Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2024 (1)
- 2023 (15)
- 2022 (30)
- 2021 (29)
- 2020 (33)
- 2019 (65)
- 2018 (47)
- 2017 (65)
- 2016 (57)
- 2015 (36)
- 2014 (59)
- 2013 (51)
- 2012 (43)
- 2011 (73)
- 2010 (33)
- 2009 (71)
- 2008 (54)
- 2007 (85)
- 2006 (81)
- 2005 (76)
- 2004 (82)
- 2003 (59)
- 2002 (56)
- 2001 (71)
- 2000 (64)
- 1999 (82)
- 1998 (74)
- 1997 (80)
- 1996 (94)
- 1995 (93)
- 1994 (61)
- 1993 (20)
- 1992 (16)
- 1991 (19)
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (1041)
- Monographie/Sammelband (417)
- Dissertation (176)
- Rezension (100)
- Teil eines Buches (Kapitel) (46)
- Masterarbeit (43)
- Postprint (29)
- Sonstiges (17)
- Bachelorarbeit (6)
- Preprint (5)
- Konferenzveröffentlichung (1)
- Zeitschrift/Schriftenreihe (1)
- Arbeitspapier (1)
Sprache
- Deutsch (1434)
- Englisch (442)
- Spanisch (3)
- Französisch (2)
- Kroatisch (1)
- Italienisch (1)
Schlagworte
- Germany (13)
- Police (10)
- Polizei (10)
- Polizeisoziologie (10)
- Sociology (10)
- European Union (9)
- accountability (8)
- Migration (7)
- Verwaltung (7)
- governance (7)
- international organizations (7)
- Partizipation (6)
- administration (6)
- climate policy (6)
- globalization (6)
- Europäische Integration (5)
- Europäische Union (5)
- Polen (5)
- decentralization (5)
- parliamentary government (5)
- political equality (5)
- public administration (5)
- public management (5)
- visions of democracy (5)
- COVID-19 (4)
- Gender (4)
- Governance (4)
- Netzwerkanalyse (4)
- Organisationstheorie (4)
- Poland (4)
- Political Science (4)
- Politikwissenschaft (4)
- Regulierung (4)
- Transformation (4)
- Verwaltungsreform (4)
- bicameralism (4)
- capitalism (4)
- coordination (4)
- democracy (4)
- financial crisis (4)
- financial institutions (4)
- financial markets (4)
- gender (4)
- local government (4)
- participation (4)
- presidential government (4)
- Öffentliche Verwaltung (4)
- Autoritarismus (3)
- Bourdieu (3)
- Bürgerbeteiligung (3)
- Demokratisierung (3)
- Denmark (3)
- Deutschland (3)
- Dezentralisierung (3)
- Digitalisierung (3)
- EU (3)
- Eastern Europe (3)
- Entwicklungszusammenarbeit (3)
- Estonia (3)
- European integration (3)
- Europäisierung (3)
- France (3)
- Föderalismus (3)
- Gesetzgebung (3)
- Gleichstellung (3)
- Measurement (3)
- Nachhaltige Entwicklung (3)
- Osteuropa (3)
- Politik (3)
- Standardkosten-Modell (3)
- Vergangenheitsbewältigung (3)
- Zivilgesellschaft (3)
- authoritarianism (3)
- civil service (3)
- cooperation (3)
- democratization (3)
- discourse (3)
- discourse analysis (3)
- economy (3)
- electoral systems (3)
- employment services (3)
- flexibility (3)
- institutional design (3)
- integration (3)
- international bureaucracies (3)
- migration (3)
- semi-parliamentarism (3)
- semi-parliamentary government (3)
- welfare markets (3)
- öffentliche Verwaltung (3)
- Afrika (2)
- Agilität (2)
- Arbeitsmarktpolitik (2)
- Austria (2)
- Außenpolitik (2)
- Big data (2)
- Blood Feud (2)
- Blutrache (2)
- Bürokratieabbau (2)
- CEE (2)
- Carbon pricing (2)
- Coordination (2)
- Culture (2)
- Demokratietheorie (2)
- Design Thinking (2)
- Deutsche Literatur (2)
- Dezentralisation (2)
- Digital trace (2)
- Diplomatie (2)
- Discourse (2)
- Diskurs (2)
- Diskursanalyse (2)
- Durkheim (2)
- Energiewende (2)
- Energy transition (2)
- Estland (2)
- Ethnizität (2)
- Europa (2)
- European Neighbourhood Policy (2)
- Europeanization (2)
- Evaluation (2)
- Executive-legislative relations (2)
- Feminismus (2)
- Framing (2)
- Frankreich (2)
- Gemeinsame Außen- und Sicherheitspolitik (2)
- German Literature (2)
- Gleichstellungspolitik (2)
- Great Britain (2)
- Großbritannien (2)
- Higher education (2)
- Hörspiel (2)
- India (2)
- Inhaltsanalyse (2)
- Institutionelle Komplexität (2)
- Isomorphism (2)
- Israel (2)
- Klimapolitik (2)
- Landbevölkerung (2)
- Landwirtschaftsverwaltung (2)
- Lictor (2)
- Liktor (2)
- Luhmann (2)
- Ländlicher Raum (2)
- MOE (2)
- Markt (2)
- Martin Walser (2)
- Medien (2)
- Mehrebenensystem (2)
- Menschenrechte (2)
- Mikropolitik (2)
- Ministerialverwaltung (2)
- Mixed methods (2)
- New Public Management (2)
- Niklas (2)
- Norway (2)
- Oprichnina (2)
- Opritschnina (2)
- Organization theory (2)
- Paris agreement (2)
- Parlamentarismus (2)
- Policy change (2)
- Politisches System (2)
- Postbürokratie (2)
- Potsdam (2)
- Public Administration (2)
- Public Management (2)
- Public organizations (2)
- Quality management (2)
- Radio Play (2)
- Rassismus (2)
- Regionalentwicklung (2)
- Relational sociology (2)
- Review (2)
- Soziale Infrastruktur (2)
- Staat (2)
- Standard Cost Model (2)
- State (2)
- Steuerung (2)
- Steuerverwaltung (2)
- Survey (2)
- Systemtheorie (2)
- Telekommunikation (2)
- Trumponomics (2)
- Turkey (2)
- UK (2)
- USA (2)
- Umweltpolitik (2)
- United States (2)
- Vertrauen (2)
- Verwaltungsmodernisierung (2)
- Wissenschaftliches Schreiben (2)
- YouTube (2)
- accountability dynamics (2)
- accountability mechanism (2)
- affect (2)
- allocation policies (2)
- asylum (2)
- authorship attribution (2)
- autonomy (2)
- citizen participation (2)
- civil society (2)
- climate change (2)
- crisis (2)
- decarbonization (2)
- decision-making (2)
- democratic theory (2)
- demografischer Wandel (2)
- demographic change (2)
- development cooperation (2)
- digital transformation (2)
- efficiency (2)
- environmental policy (2)
- equal opportunities (2)
- ethnicity (2)
- executives (2)
- experiments (2)
- federalism (2)
- field (2)
- gender equality (2)
- higher education (2)
- hospitals (2)
- identity (2)
- immigration (2)
- innovation (2)
- institutional change (2)
- institutional complexity (2)
- intergroup contacts (2)
- issue market (2)
- labour market administration (2)
- language acquisition (2)
- language courses (2)
- machine learning (2)
- methodology (2)
- minister responsibility (2)
- network analysis (2)
- new public management (2)
- nuclear weapons (2)
- organizational theory (2)
- parliamentarism (2)
- party competition (2)
- policy (2)
- policy transfer (2)
- political sociology (2)
- presidentialism (2)
- privatization (2)
- public employment service (2)
- refugees (2)
- rural (2)
- second chambers (2)
- social policy (2)
- sociology of knowledge (2)
- state (2)
- text based classification methods (2)
- transmission (2)
- trust (2)
- veto point (2)
- video surveillance (2)
- welfare state reform (2)
- Öffentliche Organisationen (2)
- Öffentlicher Dienst (2)
- (Verfahrens-)Gerechtigkeit (1)
- 1.5 degrees C (1)
- 2 degrees C target (1)
- Abrüstung (1)
- Acceptance of wind energy (1)
- Accountability (1)
- Accounting standards (1)
- Adaptive conjoint analysis (1)
- Administration (1)
- Affiliationsnetzwerke (1)
- Africa (1)
- African Union (1)
- Afroamerikaner (1)
- Agency theory (1)
- Agency-Theorie (1)
- Agenda Control (1)
- Agenda Powers (1)
- Agenda Setting (1)
- Agile (1)
- Agile Führung (1)
- Agile Leadership (1)
- Agility (1)
- Agrarsektor/Estland (1)
- Agricultural Administration (1)
- Agrifood governance (1)
- Aid Effectiveness (1)
- Aid conditionalities (1)
- Aid diplomacy (1)
- Aid-for-trade (1)
- Akteursinteraktion (1)
- Akteurskonstellationen (1)
- Algorithmen (1)
- Algorithms (1)
- Altenpflege (1)
- Alternative Regulierung (1)
- Altersstrukturen (1)
- Altruismus (1)
- Americas (1)
- Anti-Genderismus (1)
- Anti-Imperialismus (1)
- Antifeminimus (1)
- Antifeminism (1)
- Antisemitismus (1)
- Apartheid (1)
- Appliance diffusion (1)
- Armut (1)
- Atomwaffen (1)
- Atomwaffensperrvertrag (1)
- Attributionstheorie (1)
- Auditing standards (1)
- Aufstiegsmobilität (1)
- Ausländerpolitik (1)
- Ausschüsse (1)
- Australia (1)
- BRD (1)
- Beijing consensus (1)
- Beirat (1)
- Belastung (1)
- Belgien (1)
- Belgium (1)
- Belonging (1)
- Beratung (1)
- Bergbau (1)
- Berliner Mauer (1)
- Beschaffungswesen (1)
- Bessere Rechtsetzung (1)
- Better Regulation (1)
- Bevölkerungsmarketing (1)
- Bibliometric analysis (1)
- Bildung (1)
- Bildungsausländer (1)
- Bildungserfolg (1)
- Biologie (1)
- Boundary-making of work (1)
- Brandenburg (1)
- Bundesländer (1)
- Bundeswehr (1)
- Bureaucracy (1)
- Bureaucratic organization (1)
- Business participation (1)
- Bürgerdienste (1)
- Bürgerenergiegenossenschaft (1)
- Bürgerhaushalt (1)
- Bürgerschaft (1)
- Bürgerschaftliches Engagement (1)
- Bürokratie (1)
- Bürokratiekosten (1)
- Bürokratisierung (1)
- Caillé (1)
- Cambodia (1)
- Campaign finance (1)
- Candidates (1)
- Capitalism (1)
- Car ownership (1)
- Career Entry (1)
- Carl Schmitt (1)
- Case studies (1)
- Case study (1)
- Caudillismo (1)
- Central and Eastern Europe (1)
- Chalara dieback of ash (1)
- Character (1)
- Chinese Migration (1)
- Chinesische Migration (1)
- Choice experiment (1)
- Cities and regions (1)
- Citizenship (1)
- City (1)
- Civil Service Reform (1)
- Climate change (1)
- Climate governance experiments (1)
- Climate of Opinion (1)
- Climate policy (1)
- Clusteranalyse (1)
- Coleman (1)
- Collective violence (1)
- Colombia (1)
- Common Assessment Framework (1)
- Communication for development (1)
- Compromise (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)
