300 Sozialwissenschaften
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (220)
- Postprint (36)
- Doctoral Thesis (26)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (21)
- Part of a Book (11)
- Other (11)
- Report (6)
- Review (6)
- Working Paper (3)
- Conference Proceeding (2)
Language
- English (344) (remove)
Keywords
- Curriculum Framework (33)
- European values education (33)
- Europäische Werteerziehung (33)
- Lehrevaluation (33)
- Studierendenaustausch (33)
- Unterrichtseinheiten (33)
- curriculum framework (33)
- lesson evaluation (33)
- student exchange (33)
- teaching units (33)
- Familie (32)
- Family (32)
- Germany (9)
- COVID-19 (7)
- gender (7)
- Cayley Graph (5)
- Free Group (5)
- Migration (5)
- Collatz (4)
- European Union (4)
- Reachability (4)
- climate change (4)
- decision-making (4)
- governance (4)
- Austria (3)
- Bourdieu (3)
- employment (3)
- experiment (3)
- higher education (3)
- inequality (3)
- institutional change (3)
- integration (3)
- language acquisition (3)
- migration (3)
- mixed methods (3)
- perpetration (3)
- refugees (3)
- victimization (3)
- Armut (2)
- Big data (2)
- Caribbean (2)
- Collatz Conjecture (2)
- Covid-19 (2)
- Diary study (2)
- Digital trace (2)
- Duration (2)
- EMOTIKON (2)
- Economic restructuring (2)
- Electoral geography (2)
- Entwicklungszusammenarbeit (2)
- Environmental quality (2)
- Experience sampling method (2)
- Explanations (2)
- Immigration (2)
- LGTBQI+ communities (2)
- Labour market policies (2)
- Linear Mixed Models (2)
- Measurement (2)
- Network clustering (2)
- Organization theory (2)
- Othering (2)
- Partizipation (2)
- Populism (2)
- Pronouns (2)
- Protein complexes (2)
- Protein–protein interaction (2)
- Redundancy (2)
- Regulatory focus (2)
- Review (2)
- Scale development (2)
- Security Council (2)
- Social housing innovation (2)
- South Africa (2)
- Species comparison (2)
- State and trait measurement (2)
- Survey (2)
- Translation (2)
- Usage (2)
- abuse cycles (2)
- accountability (2)
- adolescence (2)
- aggressive cognitions (2)
- allocation policies (2)
- assault (2)
- associative networks (2)
- beliefs (2)
- bibliometric analysis (2)
- binary systems (2)
- business (2)
- carbon pricing (2)
- children (2)
- climate policy (2)
- co-citation analysis (2)
- co-creation (2)
- co-occurrence analysis (2)
- cognition (2)
- collective consumption context (2)
- communication (2)
- corruption (2)
- coworking spaces (2)
- crisis (2)
- decarbonization (2)
- democracy (2)
- digital contact tracing (2)
- discourse (2)
- discrimination (2)
- embodied power structures (2)
- embodiment (2)
- energy efficiency (2)
- entrepreneurship (2)
- executives (2)
- experiences survey (2)
- family (2)
- field (2)
- flexible pattern matching approach (2)
- focus group (2)
- friendship (2)
- gender equality (2)
- gender inequality (2)
- globalization (2)
- homophily (2)
- immigration (2)
- institutional design (2)
- institutional entrepreneurship (2)
- intention-behavior gap (2)
- interaction (2)
- intergroup contacts (2)
- international migration (2)
- international organizations (2)
- language courses (2)
- learning (2)
- longitudinal (2)
- longitudinal study (2)
- machine learning (2)
- management (2)
- media violence (2)
- methodology (2)
- organic search (2)
- panel data (2)
- parental leave (2)
- participation (2)
- patterns of violence (2)
- percept cycles (2)
- policy (2)
- poverty (2)
- power (2)
- presidentialism (2)
- privacy calculus (2)
- privacy risks (2)
- public health (2)
- punishment (2)
- quality assurance (2)
- quality of friendship (2)
- rape (2)
- referral propensity (2)
- reliability (2)
- resistance (2)
- responses (2)
- risk-factors (2)
- rural (2)
- scale development (2)
- science mapping (2)
- self-report measures (2)
- service business models (2)
- sexual behavior (2)
- sexual scripts (2)
