Refine
Has Fulltext
- no (684) (remove)
Year of publication
- 2020 (684) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (336)
- Part of a Book (155)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (65)
- Doctoral Thesis (56)
- Review (37)
- Other (13)
- Contribution to a Periodical (8)
- Course Material (5)
- Conference Proceeding (4)
- Habilitation Thesis (3)
- Journal/Publication series (1)
- Report (1)
Language
- German (684) (remove)
Keywords
- Fremdsprachenunterricht (4)
- Sprachgeschichte (4)
- Digitale Plattformen (3)
- Digitalisierung (3)
- Ernährung (3)
- Ethics (3)
- Fragebogen (3)
- Industrie 4.0 (3)
- KMU (3)
- Längsschnittstudie (3)
Institute
- Bürgerliches Recht (146)
- Historisches Institut (89)
- Öffentliches Recht (59)
- Institut für Germanistik (49)
- Strafrecht (47)
- Fachgruppe Betriebswirtschaftslehre (33)
- Fachgruppe Politik- & Verwaltungswissenschaft (30)
- Institut für Romanistik (29)
- Institut für Künste und Medien (24)
- Institut für Jüdische Theologie (17)
Currently a political debate is ongoing in Germany as to whether Germany should, following the example of several other European countries such as France and the Netherlands, adopt a Supply Chain Act (Lieferkettengesetz). If adopted, the act in question would impose due diligence obligations on German corporations to prevent human rights violations taking place in their respective global supply chains. It is against this background that the article examines the preconditions that must be met in order for such act to be eventually compatible with both, German constitutional and international law. The authors further deal with the question whether Germany might even be obliged under international, as well as under German constitutional law, to enact such a supply chain law in order to protect the human rights of workers employed by companies forming part of the global supply chains of German companies. As far as German constitutional law is concerned the article notably deals with the question whether it is the Federal parliament that may adopt such a law also taking into account the competencies of the European Union in the field, and what are the requirements of legal specificity and proportionality in order for the draft law to stand constitutional scrutiny. The authors further offer detailed suggestions how corporate due diligence standards might be best provided for in the envisaged law and propose a risk analysis approach that varies not only according to specific countries and sector-specific characteristics, but that by the same token also takes into account the ability of the respective German company to exercise an appropriate due diligence standard when it comes to human rigths issues arising within the framewok of their supply chain. As far as the substantive human rights standards are concerned that should serve as benchmarks for the envisaged Supply Chain Act the authors propose to rely on, and refer to, those instruments such as the ICCPR and the CESCR, as well as the ILO treaties containing core labour standards, that enjoy almost universal acceptance and reflect customary international law.
Sängers Glück
(2020)
The German singer-songwriter Reinhard Mey, although not pretending to be a second Orpheus, nevertheless appears to be very familiar with classical myth.
The German writer Wilhelm Marr is known as the father of modern antisemitism. Little attention has been paid to the fact that Marr did not coin the term “antisemitism” in his influential pamphlet Der Sieg des Judenthums über das Germanenthum published in March 1879. The neologism first appeared in the name and programme of the “Antisemiten-Liga” which came to existence in September 1879. Even less attention has been paid to the fact that it was not Marr, but the Berlin chemist and engineer Hector de Grousilliers who was the initiator of this political organisation. Although Marr attended the founding meeting and joined it as a member, he played no active role in it. Grousilliers, paradoxically, first had the idea of founding a “Lessing-Verein”, before his “Antisemiten-Liga” came into being in an absurd volte-face. Carrying out a bizarre revaluation of Lessing’s Ring Parable, Grousilliers attributed antisemitic semantics to the concept of tolerance. He delivered several speeches on tolerance in the “League” before turning his attention to the publication of the antisemitic humorous-satirical magazine Die Wahrheit. Humoristisch-satirisches Wochenblatt.
Die Umdeutung von Verwaltungsakten gemäß § 47 VwVfG steht ungeachtet ihrer Examensrelevanz nicht im Zentrum der Aufmerksamkeit aller Studierender. Um auch vor dem Hintergrund jüngerer höchstrichterlicher Entscheidungen den Blick für dieses Rechtsinstitut zu schärfen, kennzeichnet der Verfasser zunächst das nicht ohne Weiteres aus dem Gesetz ablesbare Wesen der Umdeutung und grenzt diese von anderen Instrumenten zur Interpretation, Korrektur und Aufrechterhaltung von Verwaltungsakten ab. Sodann stellt er im Einzelnen die Voraussetzungen und Ausschlussgründe des § 47 VwVfG vor.
This article analyses, as an example of the advertising of cosmetic products, a campaign launched by the US-American company “Johnson Soap” for their product, the facial soap “Palmolive”. Examining its ads of 1911 in which certain ancient exempla are employed, it becomes clear that the Palmyrene queen Zenobia and with her the semi-historical Semiramis and the more mythical Dido are aligned to the “1001 Nights” character Scheherazade. Since they are jointly labelled as “historically famous oriental queens” and because of the reference to Zenobia’s white skin, they fall into the fantasy of fair-skinned harem women and evoke thoughts of all the pleasures and comforts of the luxurious Orient. To the modern female customer of 1900 (well steeped in the knowledge of those ancient characters) Zenobia and the other exempla should serve as celebrities worth emulating. Above all they are deemed to be beautiful, and experts in cosmetics which would guarantee the effect of the product they are standing for. A finding that proves to be valid even in an advertising concept of today for the Syrian-German “Zhenobya-soap”.