- Content Analysis (1)
- Control beliefs (1)
- Conversation Analysis (1)
- Coordination game (1)
- Corporate governance (1)
- Corruption (1)
- Corruption risks (1)
- Covid-19 (1)
- Critique (1)
- Cyberspace (1)
- DDR (1)
- Data Quality (1)
- Datenanalyse (1)
- Datenqualität (1)
- De-globalisation Aid-not-trade (1)
- De-territorialisation Process (1)
- Decarbonisation (1)
- Decentralization in government (1)
- Decision-making (1)
- Decoloniale Theorie (1)
- Decomposition analysis (1)
- Dekomposition (1)
- Dekonstruktion (1)
- Demo für Alle (1)
- Democracy Promotion (1)
- Democratisation (1)
- Demografie (1)
- Demografiepolitik (1)
- Demografisierung (1)
- Demokratie (1)
- Demokratieförderung (1)
- Design Thinking Bildung (1)
- Design Thinking education (1)
- Deskriptive Statistik (1)
- Deutsch-Rap (1)
- Deutsche Entwicklungspolitik (1)
- Deutungsmuster (1)
- Development Aid (1)
- Development aid (1)
- Development aid criticism (1)
- Difference-in-Difference (1)
- Digital observation formats (1)
- Digitale Beobachtungsformate (1)
- Digitization (1)
- Directorate General (1)
- Disarmament (1)
- Discourse networks (1)
- Discrimination (1)
- Diskriminierung (1)
- Distributional effect (1)
- Doctorow (1)
- Doing Race (1)
- Doppik (1)
- Dossier (1)
- Drogen (1)
- Drogenkonsum (1)
- Drugteam (1)
- Dual Citizenship (1)
- Durkheim’s German Reception, Max Weber, Georg Simmel, Jürgen Habermas (1)
- Dynamics (1)
- ECOWAS (1)
- EU Council Presidency (1)
- EU Enlargement (1)
- EU directives (1)
- EU policy-making (1)
- EU-Beitrittsprozeß (1)
- EU-Erweiterung (1)
- EU-Membership (1)
- EU-Vollmitgliedschaft (1)
- Economic sociology (1)
- Economics (1)
- Edikt (1)
- Editorial policies (1)
- Education (1)
- Effektivität (1)
- Effizienz (1)
- Effizienzanalyse (1)
- Egoismus (1)
- Ehrenamt (1)
- Empirische Sozialforschung (1)
- Empirische Studie (1)
- Energieintensität (1)
- Energy conflicts (1)
- Energy policy (1)
- Entwicklung und Sicherheit (1)
- Entwicklungszusammenarbeit mit Indien (1)
- Environmental sustainability (1)
- Equal opportunities (1)
- Ermessen (1)
- Erweiterung (1)
- Eschentriebsterben (1)
- Essay (1)
- Estimation uncertainty (1)
- Ethical accounting estimates (1)
- Eurasian Economic Union (1)
- Europa / Sicherheitspolitik (1)
- Europe (1)
- European Commission (1)
- European Foreign Policy (1)
- European Integration (1)
- European Parliament (1)
- European Union research policy (1)
- European reference networks (1)
- European-African relations (1)
- Europeanisation (1)
- Europäisch-Afrikanische Beziehungen (1)
- Europäische Außenpolitik (1)
- Europäische Forschungspolitik (1)
- Europäische Nachbarschaftspolitik (1)
- Europäische Referenznetzwerke (1)
- Europäische Union / Erweiterung (1)
- Europäisches Parlament (1)
- Evaluationsnutzung (1)
- Evaluationsverwendung (1)
- Evaluierung (1)
- Existentialismus (1)
- Experiment (1)
- Expertenautorität (1)
- Explanation (1)
- Fahrkompetenz (1)
- Fallstudie (1)
- Falsche Weiße Stängelbecherchen (1)
- Familienstand (1)
- Fatwas (1)
- Federalism (1)
- Feminism (1)
- Feministische Philosophie (1)
- Ferdinand von Schirach (1)
- Festschrift (1)
- Field Experiment (1)
- Filmbildung (1)
- Finalität (1)
- Finanz (1)
- Finanzen (1)
- Finanzrisiken (1)
- Finanzwissenschaften (1)
- Firm (1)
- Fisheries management (1)
- Fiskalausgleich (1)
- Fiskaltransfers (1)
- Folter (1)
- Formal organization (1)
- Formale Strukturen (1)
- Formen sozialer Identitätsbildung (1)
- Forschungsdatenzentrum (1)
- Forschungsdesign, kausale Perspektiven, Theorietest, x-zentriert, y-zentriert, Experimente (1)
- Fraktion (1)
- Frame Analyse; Französische Entwicklungsagentur (1)
- Frame Analysis (1)
- Frame-Analyse (1)
- Franco-Prussian War (1)
- Francs-tireurs (1)
- Frauenfreundlichkeit, Migrantenfreundlichkeit und Gleichheit der Teilhabe (1)
- Frauenrechte (1)
- Freiheit (1)
- Freiwilligenmanagement (1)
- French Development Agency (1)
- Friedenssicherung (1)
- Functional differentiation (1)
- Fähigkeiten (1)
- Führung (1)
- Führungskräfte-Mitarbeiter-Beziehung (1)
- G. Bingham Powell (1)
- G20 (1)
- GHG Protocol (1)
- GIZ (1)
- Gangsta-Rap (1)
- Geberharmonisierung (1)
- Geist (1)
- Gemeindem (1)
- Gender Mainstreaming (1)
- Gendered (1)
- Gendered Categorization (1)
- Generalisten (1)
- Geneva convention of 1864 (1)
- Geoinformationswesen (1)
- Geometric Data Analysis (1)
- Geometrische Datenanalyse (1)
- Georg Simmel (1)
- George W. Bush (1)
- Gerald Gaus (1)
- German Bundestag (1)
- German Greens (1)
- German armed forces (1)
- German development policy (1)
- German foreign policy (1)
- German literature (1)
- German rap (1)
- Geschichte 1999-2009 (1)
- Geschlechterforschung (1)
- Geschlechterkonstruktion (1)
- Geschlechterunterschiede (1)
- Geschlechtliche Kategorisierung (1)
- Gesetzesfolgenabschätzung (1)
- Gesundheitsmanagement (1)
- Gesundheitssoziologie (1)
- Ghana (1)
- Gipfelproteste (1)
- Girls' Love (1)
- Gleichgewicht der Kräfte (1)
- Gleichheitstheorie (1)
- Global Environmental Governance (1)
- Global Zero (1)
- Global comparison (1)
- Goffman (1)
- Governance-Analyse (1)
- Governance-Formen (1)
- Governmentality (1)
- Grenzen (1)
- Grenzziehungen von Arbeit (1)
- Grenzziehungsarbeit (1)
- Group of Twenty (1)
- Großprojekte (1)
- Grundrechte (1)
- Grundsteuer (1)
- Grüne (1)
- Habitus (1)
- Haiti (1)
- Hamburg (1)
- Handlungslogiken (1)
- Haushalt (1)
- Haushaltseinkommen (1)
- Haushaltsrecht (1)
- Hermeneutische Explikation (1)
- Herrschaft (1)
- Hessen (1)
- Heteronormativität (1)
- Higher Education (1)
- Higher Education Management (1)
- Historical Sociology (1)
- Hochschulen (1)
- Hochschulsteuerung (1)
- Holocaust (1)
- Horizontal Educational Inequality (1)
- Hostile-Media-Phenomenon (1)
- Hostile-Media-Phänomen (1)
- Household (1)
- Household data (1)
- Human Rights (1)
- Human Rights Violations (1)
- Human values (1)
- Hunger (1)
- Hybridity (1)
- Hybridität (1)
- Hydropower (1)
- Hymenoscyphus fraxineus (1)
- Hyogo (1)
- IASB accounting conceptual framework (1)
- IB-Konstruktivismus (1)
- Ideational power (1)
- Identität (1)
- Ideologie (1)
- Immigration Integration Policy (1)
- Impact Assessment (1)
- Imperialismus (1)
- Inclusion (1)
- Income (1)
- Independence (1)
- Index (1)
- Indicator (1)
- Indien (1)
- Indonesien (1)
- Inferenzstatistik (1)
- Informale Strukturen (1)
- Information (1)
- Informationsflüsse (1)
- Informationspflichten (1)
- Informationstechnik (1)
- Innovation (1)
- Innovation und soziale Sicherung (1)
- Institutional Complexity (1)
- Institutional entrepreneurship (1)
- Institutionalisierte Evaluationsverfahren (1)
- Institutionen (1)
- Inszenierung (1)
- Integration (1)
- Interaction (1)
- Interaktion (1)
- International (1)
- International Labour Organization (1)
- International Migration (1)
- International Politics (1)
- International Relations Theory (1)
- International climate negotiations (1)
- Internationale Migration (1)
- Internationale Politik (1)
- Intersektionalität (1)
- Investment (1)
- Irakisch-Kurdistan (1)
- Iran (1)
- Iraqi Kurdistan (1)
- Ironie (1)
- Islamism (1)
- Islamismus (1)
- Italian (1)
- Jahresabschlussanalyse (1)
- Japan (1)
- Jordan (1)
- Jordanien (1)
- Jugendkultur (1)
- Jugendliche (1)
- Kambodscha (1)
- Kapitalismus (1)
- Kapitalismuskritik (1)
- Kenia (1)
- Kenias öffentlicher Dienst (1)
- Kenya (1)
- Kenya public service (1)
- Klassik (1)
- Klima (1)
- Klimawandel (1)
- Koalition (1)
- Kohlenstoffintensität (1)
- Kolumbien (1)
- Kommunale Daseinsvorsorge (1)
- Kommunale Verwaltung (1)
- Kommunalpolitik (1)
- Kommunalreform (1)
- Komplexität (1)
- Komplexitätskapitulation (1)
- Kompromiss (1)
- Konkurrenz (1)
- Kontext (1)
- Koordination (1)
- Koordinierung (1)
- Korruption (1)
- Korruptionsrisiken (1)
- Kosovo (1)
- Krebsfrüherkennung (1)
- Krise (1)
- Kritik (1)
- Kräftedreieck (1)
- Kultur (1)
- Kulturwandel (1)
- Kyoto Protocol (1)
- LMX-Theorie (1)
- Labor Administration (1)
- Laclau (1)
- Landesbetrieb (1)
- Landesverfassung (1)
- Landtag (1)
- Landtage (1)
- Landwehr (1)
- Latein (1)
- Lateinamerika (1)
- Latin (1)
- Latin America (1)
- Leader-Member-Exchange (1)
- Lebensbedingungen (1)
- Leftism (1)
- Legislative process (1)
- Legislativer Konflikt (1)
- Legitimacy (1)
- Legitimation (1)
- Legitimization (1)
- Lehrevaluation (1)
- Leistungsinformationen verwenden (1)
- Leistungsmanagement (1)
- Leistungsrückmeldung (1)
- Lesotho (1)
- Level Differentiation (1)
- Lieferkettengesetz (1)
- Lifetime income (1)
- Linksextremismus (1)
- Lisa Smirl (1)
- Lisbon Treaty (1)
- Local Governance (1)
- Lokale Demokratie (1)
- Lokalsteuern (1)
- Longitudinal and panel data (1)
- Low- and middle-income countries (1)
- Länder (1)
- Längsschnittstudie (1)
- Machtkampf (1)
- Makro-Mikro-Makro-Modell (1)
- Malnutrition (1)
- Management (1)
- Management control (1)
- Managementroutinen (1)
- Managerialism (1)
- Marine environmental management (1)
- Market integration (1)
- Marokko (1)
- Matching (1)
- Max Weber (1)
- Mayoralty (1)
- Meaning Structure (1)
- Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (1)
