320 Politikwissenschaft
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (192)
- Postprint (45)
- Part of a Book (43)
- Doctoral Thesis (31)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (28)
- Other (15)
- Review (8)
- Master's Thesis (6)
- Working Paper (4)
- Journal/Publication series (1)
Language
- English (373) (remove)
Keywords
- Germany (12)
- European Union (11)
- democracy (8)
- parliamentary government (8)
- Europäische Union (7)
- governance (7)
- international organizations (7)
- presidential government (7)
- bicameralism (6)
- Integration (5)
- Security Council (5)
- United Nations (5)
- World Bank (5)
- decision-making (5)
- semi-parliamentary government (5)
- Deutschland (4)
- civil war (4)
- decentralization (4)
- discourse (4)
- innovation (4)
- institutions (4)
- international organisations (4)
- visions of democracy (4)
- Außenpolitik (3)
- Coordination (3)
- Demokratisierung (3)
- Governance (3)
- Iran (3)
- Islam (3)
- Migration (3)
- Modernisierung (3)
- Verwaltung (3)
- administration (3)
- authoritarianism (3)
- climate change (3)
- counterterrorism (3)
- democratization (3)
- digitalization (3)
- evaluation (3)
- executive personalism (3)
- gender (3)
- human rights (3)
- institutional design (3)
- institutional interplay (3)
- modernization (3)
- policy (3)
- political equality (3)
- power (3)
- public administration (3)
- public management (3)
- resilience (3)
- separation of powers (3)
- territorial reforms (3)
- terrorism (3)
- transitional justice (3)
- Australia (2)
- China (2)
- Dezentralisierung (2)
- Eastern Europe (2)
- European Foreign Policy (2)
- European Neighbourhood Policy (2)
- Europäische Nachbarschaftspolitik (2)
- Executive-legislative relations (2)
- GIZ (2)
- International (2)
- International Financial Institutions (2)
- Legislative organisation (2)
- Liberia (2)
- Local authorities (2)
- Paris Agreement (2)
- Poland (2)
- Polen (2)
- Quality management (2)
- REDD (2)
- Rechenschaftspflicht (2)
- Russia (2)
- Sierra Leone (2)
- Telekommunikation (2)
- Vereinte Nationen (2)
- Verwaltungsreform (2)
- accountability (2)
- administrative reforms (2)
- aid effectiveness (2)
- authority (2)
- bias (2)
- capacity (2)
- climate mitigation (2)
- committee governance (2)
- constitutional design (2)
- contestation (2)
- cooperation (2)
- coordination (2)
- debt (2)
- democratic theory (2)
- digital transformation (2)
- digitalisation (2)
- drug control (2)
- e-government (2)
- economy (2)
- elections (2)
- electoral systems (2)
- environmental policy (2)
- expert authority (2)
- expertise (2)
- feminism (2)
- food security governance (2)
- foreign policy (2)
- globalization (2)
- higher education (2)
- institutional complexity (2)
- inter-organizational order (2)
- inter-organizational relations (2)
- international (2)
- international bureaucracies (2)
- international institutions (2)
- international law (2)
- international non-governmental organizations (2)
- international public administration (2)
- international relations (2)
- job demands-resources model (2)
- land management (2)
- legal change (2)
- local government (2)
- margins of error (2)
- metamorphosis of international law (2)
- multi-level study (2)
- narratives (2)
- natural climate solutions (2)
- new public management (2)
- organizational fields (2)
- parliamentary opposition (2)
- party competition (2)
- patterns of democracy (2)
- peacebuilding (2)
- peacekeeping (2)
- policy advice (2)
- policy analysis (2)
- policy-making (2)
- politics (2)
- populism (2)
- presidentialism (2)
- process tracing (2)
- protection (2)
- race (2)
- research communication (2)
- restoration (2)
- skills (2)
- societal impact of research (2)
- sustainable economy (2)
- telework (2)
- value change (2)
- veto players (2)
- violence (2)
- wicked problems (2)
- work-place behavior (2)
- (post) new public management (1)
- 2 degrees C target (1)
- 3C (1)
- AKP (1)
- Abendland (1)
- Absolute Advantage (1)
- Absoluter Kostenvorteil (1)
- Accountability (1)
- Active learning (1)
- Adam Smith (1)
- Administration (1)
- Administrative reform (1)
- AfD (1)
- Affiliationsnetzwerke (1)
- Africa (1)
- African American literature (1)
- Aid conditionalities (1)
- Air pollution (1)
- Akteursinteraktion (1)
- Alternative für Deutschland (1)
- Antisemitism (1)
- Apartheid (1)
- Arbeitsmarktpolitik (1)
- Argentina (1)
- Artefakte (1)
- Atomwaffen (1)
- Atomwaffensperrvertrag (1)
- Aufsatzsammlung (1)
- Augmented reality (1)
- Ausschüsse (1)
- Australian bicameralism (1)
- Autoritarismus (1)
- Außenhandel (1)
- BSW (1)
- Benchmarking (1)
- Berlin (1)
- Beschaffungswesen (1)
- Brasilien (1)
- Brazil (1)
- Buenos Aires (1)
- Bundeswehr (1)
- Bürgerschaft (1)
