881 results on '"Belgien"'
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2. Nationalsozialistische Bibliothekspolitik in Europa
- Author
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Michael Knoche
- Subjects
Nationalsozialismus ,Bibliothekspolitik 1939-1945 ,Nationalbibliothek Luxemburg ,Belgien ,Niederlande ,Luxemburg ,Bibliography. Library science. Information resources - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. SÄHN, Thomas. 2022. Analyse sémiologique des personnages dans les récits graphiques. Berlin et al.: Peter Lang.
- Author
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Beate Kern
- Subjects
Comic ,Semiotik ,Figuren ,Erzählstruktur ,Frankreich ,Belgien ,Language and Literature ,Romanic languages ,PC1-5498 - Abstract
Rezension
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. BelgienNet - une plateforme pour l'accès aux langues et cultures de la Belgique.
- Author
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Karaca, Resul and Huybrechts, Yves
- Abstract
Copyright of Synergies Pays Germanophones is the property of GERFLINT (Groupe d'Etudes et de Recherches pour le Francais Langue Internationale) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
5. National images in visual narratives : the (re)presentation of national characters in the Flemish comic series 'Suske en Wiske'
- Author
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Hermann, Christine and Hermann, Christine
- Abstract
In visual narratives such as comics, national images are actually depicted. While Franco-Belgian comics have been the subject of detailed studies regarding the national stereotypes they convey, Flemish comics have been largely ignored. This article focuses on three albums of the Flemish comic series "Suske en Wiske", in which the heroes travel to a fictitious Eastern Bloc country, Japan, and China. It will examine how both heteroimages and auto-image are presented (visually, textually, and as part of the plot), and how comic characters may combine contradictory ethnotypes. As it will turn out, in the early album (1945) ethnotypes are perpetuated, whereas in later ones (1984, 2008) they are rather undermined.
- Published
- 2024
6. Gender and Strategic Opposition Behavior: Patterns of Parliamentary Oversight in Belgium
- Author
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de Vet, Benjamin, Devroe, Robin, de Vet, Benjamin, and Devroe, Robin
- Abstract
Studies on strategic parliamentary opposition often focus on broader behavioral patterns or party‐level variation. This article analyzes differences at the individual level, more notably between male and female opposition members of parliament. Using rational‐choice perspectives of opposition activity and theories of gendered political behavior, we hypothesize that female opposition members focus less on ideological conflicts (with or between coalition parties) and more on their party's core issues. Furthermore, we expect them to more frequently target female ministers, in part because of the nature of their respective portfolios. Our analysis of all parliamentary questions tabled by opposition members in the Belgian Federal Parliament between 2007 and 2019 (N = 48,735) suggests that female members of parliament seem more likely to focus on issues that are salient to their party and less on conflictual matters between coalition partners. These results provide new empirical insights into strategic opposition behavior and gendered differences in the legislature.
- Published
- 2023
7. Is Protest Only Negative? Examining the Effect of Emotions and Affective Polarization on Protest Behaviour
- Author
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Bettarelli, Luca, Close, Caroline, Haute, Emilie van, Bettarelli, Luca, Close, Caroline, and Haute, Emilie van
- Abstract
This contribution sheds light on the link between affect and protest behaviors. Using data from a voter survey conducted around the 2019 elections in Belgium, we examine two dimensions of affect: a vertical one, i.e., negative and positive emotions towards politics in general, and a horizontal one, i.e., affective polarization towards fellow citizens. Our findings make three important contributions. First, we identify five distinct classes of respondents depending on their emotions towards politics (apathetic, angry, hopeful, highly emotional, and average). Second, we demonstrate that the combination of both anger and hope is more strongly associated with protest action than anger alone. By contrast, apathy, characterized by an absence of emotions towards politics, is negatively related to protest behavior. Third, we show that affective polarization is a key driver of protest behavior per se. We also show that the two dimensions of affect have distinctive effects. Yet they interact: Affective polarization towards political opponents compensates for the absence of emotions towards politics in general.