- Media (1)
- Medienbildung (1)
- Meeres-Governance (1)
- Mehrebenenanalyse (1)
- Meinungsklima (1)
- Menschenrechtsverletzungen (1)
- Mercantilism (1)
- Methoden (1)
- Methodenstreit (1)
- Methodologie (1)
- Methodology (1)
- Methods (1)
- Migrantensport (1)
- Militär (1)
- Minderheiten (1)
- Minijobs (1)
- Minister (1)
- Ministerial bureaucracy (1)
- Ministerialverwaltung/Estland (1)
- Mitbestimmung (1)
- Mittel- und Osteuropa (1)
- Mixed strategy (1)
- Modellierung (1)
- Modelling (1)
- Monetary Fund (1)
- Moralische Intuition (1)
- Morocco (1)
- Motivation (1)
- Multilevel system (1)
- Multiple Correspondence Analysis (1)
- Multiple Korrespondenzanalyse (1)
- Multiple Modernities (1)
- Multivariate cointegration (1)
- Municipal Administrative Reform (1)
- Municipal Politics (1)
- Muslim women (1)
- NATO / Schnelle Eingreiftruppe (1)
- Narration (1)
- Narrationen (1)
- Narrationen im Politikunterricht (1)
- National Socialism (1)
- Nationalsozialismus (1)
- Neo-Institutionalismus (1)
- Neo-institutionalismus (1)
- Neoliberalism (1)
- Neoliberalism Populism theoretical framework (1)
- Neoliberalismus (1)
- Network Analysis (1)
- Network analysis (1)
- Netzausbau (1)
- Netzwerk (1)
- Neubaugebiet (1)
- New South Wales (1)
- New institutionalism (1)
- Nicht-Beherrschung (1)
- Nicht-ideale Theorie (1)
- Nichtverbreitung von Kernwaffen (1)
- Niederlande (1)
- Nigeria (1)
- Nordrhein-Westfalen (1)
- Normalisierung (1)
- Normalization (1)
- Nuclear Weapons (1)
- Nuclear non-proliferation (1)
- Nuklearwaffen (1)
- Objectivation (1)
- Objektivierung (1)
- Occupational Statistics (1)
- Ontologie (1)
- Opposition (1)
- Organisation (1)
- Organisationales Lernen (1)
- Organisationsreform (1)
- Organisationssoziologie (1)
- Organizational change (1)
- Organizational innovation (1)
- Organizational learning (1)
- Organizations and society (1)
- Paradigm (1)
- Paradigma (1)
- Parliamentary Administrations (1)
- Parliaments (1)
- Partei (1)
- Parteiensystem (1)
- Partial organization (1)
- Peer-to-peer (1)
- Perceived socioeconomic status (1)
- Performance management (1)
- Performanz von Gesellschaften im internationalen Vergleich (1)
- Permanent income (1)
- Person Categories (1)
- Personalbedarfsplanung (1)
- Personalmanagement (1)
- Pflegekonferenzen (1)
- Philosophical perspectives (1)
- Philosophie (1)
- Philosophy (1)
- Pluralistic ignorance (1)
- Pluralistische Ignoranz (1)
- Polaritätsprofil (1)
- Policy advice (1)
- Policy coordination (1)
- Political Governance (1)
- Political Inclusion (1)
- Political System (1)
- Political economy Socio-economic development (1)
- Political sociology (1)
- Politics of childhood (1)
- Politikberatung (1)
- Politikdidaktik (1)
- Politikdidaktische Potenziale (1)
- Politikdiffusion (1)
- Politikempfehlungen (1)
- Politikevaluation (1)
- Politikfeldanalyse (1)
- Politikgestaltung (1)
- Politiknetzwerke (1)
- Politikpräferenzen (1)
- Politiktransfer (1)
- Politikverdrossenheit (1)
- Politische Bildung (1)
- Politische Herrschaft (1)
- Politisierung (1)
- Polizeireform (1)
- Populism (1)
- Populism restated (1)
- Populismus (1)
- Post-bureaucracy (1)
- Postfeminismus (1)
- Potsdamer Toleranzedikt (1)
- Power (1)
- Practice turn (1)
- Pragmatismus (1)
- Praxis (1)
- Praxisrelevanz (1)
- President (1)
- President Trump (1)
- Presidents (1)
- Prime Minister's Office (1)
- Privacy (1)
- Privatwirtschaft (1)
- Privileged Partnership (1)
- Privilegierte Partnerschaft (1)
- Processes (1)
- Procurement (1)
- Profession (1)
- Professionalisierung (1)
- Professionalisierung der Stadträte (1)
- Project management (1)
- Projektmanagement (1)
- Protest (1)
- Protest Parties (1)
- Protest Policing (1)
- Protestforschung (1)
- Protestparteien (1)
- Prozessanalyse (1)
- Präferenzen (1)
- Public Broadcasters (1)
- Public Service Motivation (1)
- Public sector (1)
- Public-private partnerships (1)
- Punctuated Equilibrium Theory (1)
- Purchasing panel data (1)
- Qualitative Sozialforschung (1)
- Qualitative enquiry (1)
- Quality Assurance (1)
- Quality assurance (1)
- Quality-Measurement (1)
- Qualität des Projektmanagements (1)
- Qualitätsmanagement (1)
- Qualitätssicherung (1)
- Quartiersrat (1)
- Queerfeminismus (1)
- Querfrontbildung (1)
- REDD (1)
- Ragtime (1)
- Raimund Krämer (1)
- Randomized controlled trial (1)
- Ranking (1)
- Rapper (1)
- Rapperin (1)
- Rassendiskriminierung (1)
- Rational-Choice (1)
- Rationalität (1)
- Rechenschaftspflicht (1)
- Rechtfertigungsordnung (1)
- Rechtsetzung (1)
- Rechtsextremismus (1)
- Rechtsradikalismus (1)
- Reduktionismus (1)
- Reform des Öffentlichen Dienstes (1)
- Reformen (1)
- Regeln (1)
- Regierung (1)
- Regierungsfähigkeit (1)
- Regierungsstabilität (1)
- Regierungszentrale (1)
- Regional states (1)
- Regionale Identität (1)
- Regionalisierung (1)
- Regionalökonometrie (1)
- Regionalökonomie (1)
- Regulierungspolitik (1)
- Regulierungsreform (1)
- Rekonstruktion (1)
- Religionsfreiheit (1)
- Renewable energy (1)
- Repräsentation (1)
- Republikanismus (1)
- Reputation der Geber (1)
- Residential energy demand (1)
- Ressourcenmodell (1)
- Results-Based Management (1)
- Rezension (1)
- Risikoauferlegung (1)
- Rockmusik (1)
- Rohstoffe (1)
- Rohstoffpolitik (1)
- Role of science (1)
- Romania (1)
- Rumänien (1)
- Russia (1)
- Russia and Eurasia (1)
- SDG 11 (1)
- SKM Bürger (1)
- STATT Partei (1)
- STATT Party (1)
- Sachsen (1)
- Sachsen-Anhalt (1)
- Scheidung (1)
- Schill (1)
- Schulleiter (1)
- Schulleiterwirksamkeit (1)
- Schulleitung (1)
- Schülerorientierung (1)
- Scientific Writing (1)
- Secret society of torturers (1)
- Sektor Staat (1)
- Sekundärprävention (1)
- Selbstregulierung (1)
- Self-disclosure (1)
- Senegal (1)
- Sequencing (1)
- Serene Khader (1)
- Shari'a (1)
- Sicherheitspolitik (1)
- Simmel (1)
- Slovakia (1)
- Slowakei (1)
- Social (1)
- Social Differentiation (1)
- Social Inequality (1)
- Social Structure (1)
- Social Unequality (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 knowledge approach to discourse (1)
- Sociology of social facts (1)
- South Africa (1)
- South Asia (1)
- Soziale Integration und Befähigung zur Autonomie (1)
- Soziale Ungleichheit (1)
- Sozialgeschichte (1)
- Sozialpolitik (1)
- Sozialstruktur (1)
- Sozialstruktur der Bundesrepublik (1)
- Sozialstrukturen (1)
- Soziologie (1)
- Spielfilme im Unterricht (1)
- Spirit (1)
- Spitzenbeamte (1)
- Sport (1)
- Sportsoziologie (1)
- Sportverein (1)
- Staatenlosigkeit (1)
- Staatsbürgerschaft (1)
- Staatskunst (1)
- Stadt (1)
- Stadtbürgerschaft (1)
- Stadtrat (1)
- Stadtsoziologie (1)
- Stadtverordnetenversammlung (1)
- Stadtwerke Potsdam GmbH (1)
- Stadtwerke Wolfhagen GmbH (1)
- Stakeholder involvement typology (1)
- Statelessness (1)
- Statistical technologies of ordering (1)
- Statistik öffentlicher Unternehmen (1)
- Statistische Ordnungstechniken (1)
- Steam coal (1)
- Stellenbesetzungsrichtlinie (1)
- Strategie (1)
- Strausberg (1)
- Street-level bureaucrats (1)
- Studentenbewegung (1)
- Sub-national (1)
- Sucht (1)
- Suedlink (1)
- Super Girl (1)
- Supreme audit institutions (1)
- Survey Research Methods (1)
- Sustainability (1)
- Sustainability science (1)
- Sustainable Development (1)
- Switzerland (1)
- Symbolic capital (1)
- Symbolisches Kapital (1)
- System (1)
- System Dynamics (1)
- Systemisches Risiko (1)
- Systems theory (1)
- Szenario (1)
- Säkularisierung (1)
- Südafrika (1)
- Südlink (1)
- TAM (1)
- TOP-Guidelines (1)
- TRC (1)
- TV Umbau (1)
- Technikentwicklung (1)
- Technological change (1)
- Terrorismus (1)
- Terroristenfinanzierung (1)
- Theorie der Integration moderner Gesellschaften (1)
- Theorie-Praxis-Problem (1)
- Theory of social fields (1)
- Third-Person-Perception (1)
- Third-Person-Wahrnehmung (1)
- Thomas theorem (1)
- Thomas-Theorem (1)
- Toleranz (1)
- Torture (1)
- Transatlantische Beziehungen (1)
- Transformationsprozesse (1)
- Transformative research (1)
- Transitional Justice (1)
- Transitions (1)
- Translation (1)
- Translationstheorie (1)
- Transnational governance (1)
- Transnational networks (1)
- Transnationalization (1)
- Transtional Justice (1)
- Trennung (1)
- Trust (1)
- Truth Commissions (1)
- Truth- and Reconciliation Commission (1)
- Turkish migrant organisations (1)
- Twinning (1)
- Tätigkeiten (1)
- Türkei (1)
- Türkische Vereine (1)
- UN-REDD (1)
- UNFCCC (1)
- US foreign policy (1)
- US-Außenpolitik (1)
- Ukraine (1)
- Umweltperformanz (1)
- Unilateralismus (1)
- United Nations (1)
- Universalismus (1)
- Upward Mobility (1)
- Urban politics (1)
- Validity (1)
- Validität (1)
- Velayate Faqih (1)
- Vereinte Nationen (1)
- Verfassungsentstehung und -änderung (1)
- Verfassungsgerichtsbarkeit (1)
- Verfassungsprinzipien (1)
- Verschwindenlassen (1)
- Versorgungsforschung (1)
- Verwaltungslehre (1)
- Verwaltungsmodelle (1)
- Verwaltungsorganisation (1)
- Verwaltungsreformen (1)
- Vetopunkte (1)
- Vetospieler (1)
- Videoüberwachung (1)
- Vietnamese (1)
- Vietnamesen (1)
- Voluntary global business initiatives (1)
- Vormärz (1)
- Vorschule (1)
- Wahl (1)
- Wahlkampffinanzierung (1)
- Wahrheits- und Versöhnungs Kommission (1)