- CDM (1)
- CESCR Committee (1)
- COVID-19 (1)
- COVID-19 pandemic (1)
- CPPS (1)
- CPS (1)
- Cabinet (1)
- Cambodia (1)
- Campaign finance (1)
- Carl Schmitt (1)
- Case studies (1)
- Catholicism (1)
- Changing nature of armed conflict (1)
- Character (1)
- Circular argumentation (1)
- Cities (1)
- Civil service career (1)
- Civil society (1)
- Climate change (1)
- Climate change adaptation (1)
- Climate governance (1)
- Colombia (1)
- Common Foreign and Security Policy (1)
- Comparative Advantage (1)
- Comparative Public Administration (1)
- Compliance (1)
- Conseil de sécurité (1)
- Consejo de Seguridad (1)
- Consolidation (1)
- Constitutive Mechanism (1)
- Coordination structures (1)
- Corruption risks (1)
- Counterterrorism (1)
- Country experience (1)
- Decarbonisation (1)
- Decentralization in government (1)
- Decision Probability (1)
- Dekarbonisierung (1)
- Democracy Promotion (1)
- Demokratie (1)
- Demokratieförderung (1)
- Design Thinking (1)
- Development aid (1)
- Development aid End of history (1)
- Development aid criticism (1)
- Development cooperation (1)
- Dezentralisation (1)
- Dicranopteris linearis (1)
- EU regional policy (1)
- EU-Regionalpolitik (1)
- Eastern policy (1)
- Economic policy (1)
- Edouard Glissant (1)
- Education (1)
- Enforcement (1)
- Entwicklungszusammenarbeit (1)
- Entwicklungszusammenarbeit mit Indien (1)
- Erdogan (1)
- Erneuerbare Energie (1)
- Estonia (1)
- Eurasian Economic Union (1)
- Eurobarometer (1)
- Eurocentrism (1)
- Europaidentität (1)
- Europe (1)
- European Commission (1)
- European Constitution (1)
- European Green Deal (1)
- European Immigration Policies (1)
- European Neighborhood Policy (1)
- European identity (1)
- European integration (1)
- Europäische Außenpolitik (1)
- Europäische Integration (1)
- Europäische Verfassung (1)
- Evaluierung (1)
- Evidence-based policy making (1)
- Evolutionary economics (1)
- Evolutorische Ökonomik (1)
- Expert Authority (1)
- Expertenautorität (1)
- Extreme weather (1)
- Federal administration (1)
- Federalism (1)
- Foreign policy (1)
- Franco (1)
- Franco-Prussian War (1)
- Friedensforschung (1)
- Friedenssicherung (1)
- Föderalismus (1)
- GREVIO (1)
- Galwan Valley (1)
- Game (1)
- Geberharmonisierung (1)
- Gemeindem (1)
- Gemeinsame Außen- und Sicherheitspolitik (1)
- Gender (1)
- Generalized knowledge constructin axiom (1)
- Geneva convention of 1864 (1)
- George W. Bush (1)
- Gerald Gaus (1)
- Gesellschaftstheorie (1)
- Gleichgewicht der Kräfte (1)
- Gleichstellung (1)
- Global Environmental Governance (1)
- Global South (1)
- Global order (1)
- Global warming potential (1)
- Gobernanza de los Comités (1)
- Greece (1)
- Green infrastructure investment (1)
- HFCS (1)
- Haiti (1)
- Hanoi (1)
- Higher education (1)
- Holocaust (1)
- IHL (1)
- IHRL (1)
- IMF (1)
- INGOs (1)
- ISIS (1)
- Impartiality (1)
- Income (1)
- India (1)
- Indo-Pacific (1)
- Industry 4.0 (1)
- Informal and formal (1)
- Informal reform (1)
- Informationsflüsse (1)
- Innovation (1)
- Institution (1)
- Institutional change (1)
- Institutionelle Komplexität (1)
- Integration Policy (1)
- Integration strategy (1)
- International Bureaucracies (1)
- International Migration (1)
- International Monetary Fund (1)
- International Practices (1)
- International bureaucrats (1)
- International policy (1)
- International relations (1)
- International trade (1)
- Internationale Migration (1)
- Internet of things (1)
- Investitionsverhalten (1)
- Investment Behavior (1)
- Irak (1)
- Iraq (1)
- Islamic movements (1)
- Israeli-Palestinian conflict (1)
- Istanbul Convention (1)
- Jawaharlal Nehru (1)
- Jewish question (1)
- Jordan (1)
- Jordanien (1)
- Kambodscha (1)
- Klimagovernance (1)
- Klimapolitik (1)
- Klimawandel (1)
- Kolumbien (1)
- Komparativer Kostenvorteil (1)
- Koordination (1)
- Korruption (1)
- Korruptionsrisiken (1)
- Kultur (1)
- Kulturwissenschaft (1)
- Kyrgyzstan (1)
- Labor supply (1)
- Landscape planning (1)
- Landwehr (1)
- Lateinamerika (1)
- Latin America (1)
- Law and economics (1)
- Lifetime income (1)
- Local Civil Society Networks (1)
- Local Governance (1)
- Local administrative systems (1)
- Local autonomy (1)
- Local government reform (1)
- Longitudinal and panel data (1)
- Lucha antiterrorista (1)
- Macht (1)
- Management control (1)
- Managerial autonomy (1)
- Market Dynamics (1)
- Market failure (1)
- Marktdynamik (1)
- Marktversagen (1)
- Marokko (1)
- Max Weber (1)
- Mayoralty (1)
- Measurement (1)
- Measurement theory (1)
- Media (1)
- Mehrebenen-System (1)
- Meta-model (1)
- Methane (1)
- Migrants (1)
- Migration Policy (1)
- Mikropolitik (1)
- Minderheiten (1)
- Ministries (1)
- Missing rich (1)
- Mixed methods (1)
