96 results
Search Results
2. Which Active Labor Market Policies Work for Male Refugees? Evidence from Germany.
- Author
-
KASRIN, ZEIN and TÜBBICKE, STEFAN
- Subjects
- *
VOCATIONAL education , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *SOCIAL security , *EFFECT sizes (Statistics) , *GOVERNMENT policy , *UNEMPLOYMENT insurance , *INCOME , *PSYCHOLOGY of refugees , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *EMPIRICAL research , *STATISTICAL sampling , *PSYCHOLOGY of men , *QUANTITATIVE research , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *LABOR market , *GOVERNMENT programs , *PUBLIC welfare , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EMPLOYMENT , *SELF-employment - Abstract
In this paper, we estimate the causal effects of a set of active labor market programs for male unemployed refugees on welfare who entered Germany between, 2013 and September, 2016. Using rich administrative data, we employ covariate balancing propensity scores combined with inverse probability weighting to estimate effects up to 33 months after the start of treatment. Our results show that relatively short-term training in the form of Schemes by Providers and In-Firm Training, as well as longer-term Further Vocational Training programs have a positive impact on both the employment chances as well as labor market earnings of refugees in the medium run. So-called "One Euro Jobs", a public employment program, does not yield positive effects on employment or earnings. Sensitivity analyses confirm that our results are unlikely to be driven by unobserved confounding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Similar yet not the Same: Right-Wing Populist Parties' Stances on Religion in Germany and the Netherlands.
- Author
-
Beuter, Christopher and Kortmann, Matthias
- Subjects
- *
POPULISM , *RELIGION , *MASS mobilization - Abstract
Applying a qualitative framing analysis, this paper examines narratives of the right-wing populist parties Alternative for Germany (AfD) and the Party for Freedom (PVV) in the Netherlands on religion. The paper argues that references of these populist parties to religion can be interpreted against the background of specific national context factors such as the respective history of nation building, the traditional role of religion in society and secularization processes. A rigorous examination of parliamentary documents published between 2017 and 2019 shows that whereas the PVV clearly defines Christianity in civilizational and not religious terms, the AfD takes a less clear-cut stance toward the religion framing it both as culture and faith. We contend that this difference can be explained by the lower degree of secularization and the greater role of Christianity as a collective identity marker in post-war Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Welfare Sanctions and Deprivation in Germany: Do First Sanctions Lead to Higher Levels of Deprivation Among the Long-Term Unemployed and Recipients of Basic Income Support?
- Author
-
LÖWE, PAUL SEVERIN and UNGER, STEFANIE ALEXANDRA
- Subjects
- *
UNEMPLOYMENT , *UNEMPLOYMENT insurance , *INTERVIEWING , *SOCIAL isolation , *INCOME , *SOCIAL security , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *COMPARATIVE studies , *QUALITATIVE research , *T-test (Statistics) , *GOVERNMENT policy , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PUBLIC welfare , *POVERTY , *GOVERNMENT aid , *SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
In Germany, as in many other European countries, vast changes in the welfare regime – towards workfare – have taken place. As a central activating element of workfare, sanctions were introduced to take effect by temporarily increasing deprivation through benefit cuts. This paper provides first quantitative insights on the effect of first sanctions on deprivation and contributes to the recent debate on the (un)constitutionality of sanctions, which re-emerged after a verdict of the Federal Constitutional Court, criticizing the lack of knowledge about the effects of sanctions on those affected. We implement a difference-in-differences propensity score matching approach that addresses selection on observables and individual time constant unobserved differences. High data accuracy is ensured by combining the "Panel Labour Market and Social Security" (PASS) with administrative data from the Federal Employment Agency. The results illustrate a slightly higher yet statistically insignificant level of deprivation for first-sanctioned unemployment/basic income recipients compared to non-sanctioned recipients. The results hint in the direction that higher levels of deprivation are not what activates the sanctioned beneficiaries to reintegrate into the labour market. We discuss whether the results imply a significant deviation from the socio-cultural subsistence minimum of sanctioned recipients and a failure of the welfare state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The importance of a transformative biodiversity education for perceiving, appreciating and supporting lichen diversity in German urban environments.
- Author
-
Zedda, Luciana
- Subjects
- *
TRANSFORMATIVE learning , *SPECIES diversity , *ENVIRONMENTAL degradation , *LICHENS , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *PUBLIC spaces , *BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Urban green spaces are indispensable for the conservation of biodiversity in Germany. In addition, the availability of green areas often provides citizens with the only opportunity to experience nature. Lichens are an important component of urban environments in terms of both species diversity, and ecosystem functions and services. However, they are rarely the subject of biodiversity education. To bolster awareness on their diversity and appreciation, a transformative biodiversity education in both the formal and informal sectors is necessary. This transformative biodiversity education should not only provide knowledge about species and habitats, but also on all dimensions of biodiversity, viz., the three levels of biodiversity, drivers of biodiversity loss, and ecosystem services. For this reason, the design of biodiversity education may be particularly challenging for educators and teachers. This paper shows how biodiversity education projects on urban lichens can be developed in accordance with the principles of transformative education, supporting nature experience, knowledge transfer (species knowledge in a broad sense and interdisciplinary aspects), participation and cooperation, as well as the use of digital media. Two best-case projects, tested in Germany, are presented as examples for the design and implementation of a transformative lichen education in urban areas. A similar approach can be easily applied in other education systems beyond national boundaries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Doing time in care homes: insights into the experiences of care home residents in Germany during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Leontowitsch, Miranda, Oswald, Frank, Schall, Arthur, and Pantel, Johannes
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGY , *NURSING home patients , *LIFE expectancy , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *GERIATRICS , *MENTAL health , *HEALTH status indicators , *INTERVIEWING , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *NURSING care facilities , *SOCIAL isolation , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *PATIENT-professional relations , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
Residents of care homes across the globe are affected by the spread of SARS-CoV-2 as they have been identified as a high-risk group and because they experienced strict social isolation regulations during the first wave of the pandemic. Social isolation of older people with poor physical and mental health is strongly associated with mental health problems and decreased life expectancy. Other research has shown that older people managed to adapt to the changes brought about by the pandemic and have linked this to the concept of resilience. The aim of this research project was to investigate how this applied to residents in care home settings during the first phases of the contact ban in Germany from sociology, developmental psychology and environmental gerontology perspectives, and to gain in-depth understanding of residents' experiences. This paper draws on structured interview data collected from residents in two care homes during early June 2020 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. The findings show that their experiences were shaped by three factors: care home settings and the approach of staff to handling the contact ban; biographical sense of resilience; and a hierarchy of life issues. The findings highlight the importance of locally specific response mechanisms in care homes, agency and belonging of residents despite health-related limitations and the importance of a critical (gendered) lens on understanding their experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Frankfurt am Meer : The "Illiberal" Liberalism of the German Confederation and Its Aspirations over the Habsburg Adriatic in 1848.