- social epistemology (2)
- social media advertising (2)
- social participation (2)
- social referrals (2)
- sociometric nomination (2)
- state (2)
- surveillance (2)
- sustainable development (2)
- teaching (2)
- terrorism (2)
- website stickiness (2)
- women (2)
- 2 degrees C target (1)
- ASEAN (1)
- Ability Tracking (1)
- Accounting standards (1)
- Adaptation (1)
- Affordances (1)
- Afrika (1)
- Agnieszka Holland (1)
- Aid Effectiveness (1)
- Aid effectiveness (1)
- Al Qaeda (1)
- Anonymity (1)
- Anthropology (1)
- Appliance diffusion (1)
- Auditing standards (1)
- Austrian Social Survey (1)
- Authentizität (1)
- Balance (1)
- Behavioralistische Verwaltungswissenschaft (1)
- Berlin (1)
- Bilanz (1)
- Bildung (1)
- Bildungsexpansion (1)
- Binary Tree (1)
- Blockchain (1)
- Body composition (1)
- Bologna Process (1)
- Bretton woods (1)
- Bürger-Staat-Interaktionen (1)
- COVID-19 pandemic (1)
- COVID-19 policy making (1)
- Callous-unemotional traits (1)
- Callousness (1)
- Cape Town (1)
- Car ownership (1)
- Carbon pricing (1)
- Case study (1)
- Citizenship (1)
- Classroom (1)
- Climate governance experiments (1)
- Collaborative consumption (1)
- Collective Identity (1)
- Communication for development (1)
- Communications/decision making (1)
- Composition (1)
- Conseil de sécurité (1)
- Consejo de Seguridad (1)
- Covid (1)
- Covid pandemic effects (1)
- Criminology (1)
- Crowd-sourcing (1)
- Cultural Integration (1)
- Cultural entrepreneurship (1)
- Cumulative advantages and disadvantages (1)
- Cyberbullying (1)
- Cycle (1)
- Cyclic Group (1)
- Decentralisation (1)
- Decision-making (1)
- Decomposition analysis (1)
- Denmark (1)
- Design Thinking (1)
- Design Thinking Bildung (1)
- Design Thinking education (1)
- Deutschland (1)
- Development Aid (1)
- Developmental gains (1)
- Dezentralisation (1)
- Difference-in-Difference (1)
- Digitalization (1)
- Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) (1)
- Discrete choice experiment (1)
- Distinction (1)
- Distinktion (1)
- Distributional effect (1)
- Double Colored Edges (1)
- Dual Citizenship (1)
- Durkheim (1)
- Durkheim’s German Reception, Max Weber, Georg Simmel, Jürgen Habermas (1)
- EU (1)
- EU Commission (1)
- Economic sociology (1)
- Economics (1)
- Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) (1)
- Education (1)
- Educational Expansion (1)
- Effizienz (1)
- Einwanderung (1)
- Embodied Practices (1)
- Emergency (1)
- Emergency response (1)
- Energy policy (1)
- Enterprise Survey (1)
- Entrepreneurial Ecosystem (1)
- Estimation uncertainty (1)
- Ethical accounting estimates (1)
- Ethnographie (1)
- Europa (1)
- European Higher Education Area (1)
- Experiment (1)
- Extreme events (1)
- Fallstudie (1)
- Familienstand (1)
- Field experiments (1)
- Finanzwissenschaften (1)
- Foreign Language (1)
- Formal organization (1)
- Frame Analyse; Französische Entwicklungsagentur (1)
- Frame Analysis (1)
- Framing (1)
- Fremdsprache (1)
- French Development Agency (1)
- Functional differentiation (1)
- GHG Protocol (1)
- Gender (1)
- Gender equality (1)
- Geometric Data Analysis (1)
- Geometrische Datenanalyse (1)
- German LifE (1)
- German literature (1)
- German secondary education (1)
- Gesundheit (1)
- GitHub (1)
- Glissant (1)
- Global comparison (1)
- Globalisation (1)
- Gobernanza de los Comités (1)
- Governance (1)
- Graph (1)
- Great Britain (1)
- Haushaltseinkommen (1)
- Health (1)
- Hirnentwicklung (1)
- Household data (1)
- Human (1)
- Human values (1)
- Human-robot interaction (1)
- Hydropower (1)
- IASB accounting conceptual framework (1)
- IAT (1)
- ICT (1)
- IHL (1)
- IHRL (1)
- Inequalities (1)
- Information (1)
- Innovation Ecosystem (1)
- Institutional Complexity (1)
- Institutionelle Komplexität (1)
- Integration (1)
- Intergenerational Mobility (1)
- Intergenerationale Mobilität (1)