- Modellierung (1)
- Modelling (1)
- Moderation (1)
- Moderne (1)
- Modernisierungstheorie (1)
- Modernization (1)
- Monetary Fund (1)
- Morocco (1)
- Municipalities (1)
- NATO (1)
- Nachhaltige Entwicklung (1)
- National state communication (1)
- Nazi Germany (1)
- Negotiation (1)
- Nelson Mandela (1)
- Neo-institutionalismus (1)
- Neoliberalism (1)
- Neoliberalismus (1)
- Netzwerkanalyse (1)
- Neutrality (1)
- New public management (1)
- Nicht-Gleichgewichtsökonomik (1)
- Nichtverbreitung von Kernwaffen (1)
- Nigeria (1)
- Non-equilibrium economics (1)
- Norm collisions (1)
- Nuclear non-proliferation (1)
- Operation Euphrates Shield (1)
- Organisations (1)
- Organizational change (1)
- Organizational innovation (1)
- Orthodoxy (1)
- Osteuropa (1)
- Ostpolitik (1)
- P/CVE (1)
- Pakistan (1)
- Palestine (1)
- Pareto distribution (1)
- Paris agreement (1)
- Parliamentary questions (1)
- Partizipation (1)
- Peace Studies (1)
- Peacebuilding (1)
- Performance (1)
- Performance management (1)
- Permanent income (1)
- Policy (1)
- Policy Changes (1)
- Policy advice (1)
- Policymaking (1)
- Political civil servant (1)
- Political craft (1)
- Political economy Socio-economic development (1)
- Political establishment (1)
- Politicisation (1)
- Politik (1)
- Politikdiffusion (1)
- Politikempfehlungen (1)
- Politiktransfer (1)
- Politikänderungen (1)
- Politische Theorie (1)
- Polizeireform (1)
- Populism (1)
- Populismus (1)
- Potassium (1)
- Precedent (1)
- President Trump (1)
- Price floor (1)
- Price review (1)
- Proceso debido (1)
- Process modeling (1)
- Procurement (1)
- Protestantism (1)
- Prozessanalyse (1)
- Prozessexpertise (1)
- Prozessgestaltung (1)
- Public Management (1)
- Public opinion (1)
- Public sector (1)
- Public-private partnerships (1)
- QCA (1)
- Quad (1)
- Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (1)
- Qualität des Projektmanagements (1)
- Rankings (1)
- Ratchet Effect (1)
- Rechtsstaatlichkeit (1)
- Recipient performance (1)
- Reform des Öffentlichen Dienstes (1)
- Regierungskooperation (1)
- Regulierung (1)
- Renewable Energy (1)
- Reputation der Geber (1)
- Resozialisierung (1)
- Responsibility to Protect (1)
- Rio Conventions (1)
- Sanciones de la ONU (1)
- Sebastian Kurz (1)
- Security council (1)
- Security council reform (1)
- Senegal (1)
- Short-lived climate pollutants (1)
- Simmel (1)
- Simulation process building (1)
- Simulations (1)
- Slovakia (1)
- Slowakei (1)
- Social Choice Theory (1)
- Social class (1)
- South Afrika (1)
- Soziologie (1)
- Spain (1)
- Strukturfonds (1)
- Sub-Sahara Africa (1)
- Sub-national Autonomy (1)
- Supermacht (1)
- Supervision (1)
- Survey (1)
- Sustainability indicators (1)
- Sustainable Development (1)
- Syria (1)
- System Dynamics (1)
- System failure (1)
- Systemversagen (1)
- Teilhabe der BürgerInnen (1)
- Transformation (1)
- Transparenz (1)
- Trump phenomenon (1)
- Turkish military in Syria (1)
- Turkish politics (1)
- U.S. Armed Forces (1)
- UN (1)
- UN human rights treaty bodies (1)
- UN sanctions (1)
- UN-REDD (1)
- US foreign policy (1)
- US-Außenpolitik (1)
- Ukraine (1)
- Ukraine war (1)
- Ultimatum (1)
- Unilateralismus (1)
- Use cases Morphologic box (1)
- Versöhnung (1)
- Verteidigungspolitik (1)
- Vertiefung (1)
- Verwaltungsmodernisierung (1)
- Verwaltungsreformen (1)
- Veto Player (1)
- Vietnamese (1)
- Vietnamesen (1)
- Wahlkampffinanzierung (1)
- Wannsee conference (1)
- Wasserentwicklungszusammenarbeit (1)
- Weak and strong sustainability (1)
- Wealth distribution (1)
- Weber (1)
- Weberian bureaucracy (1)
- West Africa (1)
- Wicked problems (1)
- Winning Coalition (1)
- Wirksamkeit der Entwicklungszusammenarbeit (1)
- Wirtschaft (1)
- Wirtschaftspolitik (1)
- Wissensmanagement (1)
- Yiddish culturalism (1)
- Zivilgesellschaft (1)
- Zusammenarbeit in Sicherheitsfragen (1)
- academic disengagement (1)
- acteurs non-étatiques (1)
- active labor market policies (1)
- actor constellations (1)
- actor interplay (1)
- administración pública (1)
- administration publique (1)
- administrative culture (1)
- advocacy coalitions (1)
- affiliation networks (1)
- agency (1)
- agent-based modeling (1)
- agentes no estatales (1)
- agricultural policy (1)
- aid (1)
- aid allocation (1)
- al-Bab Battle (1)
- anniversary issue (1)
- anthropocene (1)
- anti-gender (1)
- antifeminist (1)
- application (1)
- artefacts (1)
- attitudes (1)
- authoritarian resilience (1)
- authoritarian rule (1)
- balance of power (1)
- balancing (1)
- behavior (1)
- benefit systems (1)
- border regime (1)
- borders (1)
- boundary spanning (1)
- bullying (1)
- burden of disease (1)
- bureaucraties internationales (1)
- burocracias internacionales (1)
- candidates (1)