- Author
-
Maritan, Mario
- Subjects
- *
LIBERALISM , *NATIONALISM , *MONARCHY ,DEUTSCHE Nationalversammlung (1848-1849 : Frankfurt am Main, Germany) - Abstract
In 1848, Habsburg Trieste became the target of German nationalists gathered in Frankfurt. The Frankfurt parliament, born out of the revolutions of 1848, has been widely depicted as a liberal experience. Yet its nationalist stances, which included the creation of a unitary German state through the absorption of vast multiethnic regions of the Habsburg monarchy, whose Austrian crownlands were part of the German Confederation, bear witness to the illiberal nature of the Frankfurt parenthesis of 1848–1849. Notwithstanding the assimilatory tendencies of the Frankfurt parliament, Italian activists in Trieste supported the inclusion of the Habsburg port in an enlarged Germany, hoping to break away from Habsburg rule, which they portrayed as oppressive. This article argues that the contradictory Italian support for the German Confederation highlights the paradoxes at the basis of nationalist movements at their onset, while also pointing to the difficulty that nation-states would soon witness in dealing with other ethnic groups within their borders. On the contrary, it was the Habsburg monarchy that, in its centuries-long tradition of accommodating different ethnicities into its fold, represented what to present-day observers comes closer to political liberalism than the so-called liberal national parties that opposed Habsburg rule. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Between the Czech Krkonoše and the German Riesengebirge: Nationalism and Tourism in the Giant Mountains, 1880s–1930s.
- Author
-
Holubec, Stanislav
- Subjects
- *
MOUNTAIN tourism , *NATIONALISM , *ETHNIC conflict , *NAZI Germany, 1933-1945 ,MUNICH Four-Power Agreement (1938) - Abstract
The article deals with Czech and German nationalist discourses and practices in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as they relate to tourism in the Krkonoše/Riesengebirge, the highest Central European mountain range between the Alps and Scandinavia. It will discuss the discourses developed in relation to mountain tourism and nationalism (metaphors of battlefields, wedges, walls, gates, and bastions), different symbolical cores of mountains, and practices of tourist and nationalist organizations (tourist trails and markings, excursions, the ownership of mountains huts, languages used, memorials, and the construction of roads). It will examine how these discourses and practices changed from the first Czech-German ethnic conflicts in the 1800s until the end of interwar Czechoslovakia. Finally, it will discuss the Czech culture of defeat in the shadow of the Munich Agreement, which meant the occupation of the Giant Mountains by Nazi Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Tango Controls and data pipeline for petawatt laser experiments.
- Author
-
Weiße, Nils, Doyle, Leonard, Gebhard, Johannes, Balling, Felix, Schweiger, Florian, Haberstroh, Florian, Geulig, Laura D., Lin, Jinpu, Irshad, Faran, Esslinger, Jannik, Gerlach, Sonja, Gilljohann, Max, Vaidyanathan, Vignesh, Siebert, Dennis, Münzer, Andreas, Schilling, Gregor, Schreiber, Jörg, Thirolf, Peter G., Karsch, Stefan, and Döpp, Andreas
- Subjects
- *
ONLINE data processing , *PARTICLE acceleration , *LASERS - Abstract
The Centre for Advanced Laser Applications in Garching, Germany, is home to the ATLAS-3000 multi-petawatt laser, dedicated to research on laser particle acceleration and its applications. A control system based on Tango Controls is implemented for both the laser and four experimental areas. The device server approach features high modularity, which, in addition to the hardware control, enables a quick extension of the system and allows for automated data acquisition of the laser parameters and experimental data for each laser shot. In this paper we present an overview of our implementation of the control system, as well as our advances in terms of experimental operation, online supervision and data processing. We also give an outlook on advanced experimental supervision and online data evaluation -- where the data can be processed in a pipeline -- which is being developed on the basis of this infrastructure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Electoral Responsiveness in Closed Autocracies: Evidence from Petitions in the former German Democratic Republic.
- Author
-
LUEDERS, HANS
- Subjects
- *
CONTESTED elections , *DESPOTISM , *ELECTIONS , *PETITIONS - Abstract
Contested elections are usually seen as precondition for constituent responsiveness. By contrast, I show that even uncontested elections can create incentives for autocratic regimes to address citizen demands. I propose that closed autocracies engage in cycles of responsiveness before uncontested elections to assure citizens of their competence and raise popular support. They do so to mitigate the short-term destabilizing effects of elections. Analyzing a unique dataset of petitions to the government of the former German Democratic Republic (GDR), I calculate that response times to petitions were up to 31% shorter before the GDR's uncontested elections. Moreover, I introduce the concept of "substantive responsiveness," which focuses on the material consequences of responsiveness for petitioners, and show that petitions were 64% more likely to be successful. The paper advances our understanding of electoral mobilization in closed regimes and contributes to an emerging research agenda on responsiveness and accountability in autocracies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Group Size and Protest Mobilization across Movements and Countermovements.
- Author
-
HAGER, ANSELM, HENSEL, LUKAS, HERMLE, JOHANNES, and ROTH, CHRISTOPHER
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC demonstrations , *SOCIAL movements , *RIGHT & left (Political science) , *COLLECTIVE behavior - Abstract
Many social movements face fierce resistance in the form of a countermovement. Therefore, when deciding to become politically active, a movement supporter has to consider both her own movement's activity and that of the opponent. This paper studies the decision of a movement supporter to attend a protest when faced with a counterprotest. We implement two field experiments among supporters of a right- and left-leaning movement ahead of two protest–counterprotest interactions in Germany. Supporters were exposed to low or high official estimates about their own and the opposing group's turnout. We find that the size of the opposing group has no effect on supporters' protest intentions. However, as the own protest gets larger, supporters of the right-leaning movement become less while supporters of the left-leaning movement become more willing to protest. We argue that the difference is best explained by stronger social motives on the political left. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Relevance of Job-Related Concessions for Unemployment Duration Among Recipients of Means-Tested Benefits in Germany.
- Author
-
CHRISTOPH, BERNHARD and LIETZMANN, TORSTEN
- Subjects
- *
NONPARAMETRIC statistics , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *JOB descriptions , *UNEMPLOYMENT insurance , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *JOB applications , *SURVEYS , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SOCIAL classes , *WAGES , *CASE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *KAPLAN-Meier estimator , *LABOR market , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *PROBABILITY theory - Abstract
Unemployment strongly influences a person's economic resources and life chances. Especially for unemployed individuals who have to rely on means-tested benefits, episodes of unemployment often go along with substantial material restrictions. Therefore, from a policy perspective, measures or regulations that might shorten unemployment episodes and reduce overall unemployment are particularly important. In this paper, we analyse whether concessions regarding the characteristics of the job searched for influence an individual's unemployment duration. In doing so, we focus on a particular aspect of availability requirements in Germany. This is the fact that for unemployed recipients of means-tested benefits almost all types of jobs count as suitable employment and, therefore, recipients are obliged to make job-related concessions if offered a job requiring such concessions. The results indicate that there is no positive effect of making concessions regarding qualification requirements or status on employment chances. In contrast, there are positive effects of wage concessions. However, searching for a job in a different occupation (that does not necessarily imply a concession) has a comparable, positive effect on finding employment. Thus, it appears that being generally flexible regarding one's future occupation might be at least as important for employment chances as making concessions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Placement Advisors as Innovators. How Professionals Use Enhanced Discretion in Germany's Public Employment Services.
- Author
-
FREIER, CAROLIN and SENGHAAS, MONIKA
- Subjects
- *
COUNSELING , *EMPLOYEES , *PUBLIC sector , *EMPLOYMENT , *GOVERNMENT policy , *DIFFUSION of innovations - Abstract
Employees of the public employment services (PES) are street-level bureaucrats who shape activation policy on the ground. This paper examines how PES staff use enhanced discretion in an innovation project carried out by the German Federal Employment Agency. Applying a bottom-up perspective, we reconstruct PES employees' logic of action and the dilemmas they face in improving counselling and placement services. According to our findings, placement staff use enhanced discretion to promote more individualised support and an adequate matching of jobseekers and employers. The use of discretion is framed by organisational norms and reward mechanisms and by the current labour market situation. Our analyses are based on qualitative interviews and group discussions with placement staff. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Interpretation preferences in contexts with three antecedents: examining the role of prominence in German pronouns.
