Nicht ermittelbar
Refine
Has Fulltext
- no (48)
Year of publication
- 2022 (48) (remove)
Document Type
- Part of a Book (48) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (48)
Keywords
- Bedürfnisse (1)
- COVID-19 pandemic (1)
- Corona (1)
- Digitalisierung (1)
- Egalitarismus (1)
- Führung (1)
- Germany (1)
- Gleichstellung (1)
- Grundwerte (1)
- Homeoffice (1)
- Industrie 4.0 (1)
- Lehr-Lernsituationen (1)
- Lernaufgaben (1)
- Modellfabrik (1)
- Pluralismus (1)
- Polizei (1)
- Recht und Organisation (1)
- Soziale Gleichheit (1)
- Sozialer Status (1)
- Telearbeit (1)
- Umweltökonomie (1)
- Verhaltensökonomie (1)
- Verwaltung (1)
- Zentrum Industrie 4.0 (1)
- actor constellations (1)
- administration (1)
- administrative reforms (1)
- aid (1)
- behavioral economics (1)
- betriebliche Weiterbildung (1)
- change (1)
- classroom experiments (1)
- cognitive activation (1)
- coordination (1)
- cost cutting (1)
- dependency (1)
- development (1)
- digital teaching (1)
- digitale Führung (1)
- digitale Lehre (1)
- digitalization (1)
- economic education (1)
- employment (1)
- environmental economics (1)
- flexible Arbeitsmodelle (1)
- gender equality (1)
- institutional policy (1)
- instruments (1)
- kognitive Aktivierung (1)
- leadership (1)
- local and urban governance (1)
- local community (1)
- local finance (1)
- local politics (1)
- managerial reforms (1)
- methods (1)
- micro-politics (1)
- modernization (1)
- municipalities (1)
- nachhaltige Berufsbildung (1)
- needs (1)
- parental leave (1)
- performance (1)
- policy implementation (1)
- post-development (1)
- regional network (1)
- remanufacturing (1)
- resilience (1)
- scenario modeling (1)
- strategy (1)
- sustainable vocational education (1)
- tasks (1)
- territorial reforms (1)
- tools (1)
- virtuelle Führung (1)
- workplace culture (1)
- zero-based budgeting (1)
- Ökonomische Bildung (1)
- ökonomische Experimente (1)
Institute
- Öffentliches Recht (16)
- Fachgruppe Politik- & Verwaltungswissenschaft (13)
- Fachgruppe Betriebswirtschaftslehre (7)
- Strafrecht (4)
- Fachgruppe Soziologie (3)
- Bürgerliches Recht (2)
- Fachgruppe Volkswirtschaftslehre (1)
- Institut für Geowissenschaften (1)
- Lehreinheit für Wirtschafts-Arbeit-Technik (1)
- Sozialwissenschaften (1)
Over the last few decades, a network of misogynist blogs, websites, wikis, and forums has developed, where users share their bigoted, sexist, and toxic views of society in general and masculinity and femininity in particular. This chapter outlines conceptual framework of hegemonic and hybrid masculinity. It provides a brief overview of the historical development of the manosphere and its various configurations and present our analysis of the masculinities performed by the five groups of the manosphere. The concept of hegemonic masculinity was articulated by Connell and colleagues in the 1980s as “the pattern of practice that allowed men’s dominance over women to continue.” Prior to the advent of the manosphere, an online iteration of male supremacist mobilizations, both Men’s Rights Activists and Pick-up artists developed as offline movements in the 1970s. MRAs perceive their respective societies as inherently stacked against men. This chapter analyses the masculinities of the manosphere and how they “repudiat[e] and reif[y]” hegemonic masculinity and male supremacism.
Agricultural production worldwide has been increasing in the last decades at a very fast pace and with it the waste generation. Livestock activities are one of the largest producers of residues in the agricultural sector and contribute greatly to climate change. The present chapter gives an introduction and an in-depth analysis of the waste management of livestock for the conversion in a circular agriculture and economy based on research and experience in the sector conducted in the last decades. The conversion of animal waste into energy generation is an opportunity for farmers to obtain additional economic benefits, while contributing to the environment by preventing the release of GHGs into the atmosphere. The use of animal waste for energy generation through anaerobic digestion is a progressive technique and is being widely accepted in Europe, where Germany is the leading country in the use of biogas plants for energy production among others in the European Union. Economically speaking, the livestock industry faces the challenge of converting its production into a clean and more profitable production. The goal of this chapter is to analyze the economic benefit as well as the environmental contribution and future challenges of the use of livestock waste in the biorefineries sector from different perspectives, based on an intensive literature review. This review is accompanied by a geospatial analysis component, mapping biogas reactor hotspots and clusters in Germany, by means of methods of spatial statistics as analysis methods as kernel density estimations (KDE) and K-means clustering, based on volunteer geographic data. The applied methods easily can be transferred to other regions and allow a quick macroscopic overview over existing biogas reactors; furthermore, an identification of cluster and hotspots with a high biogas potential, that in a subsequent step can be analyzed in depth in larger scales.
This study evaluates the challenges, institutional impacts and responses of German local authorities to the COVID-19 pandemic from a political science point of view. The main research question is how they have contributed to combat the COVID-19 pandemic and to what extent the strengths and weaknesses of the German model of municipal autonomy have influenced their policy. It analyses the adaptation strategies of German local authorities and assesses the effectiveness of their actions up to now. Their implementation is then evaluated in five selected issues, e.g. adjustment organization and staff, challenges for local finances, local politics and citizen’s participation. This analysis is reflecting the scientific debate in Germany since the beginning of 2020, based on the available analyses of political science, law, economics, sociology and geography until end of March 2021.
After some seventy years of intensive debates, there is an increasingly strong consensus within the academic and practitioner communities that development is both an objective and a process towards improving the quality of people's lives in various societal dimensions – economic, social, environmental, cultural and political – and about how subjectively satisfied they are with it. Since 2015, the seventeen Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations (UN) reflect such consensus. The sections behind this argument are based on a review of (i) three key theoretical contributions to development and different phases of development thinking; (ii) global and regional governance arrangements and institutions for development cooperation; (iii) upcoming challenges to development policy and practice stemming from a series of new global challenges; and, (iv) development policy as a long and steady, increasingly global and participatory learning process.
Extreme-right terrorism is a threat that is often underestimated by the public at large. As this paper argues, this is partly due to a concept of terrorism utilized by policymakers, intelligence agents, and police investigators that is based on experience of international terrorism perpetrated by leftists or jihadists as opposed to domestic extreme-right violence. This was one reason why investigators failed to identify the crimes committed by the National Socialist Underground (NSU) in Germany (2000–2011) as extreme-right terrorism, for example. While scholarly debate focused on the Red Army Faction and Al Qaeda, terrorist tendencies among those perpetrating racist and extreme-right violence tended to be disregarded. Influential researchers in the field of “extremism” denied that terrorist acts were committed by right-wingers. By mapping the specifics regarding the strategic use of violence, target selection, addressing of different audiences etc., this paper proposes a more accurate definition of extreme-right terrorism. In comparing it to other forms of terrorism, extreme-right terrorism is distinguished by its specific framework of ideologies and practices, with the underlying idea of an essential inequality that is compensated for through the affirmation of violence. It can be differentiated from other forms of extreme-right violence based on its use of strategic, premeditated and planned attacks against targets of a symbolic nature.
Warten auf den Tag X
(2022)