- capabilities framework (1)
- child labour (1)
- childcare (1)
- citizen participation (1)
- citizenship (1)
- civil service reform (1)
- civil service survey (1)
- civil society (1)
- civilian infrastructure (1)
- climate and energy policy (1)
- climate change mitigation (1)
- climate finance (1)
- climate governance (1)
- climate policy (1)
- climate politics (1)
- closing civic space (1)
- coalitions (1)
- coercion (1)
- collaboration (1)
- collaborative governance (1)
- collective memory (1)
- collective targeting (1)
- comparative (1)
- comparative development (1)
- comparative environmental politics (1)
- comparative public administration (1)
- competition (1)
- competitiveness (1)
- complex problems (1)
- concept of the political (1)
- conceptualization (1)
- conduct of life (1)
- conflict (1)
- conflict management (1)
- conflict resolution (1)
- consensus (1)
- consensus democracy (1)
- constitution-making (1)
- containment (1)
- contentious politics (1)
- contractor/provider split (1)
- conventional donors (1)
- corruption (1)
- crises (1)
- crisis (1)
- cross-cultural competence (1)
- cross-national (1)
- cultural studies (1)
- culture (1)
- culture-general skills (1)
- cyber-attack (1)
- cyberwar (1)
- data and methods (1)
- de facto authority (1)
- de jure authority (1)
- death (1)
- death penalty (1)
- decadence (1)
- decarbonization (1)
- defence policy (1)
- definition (1)
- delegation (1)
- democratic performance (1)
- democratic quality (1)
- demografischer Wandel (1)
- demographic change (1)
- dependency (1)
- depression (1)
- design options (1)
- developing countries (1)
- development (1)
- development aid India (1)
- development cooperation (1)
- development projects (1)
- dictatorship (1)
- difference-in-differences (1)
- digital government (1)
- digital overload (1)
- digitale Verwaltung (1)
- direct democracy (1)
- disability-adjusted life years (1)
- discrimination (1)
- discriminatory dimensions of forced evictions (1)
- diversified quality production (1)
- doctrine (1)
- domestic politics (1)
- donor harmonization (1)
- donor reputation (1)
- drivers for change (1)
- due process (1)
- e-services (1)
- earth system governance (1)
- ecological modernization (1)
- economic policy (1)
- economics (1)
- effective district magnitude (1)
- employment (1)
- employment services (1)
- energy (1)
- ensuring state (1)
- entrepreneurship (1)
- environmental agreements (1)
- environmental degradation (1)
- environmental governance (1)
- environmental mainstreaming (1)
- environmental policy effects (1)
- environmental policy performance (1)
- epistemic injustice (1)
- equal opportunities (1)
- ethnicity (1)
- evidence-based policy making (1)
- evolutionary economics (1)
- executive head (1)
- executive-legislative relations (1)
- executive-parties dimension (1)
- executives (1)
- experiment (1)
- expert recommendations (1)
- facilitation (1)
- far right (1)
- far-right extremism (1)
- far-right groups (1)
- far-right parties (1)
- far-right populism (1)
- featured (1)
- federalism (1)
- fern (1)
- field experiment (1)
- field theory (1)
- film (1)
- financial policy (1)
- fisheries policy (1)
- flexibility (1)
- fluctuation (1)
- forced evictions (1)
- formale Institution (1)
- fragile and conflict-affected states (1)
- fragile und konfliktbeladene Staaten (1)
- francs-tireurs (1)
- function of cross-cultural competence (1)
- gender equality (1)
- gender mainstreaming (1)
- gender research (1)
- genre (1)
- geographical proximity (1)
- global (1)
- global commons (1)
- global environmental governance (1)
- global environmental politics (1)
- global governance (1)
- global health (1)
- global public policy (1)
- global south (1)
- globale Umweltpolitik (1)
- good governance (1)
- gouvernance de comité (1)
- government (1)
- government formation (1)
- government policymaking (1)
- government-formation (1)
- green finance (1)
- green recovery (1)
- growth strategy (1)
- gute Regierungsführung (1)
- health security (1)
- health services (1)
- hegemony (1)
- herkömmliche Geber (1)
- hermeneutical capability (1)
- hermeneutical injustice (1)
- heterogeneity (1)
- history (1)
- hospitals (1)
- huella ecológica (1)
- human mind (1)
- human rights treaty monitoring bodies (1)
- human trafficking (1)
- identity (1)
- impact evaluation (1)
- impartiality (1)
- incels (1)
- indigene Völker (1)
- indigenous peoples (1)
- individual complaints procedures (1)
- industrial organization (1)
- industrial relations (1)
- industrial restructuring (1)
- information and communication technologies (1)
- information flow (1)
- informelle Institution (1)
- innovation adoption (1)
- innovation systems (1)
- institutional change (1)
