300 Sozialwissenschaften
Refine
Has Fulltext
- no (18) (remove)
Document Type
- Other (18) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (18)
Keywords
- Digitalisierung (2)
- #4genderstudies (1)
- #AusDemDigitalenSeminarraum (1)
- #AusdemSeminarraum (1)
- #MeinSchreibtisch (1)
- #nachgefragt (1)
- Aktivismus (1)
- Arbeit (1)
- Archiv (1)
- BlackLivesMatter (1)
- Bourdieu (1)
- Corona (1)
- DDR (1)
- Durkheim (1)
- Durkheim’s German Reception, Max Weber, Georg Simmel, Jürgen Habermas (1)
- Economic sociology (1)
- Elternschaft (1)
- Familie (1)
- Feminismus (1)
- Frauengeschichte (1)
- Gender (1)
- Gendering MINT digital Gender Studies (1)
- Geschlechterforschung (1)
- Geschlechterverhältnisse (1)
- Gleichstellung (1)
- HIV (1)
- Intersektionalität (1)
- Literatur (1)
- MINT (1)
- Migration (1)
- Männlichkeit (1)
- Open Access (1)
- Podcast (1)
- Queer (1)
- Rassismus (1)
- Recht (1)
- Sexismus (1)
- Sexuelle Bildung (1)
- Studierenden-Stimmen (1)
- Symposium (1)
- Tagung (1)
- Wissenschaftskommunikation (1)
- Wissenschaftstag (1)
- Wissensproduktion (1)
- application (1)
- care (1)
- care work (1)
- conceptualization (1)
- democracy (1)
- democratic quality (1)
- digitalization (1)
- discourse (1)
- domination (1)
- economy (1)
- feminism (1)
- field (1)
- gender (1)
- human rights (1)
- measurement (1)
- methodology (1)
- modernity (1)
- social inequality (1)
- state (1)
- teengirl culture (1)
- trans* (1)
Care work 4.0
(2022)
Care-Berufe verändern sich durch demographische, technologische und wirtschaftliche Entwicklungen. Zuletzt erhöhen auch gesundheitspolitische Herausforderungen und die COVID-19 Maßnahmenpolitik den Druck auf das Sozial- und Gesundheitssystem. Dadurch befindet sich die bezahlte Care-Arbeit im berufsstrukturellen Wandel, d. h. es entstehen neue Bedingungen für und Anforderungen an diese Tätigkeiten, die in Österreich mehrheitlich von Frauen ausgeübt werden.
Social institutions
(2024)
Social institutions are a system of behavioral and relationship patterns that are densely interwoven and enduring and function across an entire society. They order and structure the behavior of individuals in core areas of society and thus have a strong impact on the quality of life of individuals. Institutions regulate the following: (a) family and relationship networks carry out social reproduction and socialization; (b) institutions in the realm of education and training ensure the transmission and cultivation of knowledge, abilities, and specialized skills; (c) institutions in the labor market and economy provide for the production and distribution of goods and services; (d) institutions in the realm of law, governance, and politics provide for the maintenance of the social order; (e) while cultural, media, and religious institutions further the development of contexts of meaning, value orientations, and symbolic codes.
Several overlapping crises which affected the EU during the past ten years have recently aggravated. Especially the progressing refugee crisis, the persisting financial crisis and geopolitical turmoil in the EU's neighbourhood contributed to the rise of anti-EU movements and diverse articulations of Euroscepticism. Although public opinion and mainstream political analysis have easily identified right-wing populism as one of the most important drivers, it is still doubtful if it can be equated with Euroscepticism without further ado. To date it is by no means clear how and where Euroscepticism exactly originates.
In Europe, different countries developed a rich variety of sub-municipal institutions. Out of the plethora of intra- and sub-municipal decentralization forms (reaching from local outposts of city administration to “quasi-federal” structures), this book focuses on territorial sub-municipal units (SMUs) which combine multipurpose territorial responsibility with democratic legitimacy and can be seen as institutions promoting the articulation and realization of collective choices at a sub-municipal level.
Country chapters follow a common pattern that is facilitating systematic comparisons, while at the same time leaving enough space for national peculiarities and priorities chosen and highlighted by the authors, who also take advantage of the eventually existing empirical surveys and case studies.