- Author
-
Patterson, Clare and Schumacher, Petra B.
- Subjects
- *
PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *COMPARATIVE grammar , *LANGUAGE acquisition - Abstract
This paper focuses on the relational notion of prominence, in which entities of equal type are ranked according to certain prominence-lending features. In German two demonstrative forms, "der" and "dieser", can function like personal pronouns in English. It has been proposed that processing "der" involves computing a prominence hierarchy of the prior referents, and excluding the referent with the highest prominence rank. The demonstrative "dieser" has not been extensively tested. In the current study, personal and demonstrative pronominal forms were investigated following ditransitive contexts, where three potential antecedents are available, in two rating experiments. The personal pronoun showed flexibility in that it received equally high ratings for all three antecedents in canonical configurations. The ratings for dieser followed a graded sensitivity to thematic role prominence, with lowest scores when referring to prominent antecedents (agents) and the highest scores for the least prominent antecedents (patients), with scores for the medium prominence candidate (recipients) differing from both. Der followed a similar but not identical pattern, with a less marked difference between lower prominence candidates. Positional information also has a strong influence on demonstratives. In sum, final interpretation is sensitive to fine-grained differences in prominence hierarchies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. War, Coal, and Forced Labor: Assessing the Impact of Prisoner-of-War Employment on Coal Mine Productivity in World War I Germany.
- Author
-
Jopp, Tobias A.
- Subjects
- *
WORLD War I , *COAL mining , *FORCED labor , *COAL , *PRISONERS of war , *LABOR incentives - Abstract
This paper assesses the causal relationship between POW assignments and labor productivity for a vital sector of the German World War I economy, namely coal mining. Prisoners of war (POWs) provided significant labor. Combining data on all Ruhr mines with a treatment-effects approach, I find that POW employment alone accounted for 36 percent of the average POW-employing mine's annual productivity decline over wartime. Estimates also suggest that the representative POW's productivity averaged 32 percent of the representative regular miner's productivity and that POWs' contribution to wartime coal output amounted to 3.9 percent. Violence did not serve as a powerful work incentive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Secular–Religious Competition and the Exclusion of Islam from the Public Sphere: Islamic Welfare in Western Europe.
- Author
-
Kortmann, Matthias
- Subjects
- *
SECULARISM , *WELFARE state , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL services , *RELIGION ,ISLAM & society - Abstract
This paper deals in a qualitative discourse analysis with the role of Islamic organizations in welfare delivery in Germany and the Netherlands. Referring to Jonathan Fox's "secular–religious competition perspective", the paper argues that similar trends of exclusion of Islamic organizations from public social service delivery can be explained with discourses on Islam in these two countries. The analysis, first, shows that in the national competitions between religious and secular ideologies on the public role of religion, different views are dominant (i.e., the support for the Christian majority in Germany and equal treatment of all religions in the Netherlands) which can be traced back to the respective regimes of religious governance. However, and second, when it comes to Islam in particular, in the Netherlands, the perspective of restricting all religions from public sphere prevails which leads to the rather exclusivist view on Islamic welfare that dominates in Germany, too. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Divided citizenship: how retirement in the host country affects the financial status of intra-European Union migrants.
- Author
-
BRIDGEN, PAUL and MEYER, TRAUTE
- Subjects
- *
CITIZENSHIP , *IMMIGRANTS , *INCOME , *PENSIONS , *POVERTY , *RETIREMENT , *PATIENT participation , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Since European Union (EU) enlargement in 2003, labour migration from East to West and South to North has increased. It is to be expected that a share of these workers will want to retire in their host countries. According to the academic literature, EU legislation protects such mobility well by allowing the transfer of rights accrued in any EU country to another. However, such research has focused on legislation, not outcomes. We know little about how migration will affect the financial status of retired migrants in their host country and their ability to sustain a life there, should they stay after retirement. Using migration, wage and pension policy data (Eurostat, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), this paper projects the post-retirement incomes of a range of hypothetical EU migrants, selected in relation to the most common migratory flows since 2003. After having worked in their home countries (Romania, Poland, Bulgaria, Italy) for at least ten years, these people move to richer countries (Italy, Spain, Germany, United Kingdom) and work there for at least 30 years. To determine whether they can remain settled after decades of labour force participation in the host country, the paper adds their pension entitlements from home and host countries and compares this income with the relative poverty line of the host countries. This shows that good portability of entitlements matters little when these are very low because of a large wage gap between home and host country. Thus, after at least 30 years of enjoying all citizenship rights as workers, most of these individuals are projected to receive incomes below the relative poverty line of their host countries and thus experience a sharp drop in this status. Their citizenship is diminished. The paper concludes by considering policies that could avoid such an outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Controversies over Austria's Nazi Past: Generational Changes and Grassroots Awakenings following the Waldheim Affair and the "Wehrmacht Exhibitions".
- Author
-
Embacher, Helga
- Subjects
- *
HOLOCAUST, 1939-1945 , *GRASSROOTS movements , *GENERATION gap , *EXHIBITIONS - Abstract
In 1945, the Austrian government constructed a new identity based on having been a "victim" of Nazi Germany. Thus, it had to hush up the fact that a majority of the population had welcomed the Anschluss , hundreds of thousands joined the NSDAP and served in the German Wehrmacht, and many were involved in the crimes of National Socialism. Only in the late 1980s, in the wake of the Waldheim Affair, did the years between 1938 and 1945 have to be re-interpreted. Ten years later, the exhibition "War of Annihilation: Crimes of the Wehrmacht 1941–1944" (short: Wehrmacht exhibition) questioned the myth of the "clean Wehrmacht." Using the examples of the Waldheim Affair and the Wehrmacht exhibition, the article analyzes the influence of grassroots movements stimulated by these events. Since some members of the second generation defended the Wehrmacht rather than embracing the grassroots movements' critique of earlier war myths, it will also problematize the category "generation." Due to the leading role played by prominent Austrian Jews in these grassroots movements, the generational gap within the Jewish community is of further interest. I emphasize that the grassroots movements needed the support of Austrian political parties and from abroad to achieve a modicum of success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Data-driven learning for beginners: The case of German verb-preposition collocations.
- Author
-
Vyatkina, Nina
- Subjects
- *
SECOND language acquisition , *ENGLISH as a foreign language , *EDUCATION , *LEXICAL access , *CORPORA - Abstract
Research on data-driven learning (DDL), or teaching and learning languages with the help of electronic corpora, has shown that it is both effective and efficient. Nevertheless, DDL is still far from common pedagogical practice, not least because the empirical research on it is still limited and narrowly focused. This study addresses some gaps in that research by exploring the effectiveness of DDL for teaching low-proficiency learners lexico-grammatical constructions (verb-preposition collocations) in German, a morphologically rich language. The study employed a pretest-posttest design with intact third- and fourth-semester classes for German as a foreign language at a US university. The same collocations were taught to each group during one class period, with one group at each course level taking a paper-based DDL lesson with concordance lines from a native-speaker corpus and the other one taking a traditional rule-based lesson with textbook exercises. These constructions were new to third-semester students, whereas fourth-semester students had been exposed to them in the previous semester. The results show that, whereas the DDL method and the traditional method were both effective and resulted in lexical and grammatical gains, DDL was more effective for teaching new collocations. The study thus argues in favor of using paper-based DDL in the classroom at lower proficiency levels and for languages other than English. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Language assessment tools for Arabic-speaking heritage and refugee children in Germany.