- institutional investors (1)
- institutional policy (1)
- institutional processes (1)
- institutional reform (1)
- institutional theory (1)
- institutionelle Komplexität (1)
- inter-governmental relations (1)
- inter-organizational control (1)
- intercultural communication (1)
- interdepartmental committee (1)
- interest group (1)
- intergovernmental cooperation (1)
- intergovernmental reforms (1)
- intergovernmental treaty secretariats (1)
- interkulturelle Kompetenz (1)
- interministerielle Arbeitsgruppe (1)
- internal migration (1)
- international administration (1)
- international bureaucracy (1)
- international cooperation (1)
- international development (1)
- international human rights (1)
- international humanitarian law (1)
- international legal order (1)
- international organisation (1)
- international trade (1)
- internationale Beziehungen (1)
- internationale Institutionen (1)
- internationale Organisationen (1)
- internationale Verwaltungen (1)
- internationale Zusammenarbeit (1)
- interne Migration (1)
- interoperability (1)
- interpretative declarations (1)
- intertextuality (1)
- islamistische Bewegungen (1)
- issue market (1)
- job autonomy (1)
- job satisfaction (1)
- job search (1)
- just transition (1)
- knowledge (1)
- knowledge creep (1)
- knowledge management (1)
- knowledge utilization (1)
- kulturell-kognitive Institution (1)
- labor force participation (1)
- labor market policies (1)
- law and technology (1)
- leadership (1)
- legislatures (1)
- levee en masse (1)
- lifestyle (1)
- local and urban governance (1)
- local autonomy (1)
- local community (1)
- local finance (1)
- local governance (1)
- local government systems (1)
- local politics (1)
- long-term policy (1)
- lutte contre le terrorisme (1)
- majority formation (1)
- majority rule (1)
- male supremacy (1)
- managerial reforms (1)
- manosphere (1)
- manufacturing (1)
- marginality (1)
- marine governance (1)
- market failures (1)
- marketization (1)
- measurement (1)
- men's rights (1)
- meso-level of government (1)
- micro-credit (1)
- micro-politics (1)
- micropolitics (1)
- migration (1)
- military culture (1)
- military effectiveness (1)
- ministry of agriculture (1)
- minorities (1)
- minority rights (1)
- misogyny (1)
- mixed methods (1)
- modernity (1)
- modernización ecológica (1)
- modernization theory (1)
- monopoly of legitimate use of force (1)
- mots clés (1)
- multi-level governance (1)
- multi-level government (1)
- multi-level system (1)
- multi-party systems (1)
- multilateral (1)
- multilateralism (1)
- multinational oganizations (1)
- multiplicity (1)
- municipalities (1)
- municipally owned corporation (1)
- myth of Franktireurkrieg (1)
- national ecological footprint (1)
- national ministries (1)
- nationale Ministerien (1)
- nationalism (1)
- nativism (1)
- neo weberian state (1)
- neo-liberal governance (1)
- neo-liberalism (1)
- network analysis (1)
- neue Geber (1)
- neue Parteien (1)
- neuer Institutionalismus (1)
- new democracies (1)
- new donors (1)
- new parties (1)
- new technologies (1)
- newsfeed (1)
- nineteenth and twentieth century (1)
- non-alignment; (1)
- non-equilibrium economics (1)
- non-state actors (1)
- nonstate actors (1)
- norm change (1)
- norm collisions (1)
- norm dynamics (1)
- norm robustness (1)
- norms (1)
- nuclear non-proliferation treaty (1)
- nuclear weapons (1)
- opinion polls (1)
- opposition (1)
- orchestration (1)
- organisational change (1)
- organisations internationales (1)
- organizaciones internacionales (1)
- organization theory (1)
- organizational epistemology (1)
- organizational reform (1)
- organizational reputation (1)
- organizations (1)
- palabras clave (1)
- parental leave (1)
- parenthood (1)
- parliament (1)
- parliamentarism (1)
- parliamentary democracy (1)
- parties (1)
- patterns (1)
- peace (1)
- peace process (1)
- performance (1)
- peripherality (1)
- personal data (1)
- personality (1)
- phytolith (1)
- planetarity (1)
- planetary boundaries (1)
- planning (1)
- pledge fulfillment (1)
- police reform (1)
- policy agendas (1)
- policy diffusion (1)
- policy output (1)
- policy reform (1)
- policy scope (1)
- policy signals (1)
- policy strategy (1)
- policy substitutes (1)
- policy transfer (1)
- policy-profession conflict (1)
- political campaigns (1)
- political integration (1)
- political opportunism (1)
- political preferences (1)
- political repression (1)
- political sociology (1)
- political stability (1)
- political symbols (1)
- politics and the media (1)
- politics of relation (1)
- polling (1)
- política ambiental comparada (1)
- pooling (1)
- populist radical right (1)
- post-Soviet (1)
- post-conflict peace (1)
- post-development (1)
