer culture and surveillance studies. Among the many far-reaching transformations that both societies and citizens have faced in recent years, the European migration crisis has most urgently brought to mind the fact that modern citizenship has always been about boundaries and about processes of inclusion and exclusion