- Author
-
Hamann, Cornelia, Chilla, Solveig, Abed Ibrahim, Lina, and Fekete, István
- Subjects
- *
REFUGEES , *ARABS , *COMPARATIVE grammar , *LANGUAGE & languages , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *SPEECH evaluation , *VOCABULARY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Though Germany has long provided education for children speaking a heritage language and received two recent waves of refugees, reliable assessment tools for diagnosis of language impairment or the progress in the acquisition of German as a second language (L2) by refugee children are still lacking. The few tools expressly targeting bilingual populations are normed for younger, early successive bilingual children. This study investigates 27 typically developing children with Arabic as first language (L1), comparing 15 school-age Syrian refugees (6;6–12;8), with 12 heritage speakers (6;0–12;9). We assess the L1 and L2 skills of these two groups with standardized tests, but crucially with an Arabic and a German sentence repetition (SRT) as well as a nonword (NWRT) repetition task (Grimm & Hübner, in press; Marinis & Armon-Lotem, 2015). Comparable scores emerged only for German LITMUS-NWRT and Arabic LITMUS-SRT. Refugee children had an advantage in L1 measures, for example, vocabulary and morphosyntactic production, whereas they performed poorly in the German LITMUS-SRT and other L2 tests involving morphosyntax and vocabulary even with 24 months of systematic exposure. This indicates that the acquisition of adequate vocabulary and complex syntax takes time. The paper explores factors influencing performance on the repetition tasks and relates the results to established diagnostic procedures and educational policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Reframing the Past: Justice, Guilt, and Consolidation in East and West Germany after Nazism.
- Author
-
Fulbrook, Mary, Hagemann, Karen, Jarausch, Konrad H., and Hof, Tobias
- Subjects
- *
NAZI Germany, 1933-1945 , *NAZI persecution , *NATIONAL socialism & collective memory , *WAR crime trials ,GERMAN history, 1945- ,EAST German history ,WEST German history - Abstract
Only a minority of Germans involved in Nazi crimes were prosecuted after the war, and the transnational history of trials is only beginning to be explored. Even less well understood are the ways in which those who were tainted by complicity reframed their personal life stories. Millions had been willing facilitators, witting beneficiaries, or passive (and perhaps unhappily helpless) witnesses of Nazi persecution; many had been actively involved in sustaining Nazi rule; perhaps a quarter of a million had personally killed Jewish civilians, and several million had direct knowledge of genocide. How did these people re-envision their own lives after Nazism? And how did they reinterpret their own former behaviors—their actions and inaction—in light of public confrontations with Nazi crimes and constructions of "perpetrators" in trials? Going beyond well-trodden debates about "overcoming the past," this paper explores patterns of personal memory among East and West Germans after Nazism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Germany and the Papacy in the Late Middle Ages.
- Author
-
D'AVRAY, DAVID
- Subjects
- *
MIDDLE Ages , *HISTORICAL research , *PROSOPOGRAPHY - Abstract
Towards the end of the twentieth century much UK public money for research was diverted to collaborative projects with specific research objectives, notably in the field of history. This distinguished the UK from other countries on the cutting edge of historical research, notably the USA which lags far behind, but not from Germany, which had long led the way when it comes to teamwork with a clearly defined theme, and where average budgets for historical research projects are still on a scale unimaginable on this side of the Channel. One of the greatest German historical enterprises is the Repertorium Germanicum. The project was conceived in the 1890s, and linked from the start with the German Historical Institute in Rome, from which so much fine work on papal history has emerged, notably by Protestant scholars. The first secretary of the DHI (Deutsches Historisches Institut) had the idea of creating a 'search engine' (Suchmaschine). It was to be and is organised within pontificates by the names of individuals who appear in documents in the Vatican Archives: a prosopographical structure. Though the individuals need a 'German' connection to be included, that is interpreted in the broadest sense, so that dioceses from Poland to Belgium find a place, as do any Germans who turn up in any other region, if the team happened upon them. Consultation online is now also possible, at < http://194.242.233.132/denqRG/index.htm >, though the volumes under review did not seem to have been made available electronically at time of writing – and many will find the paper volumes easier to manage, where they are available. Ludwig Quidde, who conceived of the project, thought that it could be completed up to the end of the fifteenth century by a team of five within three years. He had no idea of the scale of the holdings in the archive. Furthermore, alongside the Repertorium Germanicum one must now place its precocious younger sister, the Repertorium Poenitentiariae Germanicum , which has (thanks to Ludwig Schmugge and his team) already overtaken the elder sibling with Repertorium Poenitentiariae Germanicum , XI: Hadrian VI,1522–1523 , ed. Ludwig Schmugge (Tübingen 2018). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Caught between two stools? Informal care provision and employment among welfare recipients in Germany.
- Author
-
Hohmeyer, Katrin and Kopf, Eva
- Subjects
- *
AGING , *CAREGIVERS , *EMPLOYMENT , *LONG-term health care , *PUBLIC welfare , *REGRESSION analysis , *SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
In many countries, population ageing is challenging the viability of the welfare state and generating higher demands for long-term care. At the same time, increasing participation in the labour force is essential to ensuring the sustainability of the welfare state. To address the latter issue, affected countries have adopted measures to increase employment; e.g. welfare recipients in Germany are required to be available for any type of legal work. However, 7 per cent of welfare benefit recipients in Germany provide long-term care for relatives or friends, and this care-giving may interfere with their job search efforts and decrease their employment opportunities. Our paper provides evidence of the relationship between the care responsibilities and employment chances of welfare recipients in Germany. Our analyses are based on survey data obtained from the panel study 'Labour Market and Social Security' and on panel regression methods. The results reveal a negative relationship between intensive care-giving (ten or more hours per week) and employment for male and female welfare recipients. However, employment prospects recover when care duties end and are subsequently no longer lower for carers than for non-carers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Regimes, Social Risks and the Welfare Mix: Unpacking Attitudes to Pensions and Childcare in Germany and the UK Through Deliberative Forums.
- Author
-
TAYLOR-GOOBY, PETER, HEUER, JAN-OCKO, CHUNG, HEEJUNG, LERUTH, BENJAMIN, MAU, STEFFEN, and ZIMMERMANN, KATHARINA
- Subjects
- *
CHILD care , *CHILDREN'S health , *DISCUSSION , *MEDICAL care costs , *PENSIONS , *PUBLIC opinion , *PUBLIC welfare , *RESEARCH , *RESPONSIBILITY , *QUALITATIVE research , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Modern welfare regimes rest on a range of actors – state, market, family/households, employers and charities – but austerity programmes diminish the contribution of the state. While changes in this 'welfare mix' require support from the population, attitude studies have focused mainly on people's views on state responsibilities, using welfare regime theory to explain differences. This paper contributes to our understanding of the welfare mix by including other providers such as the market, the family or employers, and also introduces social risk theories, contrasting new and old risks. Regime theory implies differences will persist over time, but risk theory suggests that growing similarities in certain risks may tend to promote international convergence. This article examines attitudes to the roles of state, market, family, charity/community and employer for pension and childcare in Germany and the UK. We collected data using deliberative forums, a new method in social policy research that allows citizens space to pursue extended lightly moderated discussion and permits researchers to analyse people's justifications for their attitudes. Our research indicated patterns of convergence especially in preferences for childcare, but that regime predominates in people's justifications for their attitudes: regime differences in attitudes are resilient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Child Poverty, Child Maintenance and Interactions with Social Assistance Benefits Among Lone Parent Families: a Comparative Analysis.