- precedent (1)
- preferences (1)
- privacy (1)
- problem-solving (1)
- process design (1)
- process expertise (1)
- procédure officielle (1)
- production concepts (1)
- professionalization (1)
- professions (1)
- project management quality (1)
- proportionality analysis (1)
- protest (1)
- proxy force (1)
- public (1)
- public administration reform (1)
- public good (1)
- public health (1)
- public opinion (1)
- public opinion polls (1)
- public participation (1)
- public policy (1)
- public sector innovation (1)
- public sector reform (1)
- public value (1)
- public values (1)
- public-reason liberalism (1)
- punctuated equilibrium theory (1)
- qualitative Fallstudie (1)
- qualitative case study (1)
- qualitative research (1)
- quality management (1)
- racial discrimination (1)
- racism (1)
- radical (1)
- radicalization (1)
- rationalism (1)
- reasonableness (1)
- rebel attacks (1)
- reciprocity (1)
- reconciliation (1)
- regime complexity (1)
- regional organizations (1)
- regulación estatal (1)
- regulation (1)
- regulations (1)
- regulative Institution (1)
- regulatory environment (1)
- renewable energy (1)
- representation (1)
- research (1)
- reservations to human rights treaties (1)
- resistance (1)
- resocialisation (1)
- responsibility (1)
- restrictions to civil society (1)
- revolution (1)
- right parties and movements (1)
- right to housing (1)
- right-wing politics (1)
- romance (1)
- sanctions (1)
- sanctions de l’ONU (1)
- schlechte Regierungsführung (1)
- scholar-practitioners (1)
- science & technology (1)
- scientific use file (1)
- second chambers (1)
- second-order compliance (1)
- security cooperation (1)
- security–development nexus (1)
- selection (1)
- self-employed women (1)
- self-governance (1)
- semi-parliamentarism (1)
- service provider strategies (1)
- set theory (1)
- siege of Paris 1870 (1)
- single mothers (1)
- social epistemology (1)
- social networking sites (1)
- social theory (1)
- sozialistische Orientierung der Marktwirtschaft (1)
- space (1)
- standardization (STANAG) (1)
- start-up subsidies (1)
- state (1)
- state repression (1)
- state security (1)
- stochastic uncertainty (1)
- strategic uncertainty (1)
- structural change (1)
- structural funds (1)
- superpower (1)
- survey (1)
- survey data (1)
- survey experiment (1)
- survival analysis (1)
- symbolic representation (1)
- system failure (1)
- teaching (1)
- termination (1)
- territorial administration (1)
- trade-offs (1)
- training (1)
- transdisciplinarity (1)
- transformation (1)
- transformative justice (1)
- transition economies (1)
- transition policy (1)
- translation theory (1)
- transnational city networks (1)
- transnational governance (1)
- transnational institutional interplay (1)
- treadmill of production (1)
- triple nexus (1)
- trust (1)
- turnout (1)
- un-cancelling the future (1)
- unemployment (1)
- unilateralism (1)
- urban warfare (1)
- vertrackte Probleme (1)
- veto point (1)
- vote choice (1)
- vote switching (1)
- voters (1)
- voting (1)
- water development aid (1)
- welfare state benefits (1)
- window of opportunity (1)
- women's empowerment (1)
- work (1)
- work-family policies (1)
- working hours (1)
- working time (1)
- world bank (1)
- world literature (1)
- world-makers (1)
- youth unemployment (1)
- ÖVP (1)
- Öffentliche Verwaltung (1)
- Übergangsjustiz (1)
- öffentliche Verwaltung (1)
Institute
- Fachgruppe Politik- & Verwaltungswissenschaft (180)
- Sozialwissenschaften (75)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (33)
- Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät (25)
- WeltTrends e.V. Potsdam (15)
- Fachgruppe Betriebswirtschaftslehre (14)
- Extern (8)
- Fachgruppe Soziologie (5)
- Historisches Institut (5)
- Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik (5)
Although party competition is widely regarded as an important part of a working democracy, it is rarely analysed in political science literature. This article discusses the basic properties of party competition, especially the patterns of interaction in contemporary party systems. Competition as a phenomenon at the macro level has to be carefully distinguished from contest and cooperation as the forms of interaction at the micro level. The article gives special attention to the creation of issue innovations. Contrary to existing approaches, I argue that not only responsiveness but also innovation are necessary to guarantee a workable democratic competition. Competition takes place on an issue market, where parties can discover voters’ demands. Combined with the concept of institutional veto points, the article presents hypotheses on how institutions shape the possibility for programmatic innovations.