- Wahrheitskommissionen (1)
- Wasserentwicklungszusammenarbeit (1)
- Weber (1)
- Welt (1)
- Wirksamkeit der Entwicklungszusammenarbeit (1)
- Wirksamkeit von Entwicklungszusammenarbeit (1)
- Wirkungsorientiertes Management (1)
- Wirtschaft (1)
- Wirtschaftskrise (1)
- Wissenschaftspolitik (1)
- Wissensmanagement (1)
- Wissenssoziologie (1)
- Wissenssoziologische Diskursanalyse (1)
- Wohlfahrtsmärkte (1)
- Wohlfahrtsstaatsforschung (1)
- Wohlstand und ökologische Nachhaltigkeit (1)
- World Bank (1)
- World Health Organization (1)
- Zielsteuerung (1)
- Zieltheorie (1)
- Zoomania (1)
- Zootopia (1)
- Zootropolis (1)
- Zusammenarbeit in Sicherheitsfragen (1)
- Zweigeschlechtlichkeit (1)
- Zweigeschlechtlichkeitssystem (1)
- acceptance (1)
- acknowledgements (1)
- acteurs non-étatiques (1)
- action theory (1)
- activation (1)
- actor interplay (1)
- administración pública (1)
- administration publique (1)
- administrative burdens (1)
- administrative reform (1)
- administrative reforms (1)
- adolescents (1)
- affective communication (1)
- affiliation networks (1)
- age structure (1)
- agenda setting (1)
- agent-based modeling (1)
- agentes no estatales (1)
- agricultural policy (1)
- aid effectiveness (1)
- aid worker (1)
- al-Qaeda (1)
- alternative regulation (1)
- altruism (1)
- analysis of efficiency (1)
- anniversary issue (1)
- anthropocene (1)
- antifeminism (1)
- antigenderism (1)
- application (1)
- appreciation of the opposite sex (1)
- arms control (1)
- attributional theory (1)
- ausländische Studierende in Deutschland (1)
- authoritarian regimes (1)
- authoritarian resilience (1)
- authority (1)
- automated text analysis (1)
- autoritäre Regime (1)
- balance of power (1)
- battlefield tourism (1)
- better regulation (1)
- big data (1)
- biology (1)
- blind feeling (1)
- borders (1)
- boundary-work (1)
- buraucratisation (1)
- bureaucracy (1)
- bureaucratic politics (1)
- bureaucraties internationales (1)
- burocracias internacionales (1)
- capabilities framework (1)
- capitalism critic (1)
- carbon intensity (1)
- carbon pricing (1)
- care conferences (1)
- categorization (1)
- caudillismo (1)
- causal inference (1)
- causal perspectives (1)
- causes of effects (1)
- child asylum-seekers (1)
- childcare (1)
- childrearing practices (1)
- cities (1)
- citizen services (1)
- citizens (1)
- citizenship (1)
- civic culture (1)
- civic participation (1)
- civil service reform (1)
- civil service survey (1)
- civil war (1)
- civilsociety (1)
- climate (1)
- climate change mitigation (1)
- climate change policy (1)
- climate finance (1)
- climate politics (1)
- climate regime (1)
- cluster analysis (1)
- co-ordination (1)
- coalition (1)
- coercion (1)
- collective identity (1)
- collective memory (1)
- collective violence (1)
- command-and-control regulation (1)
- committee governance (1)
- comparative environmental politics (1)
- comparison (1)
- complex majoritarianism (1)
- complex polis (1)
- complexity (1)
- complexity capitulation (1)
- computer-assisted text analysis (1)
- concentrating solar power (1)
- concept of the political (1)
- conceptualization (1)
- conduct of life (1)
- conflict knowledge (1)
- connective action (1)
- connectivism (1)
- constellations of actors (1)
- constitutions (1)
- construction of gender (1)
- consumption (1)
- content analysis (1)
- contingent encounters (1)
- contrastive empiricism (1)
- conventional donors (1)
- core executive (1)
- corruption (1)
- crisis management (1)
- criticism of social psychology (1)
- cross-border networks in health care (1)
- cultural change (1)
- cultural diversity (1)
- culturally responsive education (1)
- data protection (1)
- de-concentration (1)
- decentralisation (1)
- decision (1)
- decision making (1)
- decision processes (1)
- decision theory (1)
- decomposition (1)
- definition (1)
- democratic quality (1)
- demographic policy (1)
- deployment (1)
- der neueste Geist des Kapitalismus (1)
- deregulation (1)
- design options (1)
- development aid India (1)
- development and security (1)
- development assistance (1)
- dictionary (1)
- difference-in-difference (1)
- digital learning (1)
- digital overload (1)
- digitale Transformation (1)
- digitisation (1)
- discipline differences (1)
- discretion (1)
- discrimination (1)
- discussion (1)
- dispatchable renewable electricity (1)
- divorce (1)
- divorced women (1)
- domestic politics (1)
- domestic work (1)
- domination (1)
- donor harmonization (1)
- donor reputation (1)
- doppelte Staatsbürgerschaft (1)
- dossier (1)
- dritte förderale Ebene (1)
- drivers (1)
- driving competence (1)
- dynamic capabilities (1)
- e-learning (1)
- early detection of cancer (1)
- earth system governance (1)
- ecological modernization (1)
- economic crisis (1)
- economic usage in admistration (1)
- edict (1)
- educational aspirations (1)
- educational success (1)
- effectiveness (1)
- effects of causes (1)
- egoism (1)
- emotional geography (1)
- empirical implications of theoretical models (1)
- empirical research (1)
- empirisch (1)
- employment policies (1)
- enabling legislation (1)
- energy decarbonization (1)
- energy efficiency (1)
- energy intensity (1)
- energy policy (1)
- energy system modeling (1)
- energy transition (1)
- energy turnaround (1)
- energy-system (1)
- enlargement (1)
- environmental degradation (1)
- environmental policy effects (1)
- environmental policy performance (1)
- environmental treaties (1)
- equality policy (1)
- equity theory (1)
- essay (1)
- evaluation (1)
- evaluation use (1)
- evaluation utilization (1)
- evidence-based policy (1)
- excessive instrumental reasoning (1)
- executive personalism (1)
- executive-legislative relations (1)
- expectations (1)
- expert authority (1)
- expert survey (1)
- extremism (1)
- family dissolution (1)
- family policies (1)
- family workers (1)
- fan community (1)
- fan fiction (1)
- feature films in class (1)
- female (1)
- female rapper (1)
- feminism (1)
- field trips (1)
- film education (1)
- finance (1)
- financial solidarity (1)
- financial statement analysis (1)
- fiscal administration (1)
- fiscal transfers (1)
- fluctuation (1)
- food security governance (1)
- forecasting (1)
- foreign students in Germany (1)
- formal structures (1)
- formale Modelle (1)
- fragile and conflict-affected states (1)
- fragile und konfliktbeladene Staaten (1)
- frame-analysis (1)
- framework (1)
- functions of Presidency (1)
- gangsta rap (1)
- gender belief system (1)
- gender beliefs (1)
- gender differences (1)
- gender inequality (1)
- gender studies (1)
- gendered boundaries (1)
- genderqueer (1)
- generalists (1)
- generalizability (1)
- geodetic survey and spatial data (1)
- geschiedene Frauen (1)
- global (1)
- global climate governance (1)
- global commons (1)
- global governance (1)
- global negotiations (1)
- goal theory (1)
- governance analysis (1)
- governance forms (1)
- government (1)
- government formation (1)
- government policymaking (1)
- government stability (1)
- government-formation (1)
- great powers (1)
- green growth (1)
- habitus (1)
- haushaltsnahe Dienstleistung (1)
- head of state (1)
- headmaster (1)
- health care management (1)
- health networks (1)
- health services research (1)
- health sociology (1)
- hegemoniale Männlichkeit (1)
- hegemonic masculinity (1)
- herkömmliche Geber (1)
- heterogeneous treatment effects (1)
- heteronormativity (1)
- heterosoziale Wertschätzung (1)
- high-voltage direct current transmission lines (1)
- household income (1)
- household services (1)
- housing estate (1)
- huella ecológica (1)
- human resources management (1)
- human rights (1)
- humanitarian organisations (1)
- humanitarianism; (1)
- ideal types (1)
- ideological congruence (1)
- ideology (1)
- impact assessment (1)
- implementation measures (1)
- inclusion/exclusion (1)
- incremental reform (1)
- indigene Völker (1)
- indigenous peoples (1)
- industry development (1)
- informal structures (1)
- information flow (1)
- information technology (1)
- innocence (1)
- innovation adoption (1)
- inscenation (1)
- institutional changes (1)
- institutional interplay (1)
- institutional reform (1)
- institutionelle Komplexität (1)
- institutions (1)
- inter-organizational order (1)
- inter-organizational relations (1)
- interdepartmental committee (1)
- interest group (1)
- interministerielle Arbeitsgruppe (1)
- internal goods (1)
- internal/external locus of control development (1)
- international cooperation (1)
- international institutions (1)
- international law (1)
- international organizations; food security governance; inter-organizational relations; overlap; perception (1)
- international security (1)
- international trade (1)
- internationale Institutionen (1)
- internationale Organisationen (1)
- internationale Verwaltungen (1)
- internationale Zusammenarbeit (1)
- internationaler Vergleich von: Gesellschaften (1)
- intersectionality (1)
- irony (1)
- irregular Migration (1)
- irreguläre Migration (1)
- job autonomy (1)
- job satisfaction (1)
- juku (1)
- knowledge management (1)