- Author
-
HAKOVIRTA, MIA, SKINNER, CHRISTINE, HIILAMO, HEIKKI, and JOKELA, MERITA
- Subjects
- *
POVERTY reduction , *CHILD rearing , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ENDOWMENTS , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL support , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHILDREN - Abstract
In many developed countries lone parent families face high rates of child poverty. Among those lone parents who do get child maintenance there is a hidden problem. States may retain all, or a proportion, of the maintenance that is paid in order to offset other fiscal costs. Thus, the potential of child maintenance to alleviate poverty among lone parent families may not be fully realized, especially if the families are also in receipt of social assistance benefits. This paper provides an original comparative analysis exploring the effectiveness of child maintenance to reduce child poverty among lone parent families in receipt of social assistance. It addresses the question of whether effectiveness is compromised once interaction effects (such as the operation of a child maintenance disregard) are taken into account in four countries Australia, Finland, Germany and the UK using the LIS dataset (2013). It raises important policy considerations and provides evidence to show that if policy makers are serious about reducing child poverty, they must understand how hidden mechanisms within interactions between child maintenance and social security systems can work as effective cost recovery tools for the state, but have no poverty reduction impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Political Imagery and the Russia-Germany-America Triangle.
- Author
-
Wood, Steve
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL image , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERNATIONAL competition ,RUSSIA-United States relations - Abstract
The material dimension of Russian foreign and domestic policy is accompanied by one of images and performativity. The Putin regime has affective-emotional and instrumental motives. Its main target audience is the Russian public. Its principal adversary is the United States. The decisive external audience is the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG), a pluralist entity that is also concerned with past and present images of itself. Politics in this critical international triangle is infused with theatrical, mediatized, and psychological elements, and the (re)construction of national and individual personae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Political aspects of repatriation: Germany, Russia, Kazakhstan. A comparative analysis.
- Author
-
Zeveleva, Olga
- Subjects
- *
REPATRIATION , *IMMIGRATION policy , *COMPARATIVE government , *POSTCOMMUNISM , *PRACTICAL politics ,FORMER communist countries - Abstract
This paper is based on a study which compares repatriation policies of Germany, Russia, and Kazakhstan. The choice of cases is based on a “most similar case design.” The Russian case results in unsuccessful and unsustainable repatriation, the German case exhibits a change from sustainable repatriation to a slow termination of the program, while the case of Kazakhstan is one of sustainable and relatively successful repatriation. The main argument of the paper is that in order for a repatriation program to be sustainable, the program must contain both a practical component and an ideological component. If a repatriation program lacks ideological backing which permeates other aspects of political life in a state, then the repatriation program grinds to a halt. If a repatriation program has ideological backing, but is rendered impractical and does not meet the economic, demographic and labor market needs of a state, then the further development of the program stops. The findings of this study merit further reflection on issues of changing national identities, on transnational migration pathways, and on the “post-Soviet condition” which has set the stage for all of the aforementioned processes and transformations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Helminth endoparasites of the smooth newt Lissotriton vulgaris : linking morphological identification and molecular data.
- Author
-
Sinsch, U., Heneberg, P., Těšínský, M., Balczun, C., and Scheid, P.
- Subjects
- *
HELMINTHS , *ENDOPARASITES , *NEWTS , *NUCLEOTIDE sequence , *HELMINTH hosts , *IDENTIFICATION - Abstract
The helminth endoparasites of many European amphibian species are often known exclusively from morphological descriptions. A molecular library of DNA sequence data linked to morphological identifications is still in its infancy. In this paper, we aim to contribute to such a library on the smooth newt Lissotriton vulgaris, the intermediate and definitive host of 31 helminth parasites, according to evidence published so far. Newts (n = 69) were collected at two study sites in western Germany and examined for the presence of helminths. A total of five helminth species were detected in 56 (81%) of the newts, but only one or two species infected a single host. Four out of five helminth species were identified morphologically and based on DNA sequences as Parastrigea robusta (metacercariae), Oswaldocruzia filiformis, Megalobatrachonema terdentatum (adults and larvae) and Cosmocerca longicauda , and the corresponding sequences were provided subsequently. Oswaldocruzia molgeta was confirmed to be a junior synonym of O. filiformis. Molecular data on a fifth species (a cosmocercid nematode) that could not be identified at species level were added to GenBank. These findings increased the molecular library on morphologically identified smooth newt parasites significantly, from 12 to 15 entries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Feasibility and relative validity of a digital photo-based dietary assessment: results from the Nutris-Phone study.
- Author
-
Prinz, Nicole, Bohn, Barbara, Kern, Annamarie, Püngel, Deborah, Pollatos, Olga, and Holl, Reinhard W
- Subjects
- *
FOOD diaries , *CLIENT satisfaction , *SCIENTISTS , *G proteins , *TEST validity , *NUTRITIONAL value - Abstract
Objective: For dietary assessment, mobile devices with a camera can be used as an alternative to hand-written paper records. The Nutritional Tracking Information Smartphone (Nutris-Phone) study aimed to examine relative validity and feasibility of a photo-based dietary record in everyday life.Design: Parallel to the photo-based technique, a weighed record was performed. Participant satisfaction was assessed by questionnaire. A trained nutrition scientist evaluated portion sizes and nutrient content was calculated (DGExpert). Spearman correlation and Bland-Altman analyses were applied.Setting: Healthy, non-pregnant volunteers (≥18 years) without intent to lose weight recruited at Ulm University, Germany.Subjects: Sixty-six participants (36 % males, median age 22·0 (interquartile range 20·0-25·0) years) took pictures of foods and beverages consumed with a commercially available mobile phone.Results: Significant correlation between the photo-based and weighed record was observed: energy (r=0·991), carbohydrate (r=0·980), fat (r=0·972), protein (r=0·988), fibre (r=0·941). Bland-Altman analyses indicated comparable means and acceptable 95 % limits of agreement (energy: -345·2 to 302·9 kJ (-82·5 to 72·4 kcal); carbohydrate: -15·2 to 13·1 g; fat: -6·4 to 6·4 g; protein: -5·9 to 5·6 g; fibre: -2·7 to 2·5 g). However, with increasing intake level, underestimation by the digital method was present (except for fat, all P<0·01). Over 80 % of participants were satisfied with the photo-based record. In nearly 90 %, technical implementation was without major problems.Conclusions: Compared with a weighed record, the photo-based dietary record seems to be valid, feasible and user-friendly to estimate energy, macronutrient and fibre intakes, although a systematic bias with increasing levels of intake should be kept in mind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Meat consumers and non-meat consumers in Germany: a characterisation based on results of the German National Nutrition Survey II.