- International Labour Organization (1)
- International climate negotiations (1)
- Intertemporal substitution (1)
- Involvierung mehrerer Interessengruppen (1)
- Irak (1)
- Irakisch-Kurdistan (1)
- Iraq (1)
- Iraqi Kurdistan (1)
- Islamophobia (1)
- Italian (1)
- Justice and Development Party (AKP) (1)
- Kapstadt (1)
- Karibik (1)
- Kartographie (1)
- Katutura (1)
- Keyage children (1)
- Klassenzusammensetzung (1)
- Kollektive Identität (1)
- Kulturelles Unternehmertum (1)
- LCGA (1)
- Labor supply (1)
- Laddering interviews (1)
- Latein (1)
- Latent Class Analysis (1)
- Latin (1)
- Learning (1)
- Learning progress (1)
- Leistungsdifferenzierung (1)
- Lesotho (1)
- Life course perspective (1)
- Local Autonomy Index (1)
- Low- and middle-income countries (1)
- Lucha antiterrorista (1)
- Luhmann (1)
- Mapping (1)
- Marronage (1)
- Matching (1)
- Meaning Structure (1)
- Means-end chain analysis (1)
- Mediation Analysis (1)
- Mediationsanalyse (1)
- Mercantilism (1)
- Migrantensport (1)
- Migration, Deutsche Demokratische Republik, Mosambik, Schule der Freundschaft (1)
- Ministerial bureaucracy (1)
- Ministerialverwaltung (1)
- Mixed methods (1)
- Mobility (1)
- Mobilität (1)
- Mozambique (1)
- Multidisciplinarity (1)
- Multidisziplinarität (1)
- Multimodal behavior (1)
- Multiple Correspondence Analysis (1)
- Multiple Korrespondenzanalyse (1)
- Multiple stakeholder involvement (1)
- Multiplicative Group (1)
- Muscle torque (1)
- Muslims (1)
- Namibia (1)
- Neoliberalism (1)
- Neoliberalism Populism theoretical framework (1)
- Niklas (1)
- Older-than-keyage children (1)
- Online disinhibition (1)
- Organisationsförmigkeit (1)
- Organisationssoziologie (1)
- Organisationstheorie (1)
- Organizations and society (1)
- Paris agreement (1)
- Partial organization (1)
- Partnership trajectories (1)
- Path modelling (1)
- Payment vehicle (1)
- Peer Effects (1)
- Peer-Effekte (1)
- Peer-to-peer (1)
- Perceived socioeconomic status (1)
- Performance (1)
- Performance Studies (1)
- Pfadmodell (1)
- Philosophical perspectives (1)
- Physical Fitness (1)
- Physical fitness (1)
- Policy advice (1)
- Political logics (1)
- Politics (1)
- Politics of childhood (1)
- Politik (1)
- Politikberatung (1)
- Populism restated (1)
- Position Generator (1)
- Postcolonial (1)
- Postkolonial (1)
- Poverty alleviation (1)
- Precautionary saving (1)
- President Trump (1)
- Presidents (1)
- Primary school children (1)
- Prime Minister's Office (1)
- Proceso debido (1)
- R&D (1)
- Randomized controlled trial (1)
- Regenerierung (1)
- Regierungszentrale (1)
- Regionalökonometrie (1)
- Regionalökonomie (1)
- Relation (1)
- Religion (1)
- Replication (1)
- Replikation (1)
- Residential energy demand (1)
- Resilience (1)
- Results-Based Management (1)
- Robot personality (1)
- Russian-Jewish Elites (1)
- Russisch-jüdische Eliten (1)
- SDG 11 (1)
- SDGs (1)
- Sanciones de la ONU (1)
- Sars-CoV-2 (1)
- Scheidung (1)
- Scientific (1)
- Scientific advice (1)
- Secondary Education Systems (1)
- Secretariat General (1)
- Sekundarbildungssysteme (1)
- Seniors (1)
- Sequence analysis (1)
- Shari’a (1)
- Slumming (1)
- Slumtourismus (1)
- Social (1)
- Social Class (1)
- Social and cognitive psychology (1)
- Social capital (1)
- Social movements (1)
- Social origin (1)
- Social stratification (1)
- Societal impacts (1)
- Sociology of social facts (1)
- Soziale Herkunft (1)
- Sozialer Survey Österreich (1)
- Sozialkapital (1)
- Spoken word (1)
- Spracherwerb (1)
- Staatenlosigkeit (1)
- Staatsbürgerschaft (1)
- Staatskunst (1)
- State Machine (1)
- Statelessness (1)
- Study (1)
- Survey Research Methods (1)
- Sustainable (1)
- Switzerland (1)
- Südafrika (1)
- Theatre Studies (1)
- Tourismus (1)
- Township (1)
- Townshiptourismus (1)
- Tracking (1)
- Translationstheorie (1)
- Transnational Diaspora (1)
- Transnationale Diaspora (1)