In the past decades, development cooperation (DC) led by conventional bi- and multilateral donors has been joined by a large number of small, private or public-private donors. This pluralism of actors raises questions as to whether or not these new donors are able to implement projects more or less effectively than their conventional counterparts. In contrast to their predecessors, the new donors have committed themselves to be more pragmatic, innovative and flexible in their development cooperation measures. However, they are also criticized for weakening the function of local civil society and have the reputation of being an intransparent and often controversial alternative to public services. With additional financial resources and their new approach to development, the new donors have been described in the literature as playing a controversial role in transforming development cooperation. This dissertation compares the effectiveness of initiatives by new and conventional donors with regard to the provision of public goods and services to the poor in the water and sanitation sector in India.
India is an emerging country but it is experiencing high poverty rates and poor water supply in predominantly rural areas. It lends itself for analyzing this research theme as it is currently being confronted by a large number of actors and approaches that aim to find solutions for these challenges .
In the theoretical framework of this dissertation, four governance configurations are derived from the interaction of varying actor types with regard to hierarchical and non-hierarchical steering of their interactions. These four governance configurations differ in decision-making responsibilities, accountability and delegation of tasks or direction of information flow. The assumption on actor relationships and steering is supplemented by possible alternative explanations in the empirical investigation, such as resource availability, the inheritance of structures and institutions from previous projects in a project context, gaining acceptance through beneficiaries (local legitimacy) as a door opener, and asymmetries of power in the project context.
Case study evidence from seven projects reveals that the actors' relationship is important for successful project delivery. Additionally, the results show that there is a systematic difference between conventional and new donors. Projects led by conventional donors were consistently more successful, due to an actor relationship that placed the responsibility in the hands of the recipient actors and benefited from the trust and reputation of a long-term cooperation. The trust and reputation of conventional donors always went along with a back-up from federal level and trickled down as reputation also at local level implementation. Furthermore, charismatic leaders, as well as the acquired structures and institutions of predecessor projects, also proved to be a positive influencing factor for successful project implementation.
Despite the mixed results of the seven case studies, central recommendations for action can be derived for the various actors involved in development cooperation. For example, new donors could fulfill a supplementary function with conventional donors by developing innovative project approaches through pilot studies and then implementing them as a supplement to the projects of conventional donors on the ground. In return, conventional donors would have to make room the new donors by integrating their approaches into already programs in order to promote donor harmonization. It is also important to identify and occupy niches for activities and to promote harmonization among donors on state and federal sides.
The empirical results demonstrate the need for a harmonization strategy of different donor types in order to prevent duplication, over-experimentation and the failure of development programs. A transformation to successful and sustainable development cooperation can only be achieved through more coordination processes and national self-responsibility.
The thesis focuses on the inter-departmental coordination of adaptation and mitigation of demographic change in East Germany. All Eastern German States (Länder) have set up inter-departmental committees (IDCs) that are expected to deliver joint strategies to tackle demographic change. IDCs provide an organizational setting for potential positive coordination, i.e. a joint approach to problem solving that pools and utilizes the expertise of many departments in a constructive manner from the very beginning. Whether they actually achieve positive coordination is contested within the academic debate. This motivates the first research question of this thesis: Do IDCs achieve positive coordination?
Interdepartmental committees and their role in horizontal coordination within the core executive triggered interest among scholars already more than fifty years ago. However, we don’t know much about their actual importance for the inter-departmental preparation of cross-cutting policies. Until now, few studies can be found that analyzes inter-departmental committees in a comparative way trying to identify whether they achieve positive coordination and what factors shape the coordination process and output of IDCs.
Each IDC has a chair organization that is responsible for managing the interactions within the IDCs. The chair organization is important, because it organizes and structures the overall process of coordination in the IDC. Consequently, the chair of an IDC serves as the main boundary-spanner and therefore has remarkable influence by arranging meetings and the work schedule or by distributing internal roles. Interestingly, in the German context we find two organizational approaches: while some states decided to put a line department (e.g. Department of Infrastructure) in charge of managing the IDC, others rely on the State Chancelleries, i.e. the center of government.
This situation allows for comparative research design that can address the role of the State Chancellery in inter-departmental coordination of cross-cutting policies. This is relevant, because the role of the center is crucial when studying coordination within central government. The academic debate on the center of government in the German politico-administrative system is essentially divided into two camps. One camp claims that the center can improve horizontal coordination and steer cross-cutting policy-making more effectively, while the other camp points to limits to central coordination due to departmental autonomy. This debate motivates the second research question of this thesis: Does the State Chancellery as chair organization achieve positive coordination in IDCs?
The center of government and its role in the German politic-administrative system has attracted academic attention already in the 1960s and 1970s. There is a research desiderate regarding the center’s role during the inter-departmental coordination process. There are only few studies that explicitly analyze centers of government and their role in coordination of cross-cutting policies, although some single case studies have been published. This gap in the academic debate will be addressed by the answer to the second research question.