- Author
-
Koch, Franziska, Heuer, Thorsten, Krems, Carolin, and Claupein, Erika
- Subjects
- *
MEAT , *NUTRITION surveys , *MIDDLE-aged persons , *HIGH-income countries , *FOOD consumption , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
Meat consumption in high-income countries is increasingly discussed due to its impact on environment and health as well as ethical considerations. The present paper aims to provide information on meat consumption behaviour, sociodemographic factors related to meat consumption and its associations with health and nutritional behaviour, based on the German National Nutrition Survey II. For 12 915 participants aged 18–80 years, food consumption was assessed by two 24-h recalls and further data by interviews. Participants were distinguished in non-meat consumers and meat consumers; meat consumers were further differentiated as low and high meat consumers (<86 g/d and ≥86 g/d). Group differences were analysed using binary logistic and linear regression models. More non-meat consumers were found among women, young and more educated persons. They showed equal or more preferable health characteristics, had a similar energy intake but ate more plant-based foods compared with meat consumers. More high meat consumers were found among men, young and middle-aged and lower-educated persons. Compared with low meat consumers, they showed equal or less preferable health characteristics, had a higher energy intake and ate more potatoes and sauces/spices and less of most other food groups in relation to their energy intake. To conclude, sociodemographic groups differ in their meat consumption and differences in meat consumption go together with differences in health behaviour and other food consumption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Filling Voice Promotion Gaps in Healthcare through a Comparative Analysis of Error Reporting and Learning Systems and Open Communication and Disclosure Policies in the United States and Germany.
- Author
-
Duffourc, Mindy Nunez
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL care , *INSTRUCTIONAL systems , *ORGANIZATIONAL performance , *NATIONAL health service laws , *QUALITY assurance , *SAFETY regulations , *DISCLOSURE , *SAFETY , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *MEDICAL errors , *ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness , *COMMUNICATION , *RISK management in business , *LAW - Abstract
Voice in healthcare is crucial because of its ability to improve organizational performance and prevent medical errors. This paper contends that a comparative analysis of voice promotion in the American and German healthcare industries can strengthen a culture of safety in both countries. It provides a brief introduction to the concept of voice in healthcare, including its impact on safety culture, barriers to voice, and the dual influences of confidentiality and transparency on voice promotion policies. It then examines the theoretical basis, practical workings, and legal aspects of voluntary error reporting and error disclosure as avenues for exercising voice in the U.S. and Germany. Finally, it identifies transferable practices that can remedy shortcomings in each country's voice promotion policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Abstracts of papers presented at the annual meeting.
- Author
-
Kinghorn, Janice
- Subjects
- *
COAL industry , *IRON industry , *STEEL industry , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Presents an abstract of a research paper entitled `Kartell or Cartel? Evidence From Turn of the Century German Coal, Iron, and Steel Industries,' by Janice Kinghorn, presented at the annual meeting of the Economic History Association.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Population ageing in a lifecourse perspective: developing a conceptual framework.
- Author
-
KOMP, KATHRIN and JOHANSSON, STINA
- Subjects
- *
AGING , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *DEMOGRAPHY , *EXPERIENCE , *LIFE expectancy , *POPULATION , *SOCIAL networks - Abstract
Population ageing is a global trend that affects individual life plans, family arrangements, market structures, care provisions and pension schemes. We combine insights from demography and lifecourse research to understand better the causes of population ageing. Demography explains population ageing by describing changes in fertility, mortality and migration rates. Lifecourse research argues that these rates are interconnected because they are embedded in the lifecourses of individuals. An individual's experiences at an early age can influence behaviours at a later age, thereby creating continuity throughout the lifecourse. Additionally, lifecourse research underlines that social networks – such as families – and countries influence lifecourse. Thus, historical events and past experiences have already set the course for today's demographic changes. Moreover, the effects of policies that strive to influence population ageing will not be evident for years or even decades to come. This paper introduces a conceptual framework that explains how the lifecourse perspective can be applied to the phenomenon of population ageing and illustrates the framework through a case study of Germany. The case study highlights that insights from the micro-, meso- and macro-levels need to be combined to achieve a deeper understanding of population ageing. Scholars can use the framework presented in this paper as a guideline for merging arguments from demography and lifecourse research in future studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Strange Birds: Ornithology and the Advent of the Collared Dove in Post-World War II Germany.
- Author
-
Lachmund, Jens
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of ornithology , *COLLARED dove , *ORNITHOLOGISTS , *BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
In this paper I study the engagement of German ornithologists with the Collared Dove, a bird species of Asian origin that spread massively throughout Central Europe in the 1940s and 1950s. Never before had the spread of a single species attracted so much attention from European ornithologists. Ornithologists were not only fascinated by the exotic origin of the bird, but even more so by the unprecedented rapidity of its expansion. As it is argued in the paper, the advent of the bird created an outstanding opportunity for ornithologists to study the process of biogeographic range expansion. The paper traces how knowledge on the dove's expansion took shape in the social, discursive, and material practices of a large-scale observation campaign of German ornithologists (both amateurs and academics). The paper also argues that ornithologists’ observation practices have contributed to the construction of a benevolent cultural image of the Collared Dove. This sets the case of the Collared Dove apart from many recent debates in which newly arriving species have been framed as a threat to biodiversity. The paper contributes both to a historical understanding of scientific fieldwork as well as of the role of scientific knowledge in the shaping of cultural meanings of animals. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Are Labour Market Reforms the Answer to Post-Euro-Crisis Management? Reflections on Germany's Hartz Reforms.
- Author
-
Chih-Mei, Luo
- Subjects
- *
REFORMS , *LABOR policy , *CRISIS management , *LABOR market , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *INCOME inequality , *WAGES , *COST of living - Abstract
This article is an attempt to clarify the effects of the German labour market reforms, commonly known as the Hartz reforms. Competing arguments were used to identify the welfare implications for German society and the German economy in order to explore whether or not such labour market reforms might provide another German answer, following fiscal discipline, to the EU's post-euro-crisis management. This paper confirms that the Hartz reforms effectively reduced German unemployment, but they did not fundamentally solve the problem. Moreover, such effects appeared to propagate an increase in size of the low-paid sector, declining wages and increasing income inequality. The reforms were not welfare-enhancing for individuals because of increased poverty levels in employment and unemployment, which further implied a counter-productive risk for the German economy because of the contraction of domestic consumption, and potential social instability for German society because of rising inequality and deteriorating living standards. Therefore, Hartz-style reforms are neither a desirable model for other EU countries, nor the answer to Europe's post-euro-crisis management in a time of fiscal austerity and negative interest rates. The real danger to European integration, as argued in this article, is not the challenge from high unemployment, but from Germany's complacency of a one-size-fits-all thinking and, being the EU's leading country, its double standards towards and ignorance of the differential nature and contexts of the European unemployment issue compared with the German one. This article warns that the mishandling of labour market reforms could result in the collapse of the already fragile public confidence in European integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Immigrant Integration Through Volunteering: The Importance of Contextual Factors.
- Author
-
GREENSPAN, ITAY, WALK, MARLENE, and HANDY, FEMIDA
- Subjects
- *
ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. , *CHI-squared test , *IMMIGRANTS , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SOCIAL networks , *T-test (Statistics) , *VOLUNTEERS , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *SOCIAL capital , *GOVERNMENT policy , *MEMBERSHIP , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Volunteering is an under-studied yet potentially beneficial avenue for immigrant integration. Whereas past research has provided important insights into the benefits of immigrant volunteering, it has been frequently based on convenience samples. This paper contributes to the literature on immigrant volunteering on two levels. First, we test less explored questions: the differences between immigrant and native-born volunteers on several volunteer indicators, and the contextual factors (cultural, social, and organisational) associated with immigrants’ proclivity to volunteer. Second, we rely on a representative sample of the German population, and use propensity score matching to strengthen the robustness of our analysis. Findings suggest that, although native-born individuals display higher rates of volunteering than immigrants, they do not significantly differ on most indicators once immigrants become volunteers. Furthermore, time since migration, social networks and organisational membership are significant drivers of immigrant volunteering. Our findings are a signal for policymakers because social policies could better address contextual and organisational barriers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Split Memory: The Geography of Holocaust Memory and Amnesia in Belarus.