- Tree (1)
- Trennung (1)
- Truman doctrine (1)
- Trumponomics (1)
- Turkey (1)
- Turkish migrant organisations (1)
- Turkish-Islamist ideology (1)
- Typologies of local government systems (1)
- Türkische Vereine (1)
- U.S. and Germany (1)
- UN (1)
- UN sanctions (1)
- UNFCCC (1)
- USA (1)
- Uncanny valley (1)
- Uncaring (1)
- Unemotional (1)
- Ungleichheiten (1)
- United States (1)
- Verwaltung (1)
- Verwaltungskompetenz (1)
- Voluntary global business initiatives (1)
- Voluntary simplicity (1)
- Vulnerability (1)
- Walking (1)
- Washington consensus Development aid (1)
- Well-being (1)
- WhatsApp (1)
- Wicked problems (1)
- Windhoek (1)
- Wirksamkeit von Entwicklungszusammenarbeit (1)
- Wirkungsorientiertes Management (1)
- Wojciech Smarzowski (1)
- World Bank (1)
- Youth (1)
- academic (1)
- academic failure (1)
- acceptance of sexual (1)
- action problems (1)
- adaptation behavior (1)
- administration (1)
- administrative literacy (1)
- adolescents (1)
- age (1)
- age-appropriate competence development (1)
- agent (1)
- agent-based modeling (1)
- aggressive peers (1)
- agile (1)
- alcohol (1)
- algorithmic contingency (1)
- alliances (1)
- analysis (1)
- antagonistic (1)
- application (1)
- argumentation research (1)
- assessment (1)
- attitudes (1)
- attrition bias (1)
- attrition rate (1)
- authenticity (1)
- authority (1)
- automated text analysis (1)
- automatic evaluation (1)
- behavioral public administration (1)
- behavioral strategy (1)
- borderlands (1)
- brain development (1)
- bright side (1)
- bully (1)
- business process management (1)
- bystander (1)
- bystanding (1)
- capabilities framework (1)
- cartel (1)
- centralization (1)
- child (1)
- child asylum-seekers (1)
- child protection (1)
- child's voice (1)
- childcare (1)
- childhood (1)
- children's participation (1)
- chronic illness (1)
- cities (1)
- citizen-state interactions (1)
- classroom cultural diversity climate (1)
- climate policies (1)
- co-ordination (1)
- coercion (1)
- coercive power (1)
- collaboration (1)
- college students (1)
- collusion (1)
- colonialism (1)
- commemorative acts of citizenship (1)
- committee governance (1)
- comparative environmental politics (1)
- comparative urban studies (1)
- competence (1)
- competency framework (1)
- complex problems (1)
- complex sentence processing (1)
- computer-assisted text analysis (1)
- concentrating solar power (1)
- conceptualization (1)
- confidence (1)
- conservative confidence limits (1)
- constitutions (1)
- consumption (1)
- contingencies (1)
- continuation thesis (1)
- contracts (1)
- contrastive empiricism (1)
- cosmopolitanism (1)
- counterterrorism (1)
- court files (1)
- critical consciousness (1)
- critical theory (1)
- criticism of social psychology (1)
- cross-national (1)
- cultural diversity (1)
- cultural identity (1)
- cultural minority youth (1)
- culturally responsive education (1)
- curtailment thesis (1)
- cyber humanistic (1)
- cyber-attack (1)
- cyberbullying (1)
- cyberwar (1)
- dark side (1)
- data fusion (1)
- datafication (1)
- dating (1)
- dating app use (1)
- decentralisation (1)
- decomposition analysis (1)
- decomposition methods (1)
- democratic quality (1)
- democratisation (1)
- demographic change (1)
- deterrence (1)
- developing and emerging economies (1)
- development (1)
- development interventions (1)
- developmental psychology (1)
- diaspora (1)
- dictator game (1)
- dictionary (1)
- didactic concept (1)
- didactic framework (1)
- difference-in-difference (1)
- diffusion (1)
- digital sovereignty (1)
- digitalisation (1)
- digitalization (1)
- digitization (1)
- disability (1)
- disaster management (1)
- discretion (1)
- distributional effect (1)
- division of labour (1)
- divorce (1)
- divorced women (1)
- doctrine (1)
- domination (1)
- donors (1)
- doppelte Staatsbürgerschaft (1)