- knowledge transfer and expertise (1)
- kollektive Identität (1)
- kollektive Zuschreibungen (1)
- kollektives Gedächtnis (1)
- kommunal (1)
- komplexe Polis (1)
- kulturelle Diversität (1)
- kultursensitive Bildung (1)
- labelling processes (1)
- labor market (1)
- labour-market (1)
- land use (1)
- law-making (1)
- lawmaking (1)
- leaders in ministries (1)
- lebensweltliche Erfahrungen (1)
- legislative conflict (1)
- legislative studies (1)
- legislatures (1)
- levee en masse (1)
- levelized cost (1)
- life-world experiences (1)
- lifestyle (1)
- liminality (1)
- living conditions (1)
- local NGOs (1)
- local affairs (1)
- local identity (1)
- logics of actions (1)
- lokale Nichtregierungsorganisationen (1)
- long-term care (1)
- long-term policy (1)
- longitudinal study (1)
- low wage sector (1)
- low-wage employment (1)
- macro-micro-macro-model (1)
- macroeconomic models (1)
- majority rule (1)
- male rapper (1)
- management by objectives (1)
- management routines (1)
- marine governance (1)
- marital status (1)
- marketization (1)
- markets (1)
- matching (1)
- mattering (1)
- measurement (1)
- measurement error (1)
- media (1)
- media literacy (1)
- methodological collectivism (1)
- methodological individualism (1)
- methodologischer Individualismus (1)
- methodologischer Kollektivismus (1)
- micro politics (1)
- micropolitics (1)
- migrant sport clubs (1)
- military (1)
- ministerielle Führungskräfte (1)
- ministry of agriculture (1)
- minorities (1)
- mixed methods (1)
- modernity (1)
- modernización ecológica (1)
- modernization (1)
- monopoly of legitimate use of force (1)
- moral philosophy (1)
- moral sociology (1)
- motivation (1)
- motivation crowding (1)
- mots clés (1)
- multi level system (1)
- multilateralism (1)
- multilevel analysis (1)
- multiple correspondence analysis (1)
- multiple modernities (1)
- municipal government (1)
- muslimische Frauen (1)
- myth of Franktireurkrieg (1)
- national ecological footprint (1)
- national ministries (1)
- nationale Ministerien (1)
- neo-institutionalism (1)
- neoliberalism (1)
- network (1)
- neue Geber (1)
- new donors (1)
- nicht-binäre Geschlechtsidentität (1)
- non-binary (1)
- non-national students (1)
- non-probability samples (1)
- non-targeted SNS activities (1)
- nonprobability sampling (1)
- nonprofit (1)
- nonstate actors (1)
- norm of reciprocity (1)
- nuclear non-proliferation treaty (1)
- on-site visits (1)
- ontology (1)
- opposition (1)
- order of justification (1)
- order transition (1)
- organisation of administration (1)
- organisations internationales (1)
- organizaciones internacionales (1)
- organization (1)
- organization theory (1)
- organizational capabilities (1)
- organizational changes (1)
- organizational fields (1)
- organizational reform (1)
- organizational reputation (1)
- palabras clave (1)
- panel data (1)
- parental leave (1)
- parenthood (1)
- parliament (1)
- parliamentarians (1)
- parliamentary democracy (1)
- participatory budget (1)
- peacekeeping (1)
- performance (1)
- performance appraisals (1)
- performance feedback (1)
- performance information use (1)
- performance management (1)
- performance measurement (1)
- performance pay (1)
- performance rating (1)
- performance-related pay (1)
- personality (1)
- personnel policy (1)
- photovoltaics (1)
- planetary boundaries (1)
- police reform (1)
- policy advice (1)
- policy agendas (1)
- policy analysis (1)
- policy competition (1)
- policy cycle (1)
- policy diffusion (1)
- policy dismantling (1)
- policy networks (1)
- policy output (1)
- policy preferences (1)
- policy-evaluation (1)
- policy-making (1)
- political System Israel (1)
- political didactics potentials (1)
- political disenchantment (1)
- political economics (1)
- political education (1)
- political participation (1)
- political parties (1)
- political processes (1)
- politicisation (1)
- politische Partizipation (1)
- politische Soziologie (1)
- politische Ökonomie (1)
- politisches System Israel (1)
- política ambiental comparada (1)
- population marketing (1)
- populism (1)
- postfeminism (1)
- poverty (1)
- power struggles (1)
- power-system (1)
- practical driving (1)
- practice (1)
- pragmatism (1)
- praktische Fahrerlaubnisprüfung (1)
- praxeology (1)
- prediction (1)
- preferences (1)
- preschool (1)
- prestige (1)
- principal (1)
- privacy (1)
- private sector (1)
- process tracing (1)
- professionalization (1)
- project management quality (1)
- property tax (1)
- prozessuale Erklärung (1)
- public (1)
- public administration reform (1)
- public economics (1)
- public justification (1)
- public organizations (1)
- public sector (1)
- public sector innovation (1)
- public service delivery (1)
- public services (1)
- public utilities (1)
- public-reason liberalism (1)
- qualitative Fallstudie (1)
- qualitative case study (1)
- qualitative research (1)
- qualitative study (1)
- qualititative Studie (1)
- quality management (1)
- qualité de vie au travail (1)
- quantitative research (1)
- race relations (1)
- racial discrimintion (1)
- racism (1)
- ratification (1)
- rational choice theory (1)
- real options (1)
- reanalysis (1)
- recall accuracy (1)
- reciprocity (1)
- reconciliation work and family (1)
- reductionism (1)
- regional economics (1)
- regional equity (1)
- regional organizations (1)
- regionalisation (1)
- regulación estatal (1)
- regulation (1)
- regulations (1)
- regulatory reform (1)
- religious change (1)
- religious groups (1)
- religiöse Gruppen (1)
- religiöser Wandel (1)
- renewable energy (1)
- representation (1)
- research (1)
- research data centre (1)
- research design (1)
- retention (1)
- retrospective questions (1)
- review (1)
- revolution (1)
- rewards (1)
- rules (1)
- scaling method (1)
- scenario (1)
- school achievement (1)
- school effectiveness (1)
- school management (1)
- science policy (1)
- science-policy interactions (1)
- scientific writing (1)
- secondary prevention (1)
- secularization (1)
- security cooperation (1)
- self-regulation (1)
- self-selection (1)
- self-sufficiency (1)
- semantic differential (1)
- sensation (1)
- sensory experience (1)
- sentiment analysis (1)
- separation (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 acceptance (1)
- social and environmental administration (1)
- social development (1)
- social functional approach to positive emotions (1)
- social identity formation (1)
- social integration (1)
- social origin (1)
- social position and status (1)
- social structures (1)
- social strucure of Germany ; international comparison of: societies (1)
- socialization conditions (1)
- sociology of social forms (1)
- soziale Akzeptanz (1)
- soziale Entwicklung (1)
- soziale Herkunft (1)
- soziale Integration (1)
- soziale Lagen (1)
- spaces of aid (1)
- spatial econometrics (1)
- sport (1)
- sport club (1)
- sport sociology (1)
- staff turnover (1)
- stakeholder involvement concepts (1)
- state parliament (1)
- state-owned companies (1)
- statistical categorization (1)
- statistics (1)
- statistics of the state-owned companies (1)
- statistiques (1)
- storage (1)
- strategic management (1)
- strategy (1)
- street-Level bureaucrats (1)
- strong structuration theory (SST) (1)
- subjective well-being (1)
- subnational authorities (1)
- survival analysis (1)
- sustainability science (1)
- sustainable development (1)
- sustainable investment (1)
- symbolic boundaries (1)
- symbolic representation (1)
- system (1)
- system theory (1)
- tasks (1)
- tax administration (1)
- technical progress (1)
- technological change (1)
- technological learning (1)
- technology acceptance (1)
- technology development (1)
- technology-mediated teaching (1)
- term limits (1)
- terrorism (1)
- terrorist behavior (1)
- terrorist finance (1)
- the newest spirit of capitalism (1)
- theory of social integration (1)
- theory test (1)
- theory testing (1)
- thermal energy storage (1)
- three-tier approach (1)
- tolerance (1)
- top bureaucrats (1)
- trade (1)
- translation theory (1)
- transmission grid (1)
- transnational actors (1)
- transnational governance arrangements (1)
- transnormative sociology (1)
- transposition (1)
- treadmill of production (1)
- unilateralism (1)
- university teaching (1)
- unqual power (1)
- urban riots (1)
- urban sociology (1)
- urban sustainability (1)
- utility-scale batteries (1)
- validity (1)
- value chain analysis (1)
- varieties of capitalism (1)
- vertrackte Probleme (1)
- veto player theory (1)
- veto players (1)
- violence (1)
- volunteer management (1)
- volunteering (1)
- water development aid (1)
- welfare state (1)
- welfare state retrenchment (1)
- wicked problems (1)
- wind (1)
- women's rights (1)
- wondering (1)
- word embeddings (1)
- work (1)
- work-family policies (1)
- working hours (1)
- working time (1)
- zeitliche Belastung von Verordneten (1)
- § 26 LHO (1)
- § 26 of budget laws (1)
- Öffentliche Unternehmen (1)
- Überforderung (1)
- Überlegungsgleichgewicht (1)
- öffentliche Leistungen (1)
Institut
- Sozialwissenschaften (1883) (entfernen)
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.