- Author
-
Walke, Anika
- Subjects
- *
HOLOCAUST, 1939-1945 , *AMNESIACS , *GENOCIDE , *JEWISH history - Abstract
The remote location of Beshankovichy’s mass grave for Jewish victims of the Nazi genocide reflects the exclusion of local Jews during the German occupation of Soviet territories and limits their memory to a few knowledgeable survivors and witnesses. In contrast, local commemorative practices focus on memorials for Soviet soldiers, partisans, and their aides. The paper reveals an incongruence of the place of historical experience on the one hand, and the locale of popular commemoration on the other, highlighting the impact of the Holocaust in Belarus to destroy Jewish history and its memory. The spatial division reflects the trauma of loss as much as shame for local participation in the mass murder. Drawing on oral histories, archival materials, and field visits, the study builds on a growing field of scholarship on the role of space and place in the construction of memories and identities in the aftermath of atrocity and trauma to discuss the geographical dimensions of memory and amnesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Apes, skulls and drums: using images to make ethnographic knowledge in imperial Germany.
- Author
-
PETROU, MARISSA H.
- Subjects
- *
ETHNOLOGY , *ZOOLOGY , *PHYSICAL anthropology , *ZOOLOGICAL museums , *ANTHROPOLOGICAL museums & collections - Abstract
In this paper, I discuss the development and use of images employed by the Dresden Royal Museum for Zoology, Anthropology and Ethnography to resolve debates about how to use visual representation as a means of making ethnographic knowledge. Through experimentation with techniques of visual representation, the founding director, A.B. Meyer (1840–1911), proposed a historical, non-essentialist approach to understanding racial and cultural difference. Director Meyer's approach was inspired by the new knowledge he had gained through field research in Asia-Pacific as well as new forms of imaging that made highly detailed representations of objects possible. Through a combination of various techniques, he developed new visual methods that emphasized intimate familiarity with variations within any one ethnic group, from skull shape to material ornamentation, as integral to the new disciplines of physical and cultural anthropology. It is well known that photographs were a favoured form of visual documentation among the anthropological and ethnographic sciences at the fin de siècle. However, in the scholarly journals of the Dresden museum, photographs, drawings, tables and etchings were frequently displayed alongside one another. Meyer sought to train the reader's eye through organized arrangements that represented objects from multiple angles and at various levels of magnification. Focusing on chimpanzees, skulls and kettledrums from Asia-Pacific, I track the development of new modes of making and reading images, from zoology and physical anthropology to ethnography, to demonstrate how the museum visually historicized humankind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Liberalisation of the German Social Model: Public–Private Pension Reform in Germany since 2001.
- Author
-
BRIDGEN, PAUL and MEYER, TRAUTE
- Subjects
- *
PENSION laws , *PUBLIC welfare laws , *WAGES , *PENSIONS , *PRACTICAL politics , *POVERTY , *RETIREMENT , *GOVERNMENT policy , *HISTORY - Abstract
Some commentators view reforms to the German political economy since the 1990s as constituting a broad liberalisation of a previously coordinated market economy (e.g., Streeck, 2009). Others argue that by maintaining protection for core workers the reforms represent a dualisation rather than liberalisation (e.g., Palier and Thelen, 2010). This debate has paid little attention to public–private pension reform since 2001. This paper argues that pensions have been a crucial component of the German social model since 1957 and demonstrates why comprehensive analysis of its development must consider them. After summarising how public and occupational pensions have supported core German workers since 1957, the paper calculates core workers’ projected net pensions and those of less privileged employees before and after recent reforms. On this basis, it concludes that pension reforms have created a system more characteristic of a liberal than a dualised political economy. Since the reform, the projected pensions of today's young workers are closer to the poverty line, and the gap between the projected benefits of core and peripheral workers has narrowed. Increasingly, as young core workers age, they will thus have less incentive to invest in employer specific skills, a development that threatens the model as a whole. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. By the sweat of their brow? The effects of starting work again after pension age on life satisfaction in Germany and the United Kingdom.
- Author
-
LUX, THOMAS and SCHERGER, SIMONE
- Subjects
- *
EMPLOYMENT of older people , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *EMPLOYMENT , *EMPLOYMENT reentry , *INCOME , *MARITAL status , *PANEL analysis , *PENSIONS , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *RETIREMENT , *SATISFACTION , *SOCIAL classes , *SOCIAL security , *WORK , *CULTURAL values , *SECONDARY analysis , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *STATISTICAL models , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
In recent years, the employment rates of people of pension age have increased considerably. However, longitudinal evidence on the effects of this employment on wellbeing which might contribute to an evaluation of this late-life work is scarce. Based on empirical findings so far and on theoretical approaches to wellbeing, work and retirement, both negative and positive effects of post-retirement work on life satisfaction are plausible. In this paper, we investigate the effects of taking up work again between the ages of 65 and 75 on life satisfaction in different occupational classes in Germany and the United Kingdom. We expect that not only the heterogeneous conditions and experiences of working are crucial for the consequences that post-retirement work has for life satisfaction, but also the institutional arrangements surrounding this form of work. We use data from the German Socio-Economic Panel and the British Household Panel Survey, covering the 1990s and 2000s. Based on fixed-effects regression modelling, we find positive effects of working in both countries, although not all effects are significant. Differentiating by the class of the job in which the older person works, we find mainly positive effects and no significant differences between those who work in a lower-class job and all others. In addition, we find that the positive effect of working on life satisfaction is partly explained by increased satisfaction with household income for those working in a lower-class job in the United Kingdom. We conclude that many of the pessimistic assumptions about people working after pension age cannot be confirmed for our time of observation. However, there are several reasons for believing that the results will be different in the future or for differently defined populations of people working past pension age. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Collective memory in law and policy: the problem of the sovereign debt crisis.
- Author
-
O'Callaghan, Patrick
- Subjects
- *
EUROPEAN Sovereign Debt Crisis, 2009-2018 , *COLLECTIVE memory , *PRICE inflation , *BOND market , *PUBLIC debts ,GERMAN politics & government - Abstract
The idea of 'collective memory' features prominently in several disciplines but rarely in legal scholarship. Drawing on the work of Henri Bergson, Maurice Halbwachs and GWF Hegel, this paper seeks to present an account of collective memory that is relevant to discourse on law and policy. The paper uses the example of the policy response to the European sovereign debt crisis as a means of illustrating how collective memory of events in the distant past can shape individual behaviour and thinking. It argues that the current policy response can be explained, at least in part, by the influence on policy makers of the standard historical narrative of the Great Inflation of Weimar Germany. When, however, collective memory takes the form of Bergsonian 'habit memory', it can inhibit our efforts to resolve hard cases and the German government's opposition to the European Central Bank acting as a lender of last resort in the government bond markets neatly illustrates this point. If the debt crisis is to be managed effectively, policy makers must draw on Bergsonian 'pure memory' to explore the bounds of political and economic possibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Challenged Media Participation of Diasporas: Iranian Productions on Public Access TV Channels in Germany.