- drivers (1)
- due process (1)
- ecological modernization (1)
- economics (1)
- economy (1)
- efficiency (1)
- elites (1)
- emigration and immigration (1)
- emotions (1)
- empirical implications of theoretical models (1)
- empirical research (1)
- employee training (1)
- employment precariousness (1)
- employment services (1)
- enablement thesis (1)
- energetic systems (1)
- energy policy (1)
- enjoyment (1)
- environment (1)
- environmental degradation (1)
- environmental policy effects (1)
- environmental policy performance (1)
- epistemic injustice (1)
- ethnicity (1)
- ethnography (1)
- evidence-based policy (1)
- executive personalism (1)
- expertise (1)
- extensive margin (1)
- fairness (1)
- family court (1)
- family dissolution (1)
- family workers (1)
- female (1)
- femininity (1)
- feminist standpoint theory (1)
- field theory (1)
- financial solidarity (1)
- firm behaviour (1)
- flood risk (1)
- floods (1)
- foreign policy (1)
- gender bias (1)
- gender composition (1)
- gender inequalities (1)
- gender social inequality (1)
- gender stereotypes (1)
- gendered boundaries (1)
- generalization (1)
- geovisualization (1)
- geschiedene Frauen (1)
- global climate governance (1)
- global comparison (1)
- global governance (1)
- gouvernance de comité (1)
- guilt (1)
- harmonisation (1)
- head of state (1)
- health policy (1)
- heat demand (1)
- hermeneutical capability (1)
- hermeneutical injustice (1)
- heterogeneity (1)
- horizontal and vertical movements (1)
- hospitals (1)
- household data (1)
- household income (1)
- household types (1)
- housing sector (1)
- huella ecológica (1)
- human capital investments (1)
- human resources management (1)
- human rights (1)
- human values (1)
- humanitarianism (1)
- hybrid mobile application (1)
- idea support (1)
- ideology cri-tique (1)
- illusion of control (1)
- immigrants (1)
- implicit (1)
- implicit self-concept of personality (1)
- in situ upgrading (1)
- inclusion (1)
- inclusion/exclusion (1)
- income (1)
- indigenous rights (1)
- individual recovery (1)
- individuals living in single-parent households (1)
- industry development (1)
- informal (1)
- informal settlements (1)
- informelle Siedlungen (1)
- injury (1)
- innocence (1)
- inpatients (1)
- institutions (1)
- international comparison; (1)
- international human rights (1)
- international humanitarian law (1)
- international organisations (1)
- international trade (1)
- interpretative Forschung (1)
- interpretive research (1)
- intersectionality (1)
- introductory phase (1)
- invisibilities (1)
- knowledge building (1)
- knowledge management (1)
- kulturelle Diversität (1)
- kultursensitive Bildung (1)
- labels (1)
- labor market (1)
- labour market (1)
- labour markets policies (1)
- labour-market (1)
- language network (1)
- latent impairment (1)
- law and technology (1)
- leadership (1)
- learning environment (1)
- learning factory (1)
- learning scenario for manufacturing (1)
- legislatures (1)
- legitimation (1)
- life course (1)
- life satisfaction (1)
- likability (1)
- limits (1)
- local climate policy making (1)
- locus of control (1)
- logics (1)
- low- and middle-income countries (1)
- low-wage employment (1)
- lutte contre le terrorisme (1)
- manager decisions (1)
- marital status (1)
- marketization (1)
- marriage (1)
- masculinity (1)
- matching (1)
- mating (1)
- measurement (1)
- media choice (1)
- media use (1)
- memory (1)
- mental health (1)
- migrant background (1)
- migrant sport clubs (1)
- migration flows (1)
- migration transition (1)
- mobility (1)
- modernity (1)
- modernización ecológica (1)
- moral disengagement (1)
- moral sociology (1)
- mortality (1)
- motivation (1)
- multiculturalism (1)
- multidirectional memory (1)
- multilevel (1)
- multilevel governance (1)
- multiple correspondence analysis (1)
- narcissism (1)