- Published
- 2023
8. Migrant-native differentials in the uptake of (in)formal childcare in Belgium: The role of mothers' employment opportunities and care availability
- Author
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Biegel, Naomi, Wood, Jonas, Neels, Karel, Biegel, Naomi, Wood, Jonas, and Neels, Karel
- Abstract
Objective: we explore migrant-native differentials in the uptake of formal and informal childcare and whether this is induced by lower demand for childcare versus differential access to (in)formal childcare compared to natives. Background: The rise in female labour market participation in recent decades has challenged parents to negotiate work and family responsibilities and organise childcare. Belgium is among the European countries with the highest availability of formal childcare, but maternal employment and uptake of childcare are substantially lower in migrant populations. Methods: Combining linked microdata from the 1991 and 2001 censuses with contextual data on childcare availability at the municipality level, we use multinomial logit models to study childcare use and type of childcare arrangement among parents having a young child in 2001. As access to childcare and maternal employment are mutually endogenous, we use estimated employment opportunities. Results: We find considerable migrant-native differentials in childcare use, as well as substantial differences between first and second generation migrants. Second generation mothers of Turkish, Moroccan and Eastern-European background are less likely than natives to use childcare, and more likely to rely on informal arrangements if childcare is used. Controlling for socio-demographic characteristics and differential availability of (in)formal childcare largely accounts for differences in childcare use, but Turkish and Moroccan women remain less likely to use care and first generation Turkish mothers remain more likely to use informal care as opposed to formal childcare. Conclusions: While differences in socio-demographic characteristics, labour market opportunities and availability of (in)formal care provide a partial explanation, partial migrant-native differentials in childcare use persist for specific groups, suggesting that other factors inhibit the uptake of formal childcare., Fragestellung: Wir untersuchen in diesem Beitrag die Unterschiede in der Inanspruchnahme von Kinderbetreuung nach Migrationshintergrund. Dabei unterscheide wir zwischen formeller Kinderbetreuung ("crèche" und Tagespflege), informeller Betreuung (Familienangehörige und Freunde) und "kombinierte" Arrangements informeller und formeller Betreuung. Wir kontrollieren für sozio-demographische Merkmale des Haushalts, mütterliches Erwerbsverhalten, regionale Kinderbetreuungsquoten und Verfügbarkeit von nahen Familienangehörigen als Proxy für informelle Betreuung. Hintergrund: Belgien ist eines der europäischen Länder, das sich durch eine hohe Verfügbarkeit institutioneller Kinderbetreuung auszeichnet, wobei allerdings die Müttererwerbstätigkeit wie auch die Inanspruchnahme institutioneller Kinderbetreuung unter der Migrantenpopulation relativ niedrig ausfällt. Methode: Als Datenbasis dienen Mikrodaten, die mit dem Zensus aus den Jahren 1991 und 2001 verbundenen wurden, die Informationen zu lokalen Kinderbetreuungsquoten enthalten. Als Methode wurden multinomiale Logit-Modelle geschätzt, wobei die abhängige Variable die Art des Betreuungsarrangements von Eltern abbildet, dessen jüngstes Kind im Jahr 2001 geboren wurde. Da Kinderbetreuung und Müttererwerbsverhalten endogene Prozesse sind, haben wir in den Modellen für das geschätzte Erwerbsverhalten nach Migrationshintergrund kontrolliert. Ergebnisse: Die Analysen zeigen, dass vor allem nicht-europäische Migranten seltener Kinderbetreuungsarrangement nutzen als Einheimische, wobei sich diese Unterschiede auch in die zweite Generation forttragen. Wenn Kindebetreuung in Anspruch genommen wird, wählen europäische Migranten eher formelle, hingegen nicht-europäische Migranten eher informelle Arrangements. Die Unterschiede im Erwerbsverhalten erklären zu einem großen Teil die Unterschiede zwischen Migranten und Einheimischen in der Nutzung institutioneller Betreuung. Schlussfolgerung: Während sich die Unterschiede in der Kinderbetre
- Published
- 2023
9. Belgische Literaturen in deutscher Übersetzung: Kulturelle und historische Verflechtungen von 1945 bis zur Gegenwart
- Author
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Pol-Tegge, Anja van de and Pol-Tegge, Anja van de
- Abstract
Was verraten literarische Übersetzungen über die komplexen kulturellen und historischen Verflechtungen von Belgien und Deutschland? Zur Beantwortung dieser Frage bezieht die Autorin erstmals beide belgischen Ausgangssprachen - Französisch und Niederländisch - in ein innovatives Forschungsformat ein. Durch detaillierte Übersetzungsanalysen von Texten namhafter Autor*innen wie Hugo Claus und Amélie Nothomb gibt sie Aufschluss über epistemische Konfigurationen im deutschen Zielkontext. Über Bilder der Fremdwahrnehmung und Selbstidentifikation bildet sie die Wirkmacht sozio-historischer Diskurse auf belgische Literaturen ab und verdichtet diese zu Tendenzen der Translationsdynamik.