The dependent variable of this study is the chair organization of IDCs. The value of this variable is dichotomous: either an IDC is chaired by a Line department or by a State Chancellery. We are interested whether this variable has an effect on two dependent variables. First, we will analyze the coordination process, i.e. interaction among bureaucrats within the IDC. Second, the focus of this thesis will be on the coordination result, i.e. the demography strategies that are produced by the respective IDCs.
In terms of the methodological approach, this thesis applies a comparative case study design based on a most-similar-systems logic. The German Federalism is quite suitable for such designs. Since the institutional framework largely is the same across all states, individual variables and their effect can be isolated and plausibly analyzed. To further control for potential intervening variables, we will limit our case selection to states located in East Germany, because the demographic situation is most problematic in the Eastern part of Germany, i.e. there is a equal problem pressure. Consequently, we will analyze five cases: Thuringia, Saxony-Anhalt (line department) and Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Saxony (State Chancellery).
There is no grand coordination theory that is ready to be applied to our case studies. Therefore, we need to tailor our own approach. Our assumption is that the individual chair organization has an effect on the coordination process and output of IDCs, although all cases are embedded in the same institutional setting, i.e. the German politico-administrative system. Therefore, we need an analytical approach than incorporates institutionalist and agency-based arguments. Therefore, this thesis will utilize Actor-Centered Institutionalism (ACI). Broadly speaking, ACI conceptualizes actors’ behavior as influenced - but not fully determined - by institutions. Since ACI is rather abstract we need to adapt it for the purpose of this thesis. Line Departments and State Chancelleries will be modeled as distinct actors with different action orientations and capabilities to steer the coordination process. However, their action is embedded within the institutional context of governments, which we will conceptualize as being comprised of regulative (formal rules) and normative (social norms) elements.
Conclusion : Tensions, Challenges, and Future "Flags" of Local Public Sector Reforms and Comparative
(2016)
Emmanuel Kant asked three important questions which will always be with us: What can we know? What should we do? What may we hope for? These three key existentialist questions are, of course, also relevant for a reflection on the future of Public Administration: What can we know, as researchers in the field of Public Administration, about our object of public administration? What should we do as researchers and teachers to make sure we remain part of a solution and to guarantee that we are ahead of reality and its future problems? What kind of improvement (or not) may we hope for a public sector in an increasingly complex society? This chapter tries to explore some possible answers to these three important questions for our field of Public Administration. The background is our common project about ‘European Perspectives for Public Administration’ (EPPA), which we hope to establish as a continuous dialogue and discourse in the context of European Public Administration and the ‘European Group for Public Administration’ (EGPA).
Translating innovation
(2017)
This doctoral thesis studies the process of innovation adoption in public administrations, addressing the research question of how an innovation is translated to a local context. The study empirically explores Design Thinking as a new problem-solving approach introduced by a federal government organisation in Singapore. With a focus on user-centeredness, collaboration and iteration Design Thinking seems to offer a new way to engage recipients and other stakeholders of public services as well as to re-think the policy design process from a user’s point of view. Pioneered in the private sector, early adopters of the methodology include civil services in Australia, Denmark, the United Kingdom, the United States as well as Singapore. Hitherto, there is not much evidence on how and for which purposes Design Thinking is used in the public sector.
For the purpose of this study, innovation adoption is framed in an institutionalist perspective addressing how concepts are translated to local contexts. The study rejects simplistic views of the innovation adoption process, in which an idea diffuses to another setting without adaptation. The translation perspective is fruitful because it captures the multidimensionality and ‘messiness’ of innovation adoption. More specifically, the overall research question addressed in this study is: How has Design Thinking been translated to the local context of the public sector organisation under investigation? And from a theoretical point of view: What can we learn from translation theory about innovation adoption processes?
Moreover, there are only few empirical studies of organisations adopting Design Thinking and most of them focus on private organisations. We know very little about how Design Thinking is embedded in public sector organisations. This study therefore provides further empirical evidence of how Design Thinking is used in a public sector organisation, especially with regards to its application to policy work which has so far been under-researched.
An exploratory single case study approach was chosen to provide an in-depth analysis of the innovation adoption process. Based on a purposive, theory-driven sampling approach, a Singaporean Ministry was selected because it represented an organisational setting in which Design Thinking had been embedded for several years, making it a relevant case with regard to the research question. Following a qualitative research design, 28 semi-structured interviews (45-100 minutes) with employees and managers were conducted. The interview data was triangulated with observations and documents, collected during a field research research stay in Singapore.
The empirical study of innovation adoption in a single organisation focused on the intra-organisational perspective, with the aim to capture the variations of translation that occur during the adoption process. In so doing, this study opened the black box often assumed in implementation studies. Second, this research advances translation studies not only by showing variance, but also by deriving explanatory factors. The main differences in the translation of Design Thinking occurred between service delivery and policy divisions, as well as between the first adopter and the rest of the organisation. For the intra-organisational translation of Design Thinking in the Singaporean Ministry the following five factors played a role: task type, mode of adoption, type of expertise, sequence of adoption, and the adoption of similar practices.