- Author
-
Horz, Christine
- Subjects
- *
DIASPORA , *TELEVISION broadcasting , *PUBLIC television , *PUBLIC broadcasting , *TELEVISION programs , *TELEVISION production & direction , *IRANIANS , *SOCIAL participation - Abstract
This paper analyses Iranian television production on Public Access TV channels in Germany. It is based on a broader study with qualitative interviews, hermeneutic content analysis of 40 hours of aired TV programs and a ?dense description? of the production background. Iranian immigrants were amongst the most active mother-tongue TV producers on local Public Access Channels (so called ?Open Channels?) since these were first launched in 1984. These non-commercial channels aim to make alternative themes and voices heard in the local public. However, the 9/11 attacks led to increased difficulties of access for immigrants from the Middle East, such as limited airtime and the obligation to translate programs. These measures diminished dramatically the opportunities to present Iranian TV shows on Open Channels. From the perspective of Communication Studies, this paper aims to analyse the intentions and strategies of Iranian immigrant media participation, but also the difficulties of access to the public sphere in Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Abstracts of papers presented at the annual meeting.
- Author
-
Guinnane, Timothy W.
- Subjects
- *
FINANCIAL institutions , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Presents an abstract of a research paper entitled `Diversification, Liquidity, and Supervision for Small Financial Institutions: Nineteenth-Century German Credit Cooperatives,' by Timothy W. Guinnane, presented at the annual meeting of the Economic History Association.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Abstracts of papers presented at the annual meeting.
- Author
-
Fohlin, Caroline
- Subjects
- *
BANKING industry , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Presents an abstract of a research paper entitled `Bank-Firm Relationships and the Development of Interlocking Directorates in the Kaiserreich,' by Caroline Fohlin, presented at the annual meeting of the Economic History Association.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Federalism and Political Change: Canada and Germany in Historical-Institutionalist Perspective.
- Author
-
BROSCHEK, JÖRG
- Subjects
- *
COMPARATIVE studies , *FEDERAL government , *POLITICAL philosophy , *POLITICAL change , *HISTORY ,CANADIAN politics & government ,GERMAN politics & government - Abstract
This paper starts from the assumption that historical institutionalism has much to offer in order to address important questions raised in the literature on comparative federalism. Historical institutionalism is a useful approach to enhancing our understanding of both the origins that drive federal system dynamics and the dynamic patterns which federal systems unfold over time. The paper conceptualizes federalism as a multi-layered political order, comprising an institutional and an ideational layer. It then introduces two models of political change, the model of path dependence and the process sequencing model, and asks how each model can contribute to explain the emergence of the federal order in Canada and Germany. I conclude that while the model of path dependence lends itself well to capturing federal system dynamics in Germany, the process sequencing model, in contrast, is better suited to explaining sources and patterns of change in Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Patterns of intergenerational support in grandparent-grandchild and parent-child relationships in Germany.
- Author
-
Hoff, Andreas
- Subjects
- *
GRANDPARENT-grandchild relationships , *SOCIAL change , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations , *AGE groups , *PARENT-child relationships - Abstract
The paper focuses on intergenerational support relations between grandparents and their grandchildren in Germany, and how they have changed from 1996 to 2002. The paper begins with a brief review of the literature on functional aspects of the grandparent-grandchild relationship, after which the research hypotheses about intergenerational support in the relationship are elaborated. Following a description of the data source, the German Ageing Survey, and its samples and measures, the evidence on the patterns of grandparents' provision and receipt of intergenerational support to and from their grandchildren are presented and compared with parent-child support patterns. The analysis also considers variations by age groups and birth cohorts and changes over time. The main empirical finding is that there was a greater likelihood of financial transfers to grandchildren in 2002 than six years earlier. Nevertheless, the grandparents' relationships with their grandchildren remained imbalanced or asymmetrical, at the older generation's expense. It was found that financial and instrumental support patterns between grandparents and grandchildren were best explained using an 'inter-generational stake' hypothesis rather than one of 'intergenerational solidarity'; the latter is more consistent with parent-child support patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Integrating corpus work into secondary education: From data-driven learning to needs-driven corpora.
- Author
-
Braun, Sabine
- Subjects
- *
CORPORA , *FOREIGN language education , *CASE studies , *HIGH schools , *SECONDARY education , *LEARNING - Abstract
This paper reports on an empirical case study conducted to investigate the overall conditions and challenges of integrating corpus materials and corpus-based learning activities into English-language classes at a secondary school in Germany. Starting from the observation that in spite of the large amount of research into corpus-based language learning, hands-on work with corpora has remained an exception in secondary schools, the paper starts by outlining a set of pedagogical requirements for corpus integration and the approach which has formed the basis for designing the case study. Then the findings of the study are reported and discussed. As a result of the methodological challenges identified in the study, the author argues for a move from ‘data-driven learning’ to needs-driven corpora, corpus activities and corpus methodologies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Germany as a Kin-State: The Development and Implementation of a Norm-Consistent External Minority Policy towards Central and Eastern Europe.
- Author
-
Cordell, Karl and Wolff, Stefan
- Subjects
- *
ETHNIC relations , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SOCIAL norms , *MINORITIES - Abstract
The article discusses Germany as a kin-state in the development and implementation of norm-consistent external minority policy for Central and Eastern Europe. It features the historical legacy of ethnic German minorities. This paper aims to show the continuity of German Ostpolitik and its development and adherence to a set of norms.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Northern European retired residents in nine southern European areas: characteristics, motivations and adjustment.
- Author
-
Casado-Díaz, María Angeles, Kaiser, Claudia, and Warnes, Anthony M.
- Subjects
- *
RETIREES , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
During the last two decades, northern European retirement residence in the southern European sunbelt has grown strongly and its forms have rapidly changed, but standard demographic and social statistical sources provide no information about the flows, the migrants or their increasingly mobile and complex residential patterns. Considerable primary research has however recently been undertaken into the causes, conditions, experiences and consequences of international retirement migration (IRM) by investigators from Germany, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Many collaborated when designing their studies and instruments, and all have subsequently worked together in a European Science Foundation Scientific Network. This paper compares the findings of six systematic social surveys in (to be more precise than the title) eight regions of southern Europe and the Canary Islands: all have tackled similar research questions with similar methods and instruments. It presents interpretations of several comparative tables compiled from their original data, with a focus on the socio-economic backgrounds, motivations and behaviour of the various migrant groups and their relationship with the host and home countries. The paper presents new findings about the typical and variant forms of IRM, and additional understanding of the heterogeneity of the retirees of different nations and in the several regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A Flight to Fame, to Oblivion.
- Author
-
Sviderskytė, Gražina
- Subjects
- *
MEMORY , *AIRCRAFT accidents , *TRAGEDY (Trauma) , *POLITICAL culture , *CONCEPTION , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper investigates a case study of memory transformation. It looks at an 80-year sequence of complex interactions by which a single tragedy, the transatlantic flight and deadly crash in Germany (now Poland) of two American-Lithuanian pilots, which occurred 17 July 1933, was turned into a lasting phenomenon, a powerful myth (re)shaped by competing memory regimes. A general discussion on memory management and the cultural politics related to this event correlates with the topical issues of the ongoing search for a new conception, or the sense of history as a tool for configuring the future of Lithuania, as well as of some other Eastern European countries. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.