- Published
- 2023
10. A Threat to the Occident? Comparing Human Values of Muslim Immigrants, Christian, and Non-religious Natives in Western Europe
- Author
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Czymara, Christian S., Eisentraut, Marcus, Czymara, Christian S., and Eisentraut, Marcus
- Abstract
With a growing Muslim population, many European countries need to integrate Muslims into their societies. One aspect that can hinder successful integration are substantial differences in human values. This is because such values are consequential for attitudes as well as behavior. We compare basic human values between Muslim immigrants and non-Muslim natives in four European countries with distinct immigration histories and integration politics: Belgium, France, Germany, and Sweden. For most insightful comparisons, we contrast values of Muslim immigrants with those of Christian natives as well as those of non-religious natives. We employ data of more than 50,000 individuals based on the first eight waves of the European Social Survey. Our findings reveal significant differences in value priorities between Muslims, Christians and non-religious individuals in all four countries. Amongst other things, Muslim immigrants score particularly high in conservation values (security and tradition/conformity). At the same time, they also score higher in self-transcendence values (benevolence as well as universalism). While many of these findings are in line with theory and previous research, the higher score in universalism is unexpected. A potential explanation is the combination of religious traditionalism and discrimination experiences. In other words, religious traditions are associated with more conservative views, but being subject to marginalization can still result in an appreciation of equal opportunities. We find only limited support for differences in hedonism. Religiosity correlates with values of tradition/conformity for Muslim immigrants as well as for Christian natives. Thus, accounting for religiosity renders differences in these values between Muslims and other groups statistically insignificant. While most of these findings hold in all countries, differences are most pronounced in Sweden and lower in the other three countries, which is also true after accounti
- Published
- 2023
11. In-work Benefits in Belgium: Effects on Labour Supply and Welfare
- Author
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de Mahieu, Antoine and de Mahieu, Antoine
- Abstract
Belgium has implemented, following the example of other countries, in-work benefit policies since the early 2000’s, with the objective of increasing employment rates and fighting poverty. Belgian in-work benefits differ from most other in-work benefits as eligibility requires low hourly earnings. We study the effects extensions of those benefits would have both on labour supply and welfare, using a random-utility - random-opportunity model estimated on cross-sectional SILC datasets. Results show that further increasing the benefits would slightly increase labour supply and welfare of low-to-middle income deciles, but at very high net cost per job created. We compare our results with existing research and explain some mechanisms that possibly led to an underestimation of negative intensive margin labour supply responses in previous simulations.
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- 2023
12. Exploring the association between occupational complexity and numeracy
- Author
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Billington, Mary Genevieve, Foldnes, Njål, Billington, Mary Genevieve, and Foldnes, Njål
- Abstract
The basic cognitive skill of numeracy is a recognized form of human capital, associated with economic and social well being for individuals and for nations. In this study, we explore how occupational complexity relates to proficiency in numeracy, among adults in full-time employment. We operationalize occupational complexity by constructing three measures of task complexity: complexity with data, complexity with people and complexity with things. Data from the international OECD survey of adult skills, 2012, is employed to investigate both the distribution of these three dimensions of occupational task complexity and how these relate to numeracy in 13 countries. The analysis indicates that data occupational complexity predicts numeracy scores, when controlling for age, gender and educational level. The findings open for a hypothesis that occupational activities may enhance basic skills in adult populations. If elaborated and supported through further studies this finding has practical implications for workplace organization and contributes to theoretical understandings of the development of basic skills in adults.