- national ecological footprint (1)
- national identity (1)
- natural hazards (1)
- negotiating (1)
- neo-liberal governance (1)
- network (1)
- neue Institutionentheorie (1)
- new institutional theory (1)
- new technologies (1)
- non-ideal theory (1)
- nonresponse bias (1)
- nonstate actions (1)
- nurses (1)
- nursing staff (1)
- objective labour market outcome (1)
- observational data (1)
- occupational gender segregation (1)
- optimism (1)
- organisation (1)
- organisationality (1)
- organizational sociology (1)
- organizations (1)
- panel (1)
- panel analysis (1)
- parental mediation (1)
- parenthood (1)
- parenting stress (1)
- parliamentary democracy (1)
- parliamentary government (1)
- partnership (1)
- partnership trajectories (1)
- peer cultural socialisation (1)
- perceived job insecurity/security (1)
- perception of robots (1)
- perceptions of inequality (1)
- performance (1)
- phone (1)
- pioneering strategy (1)
- platform (1)
- policy agendas (1)
- policy analysis (1)
- policy competition (1)
- policy cycle (1)
- policy implementation (1)
- policy output (1)
- policy-making (1)
- political economics (1)
- political equality (1)
- political integration (1)
- political trust (1)
- politische Ökonomie (1)
- política ambiental comparada (1)
- power motive (1)
- precedent (1)
- preference for agency (1)
- preferences (1)
- preparedness (1)
- prestige (1)
- prevalence (1)
- primary school children (1)
- principal (1)
- privatization (1)
- proactivity (1)
- probability samples (1)
- problem-solving (1)
- procédure officielle (1)
- productivity (1)
- professional identity (1)
- professionalization (1)
- professions (1)
- project performance (1)
- promotive voice (1)
- prosocial behavior (1)
- psychological distress (1)
- public (1)
- public economics (1)
- public sector choice (1)
- qualitative research (1)
- quality management (1)
- quantitative research (1)
- race/ethnicity (1)
- racism (1)
- reactionary mood (1)
- reactive/proactive aggression (1)
- recall accuracy (1)
- reciprocity (1)
- reflection (1)
- refugee (1)
- regional economics (1)
- regionalisation (1)
- regression tree (1)
- regulación estatal (1)
- regulation (1)
- regulations (1)
- religion (1)
- renewable energy (1)
- representative real-time survey data (1)
- research challenges (1)
- resentment (1)
- retrospective questions (1)
- return migration (1)
- risk attitudes (1)
- sanctions (1)
- sanctions de l’ONU (1)
- satisfaction (1)
- scaling method (1)
- schematic maps (1)
- school motivation (1)
- schrumpfende Städte (1)
- science-policy interactions (1)
- selective exposure (1)
- self-employed (1)
- self-rated health (1)
- semi-parliamentarism (1)
- semi-parliamentary government (1)
- sentiment analysis (1)
- separation (1)
- separation of powers (1)
- sequence (1)
- service motivation (1)
- sexual victimization (1)
- simulation model (1)
- single mothers (1)
- slum tourism (1)
- slumming (1)
- social categories (1)
- social construction (1)
- social housing (1)
- social inclusion (1)
- social inequality (1)
- social network analysis (1)
- social rejection (1)
- socialization (1)
- sociology of social forms (1)
- soziale Klasse (1)
- sozialer Wohnungsbau (1)
- spatial econometrics (1)
- sport profile (1)
- standpoint epistemology (1)
- statistical categorization (1)
- stereotypes (1)
- street-level bureaucracy (1)
- strength (1)
- striking combat sports (1)
- subject-oriented learning (1)
- subjective risk perception (1)
- supervisor support (1)
- supply chain (1)
- survey mode (1)
- systematic literature review (1)
- systems theory (1)
- teamwork (1)
- technical system (1)
- technological change (1)
- technological learning (1)
- term limits (1)
- territorial rights (1)
- text analysis (1)
- theory testing (1)
- tourism (1)
- township (1)
- township tourism (1)
- trade (1)
- traits (1)
- transit migration (1)