In this paper, we show how socialist planning can be based on input-output data. We argue that the information required for this can be obtained by a central planning agency and thus dismiss Hayek’s information argument against socialism. We further show how economic planning can be made responsive to consumer demand through a feedback control mechanism. Output targets of products would be adjusted in response to observed consumer demand or based on predictions about future demand. Planners can use machine learning to make more accurate forecasts. The valuation of goods plays an important role in the feedback control mechanism. The values of goods can either be measured by the labour time necessary for their production (labour values) or through shadow prices based on linear programming.
Reply and Counter-Reply
(2023)
This article responds to critical reflections on my Beyond Presidentialism and Parliamentarism by Sarah Birch, Kevin J. Elliott, Claudia Landwehr and James L. Wilson. It discusses how different types of representative democracy, especially different forms of government (presidential, parliamentary or hybrid), can be justified. It clarifies, among other things, the distinction between procedural and process equality, the strengths of semi-parliamentary government, the potential instability of constitutional designs, and the difference that theories can make in actual processes of constitutional reform.
Review symposium
(2023)
Steffen Ganghof’s Beyond Presidentialism and Parliamentarism: Democratic Design and the Separation of Powers (Oxford University Press, 2021) posits that “in a democracy, a constitutional separation of powers between the executive and the assembly may be desirable, but the constitutional concentration of executive power in a single human being is not” (Ganghof, 2021). To consider, examine and theorise about this, Ganghof urges engagement with semi-parliamentarism. As explained by Ganghof, legislative power is shared between two democratically legitimate sections of parliament in a semi-parliamentary system, but only one of those sections selects the government and can remove it in a no-confidence vote. Consequently, power is dispersed and not concentrated in the hands of any one person, which, Ganghof argues, can lead to an enhanced form of parliamentary democracy. In this book review symposium, George Tsebelis, Michael Thies, José Antonio Cheibub, Rosalind Dixon and Daniel Bogéa review Steffen Ganghof’s book and engage with the author about aspects of research design, case selection and theoretical argument. This symposium arose from an engaging and constructive discussion of the book at a seminar hosted by Texas A&M University in 2022. We thank Prof José Cheibub (Texas A&M) for organising that seminar and Dr Anna Fruhstorfer (University of Potsdam) for initiating this book review symposium.
Der Beitrag widmet sich zwei überaus fruchtbaren theoretischen Ansätzen in der Policy-Forschung und darüber hinaus: der Vetospielertheorie und Vetopunkt-Ansätzen. Neben den Grundzügen beider Ansätze stellen wir grundlegende Entwicklungslinien und Probleme dieser Literaturen anhand beispielhafter Studien dar. Es zeigt sich, dass beide Ansätze teils kontroverse Annahmen treffen, zu denen es plausible Alternativen gibt. Zum Beispiel kann das Verhalten von Koalitionsparteien im Policy-Prozess anders als von der Vetospielertheorie angenommen modelliert werden. Die kausalen Effekte bestimmter Institutionen oder Vetopunkte können zudem je nach Kontext variieren. Diesem Kontext sollte größere Beachtung geschenkt werden.
In recent years, governments have increased their efforts to strengthen the citizen-orientation in policy design. They have established temporary arenas as well as permanent units inside the machinery of government to integrate citizens into policy formulation, leading to a “laboratorization” of central government organizations. We argue that the evolution and role of these units herald new dynamics in the importance of organizational reputation for executive politics. These actors deviate from the classic palette of organizational units inside the machinery of government and thus require their own reputation vis-à-vis various audiences within and outside their parent organization. Based on a comparative case study of two of these units inside the German federal bureaucracy, we show how ambiguous expectations of their audiences challenge their organizational reputation. Both units resolve these tensions by balancing their weaker professional and procedural reputation with a stronger performative and moral reputation. We conclude that government units aiming to improve citizen orientation in policy design may benefit from engaging with citizens as their external audience to compensate for a weaker reputation in the eyes of their audiences inside the government organization. Points for practitioners: many governments have introduced novel means to strengthen citizen-centered policy design, which has led to an emergence of novel units inside central government that differ from traditional bureaucratic structures and procedures ; this study analyzes how these new units may build their organizational reputation vis-à-vis internal and external actors in government policymaking. ; we show that such units assert themselves primarily based on their performative and moral reputation.
Worldwide, governments have introduced novel information and communication technologies (ICTs) for policy formulation and service delivery, radically changing the working environment of government employees. Following the debate on work stress and particularly on technostress, we argue that the use of ICTs triggers “digital overload” that decreases government employees’ job satisfaction via inhibiting their job autonomy. Contrary to prior research, we consider job autonomy as a consequence rather than a determinant of digital overload, because ICT-use accelerates work routines and interruptions and eventually diminishes employees’ freedom to decide how to work. Based on novel survey data from government employees in Germany, Italy, and Norway, our structural equation modeling (SEM) confirms a significant negative effect of digital overload on job autonomy. More importantly, job autonomy partially mediates the negative relationship between digital overload and job satisfaction, pointing to the importance of studying the micro-foundations of ICT-use in the public sector.
Creativity is a crucial part of policy capacity in governments. Existing studies on creative behavior in the public sector assess employees' openness to new ideas and creative solutions, and they confirm the relevance of organizational and individual determinants for pro-creativity attitudes. Yet we lack systemic evidence on the explicit level of work-related creativity among policy officials in government organizations. At the same time, novel technologies and particularly social networking services change the working environment of policy officials radically, alter organizational features, and may also yield crucial individual effects. Our study analyses “policy creativity” of policy officials in three European governments. We demonstrate the importance of organizational and individual features, including the stress triggered by using social networking services. Our study captures officials' creativity explicitly and adds to debates on creativity and innovation in the public sector as well as the micro-level foundations of the digital transformation in the public sector.
Structural duration conveys stability but also resilience in central government and is therefore a key issue in the debate on the structure and organization of government. This paper discusses three core variants of structural duration to study the explanatory relevance of politics. We compare these durations across ministerialunits in four European democracies (Germany, France, The Netherlands, and Norway) from 1980 to 2013, totaling over 17,000 units. Our empirical analyses show that cabinets’ ideological turnover and extremism are the most significant predictors of all variants of duration, whereas polarization in parliament as well as new prime ministers without office experience yield the predicted significant negative effects for most models. We discuss these findings and avenues for futureresearch that acknowledge the definition and measures for structural change as well as temporal aspects of the empirical phenomenon more explicitly.
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.
SNS Democracy Council 2023
(2023)
Transboundary problems such as climate change, military conflicts, trade barriers, and refugee flows require increased collaboration across borders. This is to a large extent possible using existing international organizations. In such a case, however, they need to be considerably strengthened – while current trends take us in the opposite direction, according to the researchers in the SNS Democracy Council 2023.
Eskalation
(2023)
Die Ereignisse um den G20-Gipfel im Juli 2017 haben viele Menschen schockiert und die Hamburger Stadtgesellschaft gespalten. Sie stehen in starkem Kontrast zu dem Sicherheitsversprechen, das der Senat im Vorfeld abgegeben hat, ebenso wie zu der Ankündigung, der Gipfel werde ein „Festival der Demokratie“. Dass ein Gipfelprotest in Unruhen mit breiter Beteiligung überging aber auch das teils gewaltsame polizeiliche Vorgehen gegen Protestierende ist erklärungsbedürftig. In der anhaltenden Diskussion über die Hintergründe der Auseinandersetzungen werden zumeist entweder die Polizei oder „gewaltbereite Gruppen“ für das Ausmaß der Gewalt verantwortlich gemacht. Letzteres lässt sich jedoch nur bedingt aus Motiven und vorgefassten Plänen bestimmter Akteure ableiten. Ein großer Teil der Gewalt entsteht – dies gerät allzu oft aus dem Blick – maßgeblich in Prozessen der Eskalation, in denen die Handlungen der verschiedenen Beteiligten miteinander verflochten sind, insofern sie auf Grundlage ihrer Deutung vorangegangener Erfahrungen und ihrer Wahrnehmung des Gegenübers aufeinander reagieren. Situationen der Gewalt haben zudem ihre eigene, in manchen Fällen kaum steuerbare, Dynamik. Der Bericht rekonstruiert, wie und warum die Gewalt in Hamburg in dieser Form eskalierte. Er enthält sich weitgehend einer moralischen Einordnung. Er beleuchtet konkrete Situationen des Aufeinandertreffens der Konfliktparteien und bettet sie in einen größeren Kontext ein, unter anderem in Hinblick auf die Konstitution der beteiligten Gruppen und in Hinblick auf die mediale Deutung des Geschehens. Der Bericht fasst die ersten Ergebnisse eines Forschungsprojektes zusammen, an dem über acht Monate mehr als 20 Gewalt-, Protest- und Polizeiforscher*innen mitgewirkt haben. Er beruht auf einer Vielzahl unterschiedlicher Quellen: Interviews mit Beteiligten, Dokumente, Filmaufnahmen und Fotografien, die Kommunikation auf Twitter und die Berichterstattung in ausgewählten Tageszeitungen, Beobachtungsprotokolle aus der Protestwoche und danach. Die Analyse gliedert sich in drei Teile. (1) Die Ausgangskonstellation, in der sich die unmittelbar Beteiligten, Polizei und Protestierende, auf die Protestwoche einstellen und prägende Grundkonflikte sichtbar werden. (2) Schlüsselsituationen, in denen Konflikte ausgetragen werden und die Muster der Eskalation im Kleinen sichtbar machen. (3) Die mediale Deutung und Formung der Ereignisse, über die der Fokus auf „Gewalt“ verstärkt und die jeweils eigene Wahrnehmung bestätigt wird. Für die Analyse der Entstehung von Gewalt ist der Fall ein eindrückliches Beispiel für die Verkettung von Ereignissen ebenso wie für die Eigendynamik situativer Konfrontationen. Dies bedeutet jedoch nicht, dass die Planungen, Erwartungen und Entscheidungen der Handelnden keine Rolle spielen würden. Die Dynamik des Geschehens verwirklicht sich, im Gegenteil, gerade darin, dass die Beteiligten in der Verflechtung ihrer Handlungen ihre Kalkulationen verändern und Situationsdeutungen entwickeln, welche Gewalt möglich oder notwendig erscheinen lassen
Faced with an accelerating climate crisis caused by burning fossil fuels we have to change the way the economy works. We can no longer go on with a system that just maximises private profit without consideration for its effects. Instead we have to conciously plan how to change to a fossil fuel free society.
The need is urgent.
The transformation will be vast.
Nothing similar has been done in the West since the days of wartime mobilisation.
This book explains the basic science of climate change before looking at the transformations needed to our energy and basic industries. It looks at the previous successful history of deliberate planning practiced in the UK from 1939 to the 1960s and how, using modern computing techniques it will be possible to organise resources so as to effect the change.
Einleitung
(2022)
Ausblick
(2022)
Is Vienna still a just city?