- Published
- 2023
13. Belgische Literaturen in deutscher Übersetzung
- Author
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Pol-Tegge, Anja van de
- Subjects
Literaturübersetzung ,Belgien ,Deutschland ,Mehrsprachigkeit ,Kulturtransfer ,Französisch ,Niederländisch ,Sprache ,Rezeption ,Translationsdynamik ,Literatur ,Kultur ,Interkulturalität ,Allgemeine Literaturwissenschaft ,Kulturgeschichte ,Kulturwissenschaft ,Literary Translation ,Belgium ,Germany ,Multilinguism ,French ,Dutch ,Language ,Perception ,Translation Dynamics ,Literature ,Culture ,Interculturalism ,Literary Studies ,Cultural History ,Cultural Studies ,thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JB Society and culture: general::JBC Cultural and media studies::JBCC Cultural studies ,thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies::DS Literature: history and criticism::DSB Literary studies: general - Abstract
Was verraten literarische Übersetzungen über die komplexen kulturellen und historischen Verflechtungen von Belgien und Deutschland? Zur Beantwortung dieser Frage bezieht Anja van de Pol-Tegge erstmals beide belgischen Ausgangssprachen - Französisch und Niederländisch - in ein innovatives Forschungsformat ein. Durch detaillierte Übersetzungsanalysen von Texten namhafter Autor*innen wie Hugo Claus und Amélie Nothomb gibt sie Aufschluss über epistemische Konfigurationen im deutschen Zielkontext. Über Bilder der Fremdwahrnehmung und Selbstidentifikation bildet sie die Wirkmacht sozio-historischer Diskurse auf belgische Literaturen ab und verdichtet diese zu Tendenzen der Translationsdynamik.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Collective Housing in Belgium and the Netherlands: A Comparative Analysis
- Author
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Els De Vos and Lidwine Spoormans
- Subjects
collective housing ,Raumplanung und Regionalforschung ,Wohnungspolitik ,Wohnform ,housing construction ,central living ,housing culture ,Sociology ,Belgium ,residential behavior ,Gemeinschaft ,type of housing ,Niederlande ,ddc:710 ,Netherlands ,Landscaping and area planning ,Städtebau, Raumplanung, Landschaftsgestaltung ,Belgien ,housing policy ,Area Development Planning, Regional Research ,Wohnen ,cohousing ,Wohnungsbau ,Urban Studies ,comparison ,community ,Vergleich ,Engineering sciences. Technology ,Art - Abstract
Collective housing (CH) is undergoing a revival in Belgium. Since 2009, the Flemish Government Architect and his team have been advocating CH, stressing its importance as a task for architects given the demand for affordable housing and the need to reduce the environmental impact of housing. This support for CH has converged with the work of the non-profit citizen organization Samenhuizen (“Living together”) and the ad hoc initiatives taken by individual households and architects. In the Netherlands too, where there is a longer tradition of CH, the phenomenon is once more on the rise because of the housing crisis. As it is a developing topic, the terminology used for CH is also evolving. Drawing on publications on the subject in both Belgium and the Netherlands as well as on interviews with relevant stakeholders, this article sheds light on two widely published cases in both countries (pioneering and current, greenfield and conversion). These cases are compared in regard to thematic areas, based on an extensive literature study on collaborative housing by Lang et al. (2018). In addition to such aspects as the balance between “individuality” and the “collective,” we compare the role played by architects in both countries. Besides similarities, we show that the historical context, and especially the housing policy of each country, has a great influence and that the role of the architect is essential in the development of older and contemporary cohousing projects.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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15. Belgische Literaturen in deutscher Übersetzung: Kulturelle und historische Verflechtungen von 1945 bis zur Gegenwart