- transnational city networks (1)
- transnational governance arrangements (1)
- transnormative sociology (1)
- treadmill of production (1)
- types of municipal administration (1)
- unemployment (1)
- unit nonresponse (1)
- urban decline (1)
- urban regeneration (1)
- urban sustainability (1)
- value chain analysis (1)
- vements labour market occupational transitions (1)
- verbal working memory (1)
- verbales Arbeitsgedächtnis (1)
- vergleichende Stadtforschung (1)
- veto player theory (1)
- victimhood (1)
- video games (1)
- violence (1)
- virtual groups (1)
- vocational training (1)
- voice pitch (1)
- welfare (1)
- welfare and gender regimes (1)
- welfare markets (1)
- welfare state benefits (1)
- word embeddings (1)
- work-family policies (1)
- working hours (1)
- working time (1)
- workplace culture (1)
- young adults (1)
- youth characteristics (1)
- ‘refugee crisis’ (1)
Institute
- Sozialwissenschaften (96)
- Fachgruppe Politik- & Verwaltungswissenschaft (45)
- Institut für Umweltwissenschaften und Geographie (42)
- Fachgruppe Soziologie (41)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (19)
- Fachgruppe Volkswirtschaftslehre (16)
- Fachgruppe Betriebswirtschaftslehre (15)
- Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät (13)
- Department Psychologie (12)
- Department Erziehungswissenschaft (7)
- Department Sport- und Gesundheitswissenschaften (6)
- Extern (6)
- Strukturbereich Kognitionswissenschaften (6)
- Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik (5)
- Department für Inklusionspädagogik (4)
- Humanwissenschaftliche Fakultät (4)
- Historisches Institut (3)
- Institut für Slavistik (3)
- Department Linguistik (2)
- Hasso-Plattner-Institut für Digital Engineering gGmbH (2)
- Institut für Biochemie und Biologie (2)
- Institut für Geowissenschaften (2)
- Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät (2)
- Philosophische Fakultät (2)
- Bürgerliches Recht (1)
- Institut für Jüdische Studien und Religionswissenschaft (1)
- Institut für Physik und Astronomie (1)
- Juristische Fakultät (1)
- Lehreinheit für Wirtschafts-Arbeit-Technik (1)
- Zentrum für Lehrerbildung und Bildungsforschung (ZeLB) (1)
- Zentrum für Qualitätsentwicklung in Lehre und Studium (ZfQ) (1)
- Öffentliches Recht (1)
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.
The growing use of digital tools in policy implementation has altered the work of street-level bureaucrats who are granted substantial discretionary power in decision-making. Digital tools can constrain discretionary power, like the curtailment thesis proposed, or serve as action resources, like the enablement thesis suggested. This article assesses empirical evidence of the impact of digital tools on street-level work and decision-making in service-oriented and regulation-oriented organisations based on a systematic literature review and thematic qualitative content analysis of 36 empirical studies published until 2021. The findings demonstrate different effects with regard to the role of digital tools and the core tasks of the public administration, depending on political and managerial goals and consequent system design. Leading or decisive digital tools mostly curtail discretion, especially in service-oriented organisations. In contrast, an enhanced information base or recommendations for actions enable decision-making, in particular in regulation-oriented organisations. By showing how street-level bureaucrats actively try to resist the curtailing effects caused by rigid design to address individual circumstances, for instance by establishing ways of coping like rule bending or rule breaking, using personal resources or prioritising among clients, this study demonstrates the importance of the continuation thesis and the persistently crucial role of human judgement in policy implementation.