(2022)
Research on multi-level implementation of EU legislation has almost exclusively focused on the national level, while little is known about the role of subnational authorities. Nevertheless, it is a prerequisite for the functioning of the European Union that all member states and their subnational authorities apply and enforce EU legislation in due time. I address this research gap and take a closer look at the legal transposition process in the German regional states. Using a novel data set comprising detailed information on about 700 subnational measures, I show that state-level variables, such as political preferences and ministerial resources, account for variation in the timing of legal transposition and repeatedly lead to subnational delay. To conclude, the paper addresses the role of subnational authorities in the EU multi-level system and points to their interest in shaping legal transposition in order to counterbalance their loss of competences to the national level.
“Broadcast your gender.”
(2022)
Social media platforms provide a large array of behavioral data relevant to social scientific research. However, key information such as sociodemographic characteristics of agents are often missing. This paper aims to compare four methods of classifying social attributes from text. Specifically, we are interested in estimating the gender of German social media creators. By using the example of a random sample of 200 YouTube channels, we compare several classification methods, namely (1) a survey among university staff, (2) a name dictionary method with the World Gender Name Dictionary as a reference list, (3) an algorithmic approach using the website gender-api.com, and (4) a Multinomial Naïve Bayes (MNB) machine learning technique. These different methods identify gender attributes based on YouTube channel names and descriptions in German but are adaptable to other languages. Our contribution will evaluate the share of identifiable channels, accuracy and meaningfulness of classification, as well as limits and benefits of each approach. We aim to address methodological challenges connected to classifying gender attributes for YouTube channels as well as related to reinforcing stereotypes and ethical implications.
Die Transformation der öffentlichen Verantwortung im Bereich der sozialen Wohlfahrt führte in den letzten Jahren zu einem gestiegenen Forschungsinteresse an Mitarbeiten-den, die sich an der Schnittstelle zwischen öffentlicher Verwaltung und direktem Kontakt zu Klient*innen befinden. Die vorliegende Arbeit geht am Beispiel der Schulsozialarbeit an Potsdamer Grundschulen der Frage nach, inwieweit Vertrauen in Klient*innen die Nutzung von Ermessensspielräumen durch Schulsozialarbeiter*innen beeinflusst. Das Street-Level Bureaucracy Framework nach Michael Lipsky spannt dabei den theoretischen Rahmen, während qualitative Interviews mit Schulsozialarbei-ter*innen die Basis für die Beantwortung der Forschungsfrage darstellen. Die Ergebnis-se zeigen, dass ein geringeres Maß an Vertrauen in Klient*innen dafür sorgt, dass Schulsozialarbeiter*innen durch Bewältigungsstrategien wie der Rationierung von Res-sourcen und dem gedanklichen Rückzug von Klient*innen versuchen, ihre Arbeitslast zu verringern. Ein höheres Maß an Vertrauen in Klient*innen sorgt hingegen dafür, dass sie ihre Ermessensspielräume zu Gunsten dieser Klient*innen nutzen, zum Beispiel durch das Umgehen von Datenschutzregeln zur effektiveren Fallbearbeitung.
“Broadcast your gender.”
(2022)
Social media platforms provide a large array of behavioral data relevant to social scientific research. However, key information such as sociodemographic characteristics of agents are often missing. This paper aims to compare four methods of classifying social attributes from text. Specifically, we are interested in estimating the gender of German social media creators. By using the example of a random sample of 200 YouTube channels, we compare several classification methods, namely (1) a survey among university staff, (2) a name dictionary method with the World Gender Name Dictionary as a reference list, (3) an algorithmic approach using the website gender-api.com, and (4) a Multinomial Naïve Bayes (MNB) machine learning technique. These different methods identify gender attributes based on YouTube channel names and descriptions in German but are adaptable to other languages. Our contribution will evaluate the share of identifiable channels, accuracy and meaningfulness of classification, as well as limits and benefits of each approach. We aim to address methodological challenges connected to classifying gender attributes for YouTube channels as well as related to reinforcing stereotypes and ethical implications.
Is There a Rural Penalty in Language Acquisition? Evidence From Germany's Refugee Allocation Policy
(2022)
Emerging evidence has highlighted the important role of local contexts for integration trajectories of asylum seekers and refugees. Germany's policy of randomly allocating asylum seekers across Germany may advantage some and disadvantage others in terms of opportunities for equal participation in society. This study explores the question whether asylum seekers that have been allocated to rural areas experience disadvantages in terms of language acquisition compared to those allocated to urban areas. We derive testable assumptions using a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) which are then tested using large-N survey data (IAB-BAMF-SOEP refugee survey). We find that living in a rural area has no negative total effect on language skills. Further the findings suggest that the “null effect” is the result of two processes which offset each other: while asylum seekers in rural areas have slightly lower access for formal, federally organized language courses, they have more regular exposure to German speakers.
Is There a Rural Penalty in Language Acquisition? Evidence From Germany's Refugee Allocation Policy
(2022)
Emerging evidence has highlighted the important role of local contexts for integration trajectories of asylum seekers and refugees. Germany's policy of randomly allocating asylum seekers across Germany may advantage some and disadvantage others in terms of opportunities for equal participation in society. This study explores the question whether asylum seekers that have been allocated to rural areas experience disadvantages in terms of language acquisition compared to those allocated to urban areas. We derive testable assumptions using a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) which are then tested using large-N survey data (IAB-BAMF-SOEP refugee survey). We find that living in a rural area has no negative total effect on language skills. Further the findings suggest that the “null effect” is the result of two processes which offset each other: while asylum seekers in rural areas have slightly lower access for formal, federally organized language courses, they have more regular exposure to German speakers.
In countries with long-standing agency traditions, the creation of new agencies rarely comes as a large-scale reform but rather as one structural choice of many possible, most notably a ministerial division. In order to make sense of these choices, the article discusses the role of political design-focusing on the role of political motivations, such as ideological turnover, replacement risks and ideological stands toward administrative efficiency-and organizational dynamics-focusing on the role of administrative legacies and existing organizational palettes. The article utilizes data on organizational creations in the Norwegian central state between 1947 and 2019, in order to explore how political design and organizational dynamics help us understand the creation of agencies relative to ministry divisions over time. We find that political motives matter a great deal for the structural choices made by consecutive Norwegian governments, but that structural path dependencies may also be at play.
Can we rely on computational methods to accurately analyze complex texts? To answer this question, we compared different dictionary and scaling methods used in predicting the sentiment of German literature reviews to the "gold standard " of human-coded sentiments. Literature reviews constitute a challenging text corpus for computational analysis as they not only contain different text levels-for example, a summary of the work and the reviewer's appraisal-but are also characterized by subtle and ambiguous language elements. To take the nuanced sentiments of literature reviews into account, we worked with a metric rather than a dichotomous scale for sentiment analysis. The results of our analyses show that the predicted sentiments of prefabricated dictionaries, which are computationally efficient and require minimal adaption, have a low to medium correlation with the human-coded sentiments (r between 0.32 and 0.39). The accuracy of self-created dictionaries using word embeddings (both pre-trained and self-trained) was considerably lower (r between 0.10 and 0.28). Given the high coding intensity and contingency on seed selection as well as the degree of data pre-processing of word embeddings that we found with our data, we would not recommend them for complex texts without further adaptation. While fully automated approaches appear not to work in accurately predicting text sentiments with complex texts such as ours, we found relatively high correlations with a semiautomated approach (r of around 0.6)-which, however, requires intensive human coding efforts for the training dataset. In addition to illustrating the benefits and limits of computational approaches in analyzing complex text corpora and the potential of metric rather than binary scales of text sentiment, we also provide a practical guide for researchers to select an appropriate method and degree of pre-processing when working with complex texts.
To meet the Paris Agreement targets, carbon emissions from the energy system must be eliminated by mid-century, implying vast investment and systemic change challenges ahead. In an article in WIREs Climate Change, we reviewed the empirical evidence for effects of carbon pricing systems on technological change towards full decarbonisation, finding weak or no effects. In response, van den Bergh and Savin (2021) criticised our review in an article in this journal, claiming that it is "unfair", incomplete and flawed in various ways. Here, we respond to this critique by elaborating on the conceptual roots of our argumentation based on the importance of short-term emission reductions and longer-term technological change, and by expanding the review. This verifies our original findings: existing carbon pricing schemes have sometimes reduced emissions, mainly through switching to lower-carbon fossil fuels and efficiency increases, and have triggered weak innovation increases. There is no evidence that carbon pricing systems have triggered zero-carbon investments, and scarce but consistent evidence that they have not. Our findings highlight the importance of adapting and improving climate policy assessment metrics beyond short-term emissions by also assessing the quality of emission reductions and the progress of underlying technological change.
Zunehmend komplexe Herausforderungen und Aufgaben lassen sich nicht mehr mit den bisherigen Strukturen, Methoden und Prozessen der klassischen Verwaltung bewältigen. Vielmehr gewinnen Ansätze und Methoden des New Work im öffentlichen Sektor angesichts der sich stetig ändernden und dynamischen Arbeitswelt eine immer größere Bedeutung. Umso mehr besteht die Notwendigkeit, sich in der Verwaltung agil aufzustellen. Unter Agilität wird hierbei die Fähigkeit einer Organisation verstanden, sich schnell verändernden Rahmenbedingungen flexibel und dynamisch anzupassen.
Im Fokus dieser Arbeit steht der Einfluss von Agilität auf die Führungskräfte-Mitarbeiter-Beziehung. Mittels einer halbstandardisierten Online-Befragung im Landesamt für Flüchtlingsangelegenheiten und im Bezirksamt Neukölln von Berlin wird zunächst der vorliegende Agilitätsgrad mit dem Fokus auf agile Organisationsstrukturen, agile Organisationskultur und agile Führung ermittelt und sodann anhand der Qualität der dyadischen Arbeitsbeziehung von Führungskraft und Mitarbeiter (LMX-Qualität) überprüft, inwiefern die agile Arbeitsweise im Vergleich zu einer nicht-agilen Arbeitsumgebung die Beziehung beeinflusst.
Im Ergebnis der Untersuchung zeigt sich, dass ein positiver Zusammenhang zwischen Agilität und der Führungskräfte-Mitarbeiter-Beziehung besteht. Es stellt sich in beiden Ämtern ein mäßig bis starker Agilitätsgrad heraus, wobei besonders agile Führungseigenschaften zu den wesentlichen Faktoren zählen, die eine hochqualitative Beziehung begünstigen. Während im Bezirksamt ein Zusammenhang zwischen Agilität und hoher LMX-Qualität ermittelt wurde, konnte dieser nicht für die untersuchte Stichprobe des Landesamts festgestellt werden. Dennoch ließ sich in beiden Behörden ein positiver Einfluss von Agilität auf zumindest die Entwicklung einer erfolgreichen Führungskräfte-Mitarbeiter-Beziehung erfassen.