- Author
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Anja Van de Pol-Tegge, Brussels Instituut voor Toegepaste Taalkunde, Linguistiek en Literatuurstudie, and Centrum voor Literatuur- en Cultuurwetenschappen
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Sprache ,Mehrsprachigkeit ,Kulturgeschichte ,cultural transfer ,French ,multilingualism ,Culture ,cultural studies ,translation ,Multilingualism ,Federal Republic of Germany ,Literatur ,Sociology & anthropology ,literary translation ,Belgium ,Germany ,Übersetzung ,Cultural Sociology, Sociology of Art, Sociology of Literature ,reception ,Belgien ,Kulturwissenschaft ,language ,literature ,cultural history ,interculturality ,Literaturwissenschaft, Sprachwissenschaft, Linguistik ,Literatur, Rhetorik, Literaturwissenschaft ,Bundesrepublik Deutschland ,Kulturtransfer ,Französisch ,Niederländisch ,Translationsdynamik ,Kultur ,Interkulturalität ,Dutch ,Perception ,Translation Dynamics ,Interculturalism ,Literary Studies ,Science of Literature, Linguistics ,Soziologie, Anthropologie ,Rezeption ,literature (discipline) ,ddc:301 ,Literature, rhetoric and criticism ,Literaturwissenschaft ,ddc:800 ,Kultursoziologie, Kunstsoziologie, Literatursoziologie - Abstract
Was verraten literarische Übersetzungen über die komplexen kulturellen und historischen Verflechtungen von Belgien und Deutschland? Zur Beantwortung dieser Frage bezieht Anja van de Pol-Tegge erstmals beide belgischen Ausgangssprachen - Französisch und Niederländisch - in ein innovatives Forschungsformat ein. Durch detaillierte Übersetzungsanalysen von Texten namhafter Autor*innen wie Hugo Claus und Amélie Nothomb gibt sie Aufschluss über epistemische Konfigurationen im deutschen Zielkontext. Über Bilder der Fremdwahrnehmung und Selbstidentifikation bildet sie die Wirkmacht sozio-historischer Diskurse auf belgische Literaturen ab und verdichtet diese zu Tendenzen der Translationsdynamik.
- Published
- 2023
16. Challenging the Master Narrative on Large-Scale Social Estates: Exploring Counterstories Through Digital Storytelling
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Younes Rifaad and Nele Aernouts
- Subjects
Landscaping and area planning ,Stigmatisierung ,Städtebau, Raumplanung, Landschaftsgestaltung ,Belgien ,Wohnsiedlung ,Raumplanung und Regionalforschung ,Area Development Planning, Regional Research ,counterstories ,digital storytelling ,inclusive planning ,social housing ,Planungsprozess ,renter ,planning process ,Urban Studies ,Mieter ,inclusion ,Belgium ,stigmatization ,Sozialwohnung ,ddc:710 ,housing development ,Inklusion - Abstract
The challenging and reframing of dominant narratives have been recognized as crucial to the regeneration of stigmatized areas. This article builds upon a digital storytelling process in the social estate of Peterbos, Brussels, to investigate how the counterstories of inhabitants challenge the “master narrative.” The counterstories foreground the spatial agency of tenants, the (dis)enabling role of space, and the difficult relationship with social housing companies. The article concludes that counterstories not only reveal dominant spatial imaginaries about high-rise estates but also have the potential to foster a more situated and experiential understanding of the relationship between people and space. However, it is important to note that digital storytelling is not a substitute for inclusive planning. Critical engagement with ongoing planning processes remains crucial.