We conduct a laboratory experiment to study how locus of control operates through people’s preferences and beliefs to influence their decisions. Using the principal–agent setting of the delegation game, we test four key channels that conceptually link locus of control to decision-making: (i) preference for agency, (ii) optimism and (iii) confidence regarding the return to effort, and (iv) illusion of control. Knowing the return and cost of stated effort, principals either retain or delegate the right to make an investment decision that generates payoffs for themselves and their agents. Extending the game to the context in which the return to stated effort is unknown allows us to explicitly study the relationship between locus of control and beliefs about the return to effort. We find that internal locus of control is linked to the preference for agency, an effect that is driven by women. We find no evidence that locus of control influences optimism and confidence about the return to stated effort, or that it operates through an illusion of control.
Does working in a gender-atypical occupation reduce individuals’ likelihood of finding a different-sex romantic partner, and do such occupational partnership penalties contribute to occupational gender segregation? To answer this question, we theorized partnership penalties for working in gender-atypical occupations by drawing on insights from evolutionary psychology, social constructivism, and rational choice theory and exploited the stability of occupational pathways in Germany. In Study 1, we analyzed observational data from a national probability sample (N= 1,634,944) to assess whether individuals in gender-atypical occupations were less likely to be partnered than individuals who worked in gender typical occupations. To assess whether the observed partnership gaps found in Study 1 were causally related to the gender typicality of men’s and women’s occupations, we conducted a field experiment on a dating app (N = 6,778). Because the findings from Study 2 suggested that young women and men indeed experienced penalties for working in a gender-atypical occupation (at least when they were not highly attractive), we employed a choice-experimental design in Study 3 (N = 1,250) to assess whether women and men were aware of occupational partnership penalties and showed that anticipating occupational partnership penalties may keep young and highly educated women from working in gender-atypical occupations. Our main conclusion therefore is that that observed penalties and their anticipation seem to be driven by unconscious rather than conscious processes.
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.
Competence development must change at all didactic levels to meet the new requirements triggered by digitization. Unlike classic learning theories and the resulting popular approaches (e.g., sender-receiver model), future-oriented vocational training must include new learning theory impulses in the discussion about competence acquisition. On the one hand, these impulses are often very well elaborated on the theoretical side, but the transfer into innovative learning environments - such as learning factories - is often still missing. On the other hand, actual learning factory (design) approaches often concentrate primarily on the technical side. Subject-oriented learning theory enables the design of competence development-oriented vocational training projectsin learning factories in which persons can obtain relevant competencies for digitization. At the same time, such learning theory approaches assume a potentially infinite number of learning interests and reasons. Following this, competence development is always located in an institutional or organizational context. The paper conceptionally answers how this theoryimmanent challenge is synthesizable with the reality of organizationally competence development requirements.
This essay takes an Anglophone Cultural Studies approach to reflect on the interdependence among as well as the individual (implicit) impact of the elements constituting our (embodied) power structures. These are, e.g., bodily experience/s such as shame and fear, everyday and institutional discourses and practices, but also manifestations of differences and particularities that we transform into phenomena such as “norms”, “binary systems” and “binary organisations”. The analysis of seemingly cyclic “Othering processes” and patterns of violence shows how people who identify as trans*, inter*, or non-binary have to live through and embody epistemological, emotional, and/or physical violence. At the same time, the descriptions illustrate numberless potential forms of resistance and change.
This study analyses the impact of managers’ risk preferences on their training allocation decisions. We begin by providing nationally representative evidence that managers’ risk-aversion is negatively correlated with the likelihood that their firms engage in any worker training. Using a novel vignette study, we then demonstrate that risk-tolerant and risk-averse decision makers have significantly different training preferences. Risk aversion results in increased sensitivity to turnover risk. Managers who are risk-averse offer less general training and are more reluctant to train workers with a history of job mobility. Adopting a weighting approach to flexibly control for observed differences in the characteristics of risk-averse and risk-tolerant managers, we show that our findings cannot be explained by heterogeneity in either managers’ observed characteristics or the type of firms where they work. All managers, irrespective of their risk preferences, are sensitive to the investment risk associated with training, avoiding training that is more costly or that targets those with less occupational expertise or nearing retirement. This provides suggestive evidence that the risks of training are primarily due to the risk that trained workers will leave the firm (turnover risk) rather than the risk that the benefits of training do not outweigh the costs (investment risk).
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.