Typen von Forschungsdesigns
(2022)
Sozialwissenschaftliche Forschungsdesigns umfassen alle wesentlichen Entscheidungen, die im Forschungsprozess getroffen werden müssen. Der Beitrag unterscheidet drei rundlegende Typen von Forschungsdesigns: x-zentriert, y-zentriert und kontrastiv. Das x-zentrierte Design versucht einen theoretisch spezifizierten kausalen Effekt zu identifizieren und dessen Größe möglichst genau und ohne Verzerrungen zu schätzen. Das y-zentrierte Design versucht mehrere komplementäre Theorien über kausale Effekte so zu kombinieren, dass bestimmte Phänomene möglichst gut erklärt werden. Das kontrastive Design vergleicht die Erklärungskraft von zwei oder mehr konkurrierenden Theorien. Die Unterscheidung der drei Typen ist für qualitative Fallstudien ebenso relevant wie für Experimente oder statistische Studien mit Beobachtungsdaten. Der Beitrag grenzt die drei Typen voneinander ab, erklärt ihre jeweiligen Annahmen und diskutiert ihre Vor- und Nachteile sowie die Möglichkeiten und Grenzen ihrer Kombination. Daneben diskutiert er den Unterschied zwischen Modellen und Theorien sowie die Bedeutung des Sparsamkeitsprinzips bei der Entwicklung und Bewertung wissenschaftlicher Theorien und Erklärungen.
Voting for Votes
(2022)
Scholars frequently expect parties to act strategically in parliament, hoping to affect their electoral fortunes. Voters assumingly assess parties by their activity and vote accordingly. However, the retrospective voting literature looks mostly at the government's outcomes, leaving the opposition understudied. We argue that, for opposition parties, legislative voting constitutes an effective vote-seeking activity as a signaling tool of their attitude toward the government. We suggest that conflictual voting behavior affects voters through two mechanisms: as a signal of opposition valence and as means of ideological differentiation from the government. We present both aggregate- and individual-level analyses, leveraging a dataset of 169 party observations from 10 democracies and linking it to the CSES survey data of 27,371 respondents. The findings provide support for the existence of both mechanisms. Parliamentary conflict on legislative votes has a general positive effect on opposition parties' electoral performance, conditional on systemic and party-specific factors.
Real options are widely applied in strategic and operational decision-making, allowing for managerial flexibility in uncertain contexts. Increased scholarly interest has led to an extensive but fragmented research landscape. We aim to measure and systematize the research field quantitatively. To achieve this goal, we conduct bibliometric performance analyses and bibliographic coupling analyses with an in-depth content review. The results of the performance analyses show an increasing interest in real options since the beginning of the 2000s and identity the most influential journals and authors. The science mappings reveal six and seven research clusters over the last two decades. Based on an in-depth analysis of their themes, we develop a research framework comprising antecedents, application areas, internal and external contingencies, and uncertainty resolution through real option valuation or reasoning. We identify several gaps in that framework, which we propose to tackle in future research.
As presidents approach the end of their constitutionally defined term in office, they face a number of difficulties, most importantly the deprivation of sources of power, personal enrichment, and protection from prosecution. This leads many of them to attempt to circumvent their term limits. Recent studies explain both the reasons for the extension or full abolition of term limits, and failed attempts to do so. Key explanations include electoral competition and the post-term fate of previous post holders. What we do not know yet is how compliance with term limits may be tied to the current president's expectations for their post-term fate. In particular, we do not know whether leaders who attempt to remove term limits and fail to do so jeopardize their post-term career as a result, and conversely, whether leaders who comply will have better outcomes in terms of security, prestige, and economic gain. Hence, we ask how the decision of a leader to comply or not comply with term limits is conditioned by the expectation of their post-term fate. To address this question, this article introduces new data on the career trajectories of term-limited presidents and its systematic effect on term limit compliance.
The reorganization of governments is crucial for parties to express their policy preferences once they reach office. Yet these activities are not confined to the direct aftermath of general elections or to wide-ranging structural reforms. Instead, governments reorganize and adjust their machinery of government all the time. This paper aims to assess these structural choices with a particular focus at the core of the state, comparing four Western European democracies (Germany, France, the Netherlands, and United Kingdom) from 1980 to 2013. Our empirical analysis shows that stronger shifts in cabinets' ideological profiles in the short- and long-term as well as the units' proximity to political executives yield significant effects. In contrast, Conservative governments, commonly regarded as key promoters of reorganizing governments, are not significant for the likelihood of structural change. We discuss the effects of this politics of government reorganization for different research debates assessing the inner workings of governments.
In this article, we examine the effects of political change on name changes of units within central government ministries. We expect that changes regarding the policy position of a government will cause changes in the names of ministerial units. To this end we formulate hypotheses combining the politics of structural choice and theories of portfolio allocation to examine the effects of political changes at the cabinet level on the names of intra-ministerial units. We constructed a dataset containing more than 17,000 observations on name changes of ministerial units between 1980 and 2013 from the central governments of Germany, the Netherlands, and France. We regress a series of generalized estimating equations (GEE) with population averaging models for binary outcomes. Finding variations across the three political-bureaucratic systems, we overall report positive effects of governmental change and ideological positions on name changes within ministries.
Global Legitimacy Crises
(2022)
Global Legitimacy Crises addresses the consequences of legitimacy in global governance, in particular asking: when and how do legitimacy crises affect international organizations and their capacity to rule. The book starts with a new conceptualization of legitimacy crisis that looks at public challenges from a variety of actors. Based on this conceptualization, it applies a mixed-methods approach to identify and examine legitimacy crises, starting with a quantitative analysis of mass media data on challenges of a sample of 32 IOs. It shows that some, but not all organizations have experienced legitimacy crises, spread over several decades from 1985 to 2020. Following this, the book presents a qualitative study to further examine legitimacy crises of two selected case studies: the WTO and the UNFCCC. Whereas earlier research assumed that legitimacy crises have negative consequences, the book introduces a theoretical framework that privileges the activation inherent in a legitimacy crisis. It holds that this activation may not only harm an IO, but could also strengthen it, in terms of its material, institutional, and decision-making capacity. The following statistical analysis shows that whether a crisis has predominantly negative or positive effects depends on a variety of factors. These include the specific audience whose challenges define a certain crisis, and several institutional properties of the targeted organization. The ensuing in-depth analysis of the WTO and the UNFCCC further reveals how legitimacy crises and both positive and negative consequences are interlinked, and that effects of crises are sometimes even visible beyond the organizational borders.
Mit narrativen Medien lernen
(2022)
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.
The demand for learning Design Thinking (DT) as a path towards acquiring 21st-century skills has increased globally in the last decade. Because DT education originated in the Silicon Valley context of the d.school at Stanford, it is important to evaluate how the teaching of the methodology adapts to different cultural contexts.The thesis explores the impact of the socio-cultural context on DT education.
DT institutes in Cape Town, South Africa and Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, were visited to observe their programs and conduct 22 semistructured interviews with local educators regarding their adaption strategies. Grounded theory methodology was used to develop a model of Socio-Cultural Adaptation of Design Thinking Education that maps these strategies onto five dimensions: Planning, Process, People, Place, and Presentation. Based on this model, a list of recommendations is provided to help DT educators and practitioners in designing and delivering culturally inclusive DT education.
In diesem Beitrag untersuchen wir den Zusammenhang zwischen staatlicher Regulierung im Umweltschutz und der Umweltperformanz. Ausgehend von drei theoretischen Perspektiven, welche die Beziehung von Staat und Markt beim Umweltschutz unterschiedlich konzeptualisieren, identifizieren wir fünf Pfade, wie staatlicher Eingriff und Umweltperformanz miteinander verknüpft sein könnten. Wir untersuchen dann die empirische Relevanz dieser Pfade mit einer quantitativen Analyse, die 29 umweltpolitische Maßnahmen in für 37 Länder und den Zeitraum von 1970 bis 2010 umfasst. Dabei finden wir zumindest für einige Politikbereiche und einige Länder Hinweise, die auf eine Effektivität nationalstaatlicher Regulierung hinweisen. Zukünftige Forschung kann auf unserem Rahmen aufbauen, um weitere Hypothesen zum Policy-Outcome-Nexus zu generieren und zu testen.
This study examines how public policies affect parents' preferences for a more egalitarian division of paid and unpaid work. Based on the assumption that individuals develop their preferences within a specific policy context, we examine how changes in three policies affect mothers' and fathers' work-family preferences: the availability of high-quality, affordable childcare; the right to return to a full-time job after having reduced hours to part-time and an increase in the number of 'partner months' in parental leave schemes. Analysing a unique probability sample of parents with young children in Germany from 2015 (N = 1756), we find that fathers would want to work slightly fewer hours if they had the right to return to a full-time position after working part-time, and mothers would want to work slightly more hours if childcare opportunities were improved. Full-time working parents, moreover, are found to prefer fewer hours independent of the policy setting, while non-employed parents would like to work at least some hours. Last but not least, our analyses show that increasing the number of partner months in the parental leave scheme considerably increases fathers' preferences for longer and mothers' preferences for shorter leave. Increasing the number of partner months in parental schemes hence has the greatest potential to increase gender equality.
The recent debate on administrative bodies in international organizations has brought forward multiple theoretical perspectives, analytical frameworks, and methodological approaches. Despite these efforts to advance knowledge on these actors, the research program on international public administrations (IPAs) has missed out on two important opportunities: reflection on scholarship in international relations (IR) and public administration and synergies between these disciplinary perspectives. Against this backdrop, the essay is a discussion of the literature on IPAs in IR and public administration. We found influence, authority, and autonomy of international bureaucracies have been widely addressed and helped to better understand the agency of such non-state actors in global policy-making. Less attention has been given to the crucial macro-level context of politics for administrative bodies, despite the importance in IR and public administration scholarship. We propose a focus on agency and politics as future avenues for a comprehensive, joint research agenda for international bureaucracies.
Measuring migration 2.0
(2021)
The interest in human migration is at its all-time high, yet data to measure migration is notoriously limited. “Big data” or “digital trace data” have emerged as new sources of migration measurement complementing ‘traditional’ census, administrative and survey data. This paper reviews the strengths and weaknesses of eight novel, digital data sources along five domains: reliability, validity, scope, access and ethics. The review highlights the opportunities for migration scholars but also stresses the ethical and empirical challenges. This review intends to be of service to researchers and policy analysts alike and help them navigate this new and increasingly complex field.
Measuring migration 2.0
(2021)
The interest in human migration is at its all-time high, yet data to measure migration is notoriously limited. “Big data” or “digital trace data” have emerged as new sources of migration measurement complementing ‘traditional’ census, administrative and survey data. This paper reviews the strengths and weaknesses of eight novel, digital data sources along five domains: reliability, validity, scope, access and ethics. The review highlights the opportunities for migration scholars but also stresses the ethical and empirical challenges. This review intends to be of service to researchers and policy analysts alike and help them navigate this new and increasingly complex field.