- Published
- 2023
17. Change in the Dispersed Territory: (Proto)Types for a New Urban Paradigm
- Author
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Maarten Gheysen and Sophie Leemans
- Subjects
architecture ,Science ,Raumplanung und Regionalforschung ,Naturwissenschaften ,urbanization ,Siedlungsstruktur ,Architektur ,Belgium ,Urbanisierung ,Landwirtschaft ,ddc:710 ,settlement pattern ,Natural Science and Engineering, Applied Sciences ,Agrarbetrieb ,agriculture ,Landscaping and area planning ,Städtebau, Raumplanung, Landschaftsgestaltung ,Belgien ,Flanders ,architectural prototype ,architectural typology ,dispersed territories ,moated farmstead ,urban transformation ,settlement area ,Area Development Planning, Regional Research ,Urban Studies ,Naturwissenschaften, Technik(wissenschaften), angewandte Wissenschaften ,ddc:500 ,Siedlungsgebiet ,farm - Abstract
Dispersed territories such as Flanders (Belgium) have been amongst others described as layered territories, as a palimpsest landscape, or as both a selective and a-selective infill of the territory. In the constant re-editing and change of this territory, historical remnants remain visible and often form a departing point for further adaptations and changes. One of these remnants, the moated farmstead, has evolved from a historical (proto)type to a common typology in South-West Flanders and enabled inhabiting the territory dispersedly. Moated farmsteads are typically composed of a series of different buildings and are surrounded by an artificial water body. The moat formed the central point of a larger land management system. Nowadays, many of these farmsteads still exist, however, over time they lost their original purpose and transformed into a variety of uses. The design of a prototype, i.e., a first model later evolving into a type, a recurring model, as an architectural object can simultaneously relate to a larger theoretical reflection on the scale of the territory. Subsequently, these farmsteads lead to the question: What (proto)types have been developed to demonstrate the uniqueness of the relation between the land/labour/living in a dispersed territory? Can we re-interpret the moated farmstead as a new (proto)type to establish a more sustainable way of urbanising the countryside in a dispersed context? Therefore, this article first documents the historical figure of the moated farmstead as an architectural object, socio-economic and political organisation, and ecological land management, and documents its change throughout time. Then, a reflection is built on how, at the time of their emergence, these moated farmsteads were an exponent of a sustainable and ground-breaking type that enabled a dispersed settlement pattern. Finally, the potential of the farmstead as a new prototype for a twenty-first-century dispersed territory is discussed.
- Published
- 2023
18. Measuring public knowledge on nuclear weapons in the post-Cold War: dimensionality and measurement invariance across eight European countries
- Author
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Fabrício Mendes Fialho
- Subjects
knowledge ,Italien ,Frankreich ,Fragebogen ,Großbritannien ,Federal Republic of Germany ,internationaler Vergleich ,Wissen ,Einstellung ,0504 sociology ,Belgium ,050602 political science & public administration ,Messung ,Datengewinnung ,Niederlande ,Social sciences, sociology, anthropology ,Netherlands ,Erhebungstechniken und Analysetechniken der Sozialwissenschaften ,Sweden ,H1-99 ,Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie ,Belgien ,Polen ,questionnaire ,05 social sciences ,international security ,Great Britain ,050401 social sciences methods ,international comparison ,16. Peace & justice ,Bundesrepublik Deutschland ,nuclear weapon ,0506 political science ,Kernwaffe ,data capture ,Social sciences (General) ,Methods and Techniques of Data Collection and Data Analysis, Statistical Methods, Computer Methods ,Italy ,attitude ,öffentliche Meinung ,public opinion ,ddc:300 ,internationale Sicherheit ,measurement ,France ,Poland ,Schweden - Abstract
Research on public opinion and international security has extensively examined attitudes toward nuclear weapons, but the diffusion of basic knowledge about nuclear weapons among the everyday citizens has nevertheless been mostly missed. This study proposes a working definition and advances a measurement model of knowledge on nuclear weapons in the general public. It analyzes data from two novel surveys conducted in 2018 (N = 6559) and 2019 (N = 6227) where respondents from Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, and the United Kingdom answered a web survey on attitudes and factual knowledge on nuclear weapons. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analytic models are used to examine the dimensionality and to assess the measurement invariance of a scale of knowledge about nuclear weapons. A bifactor measurement model, where a strong general factor represents the construct of interest and specific factors account for the presence of testlets due to questionnaire design, is established and validated. Configural, metric, and scalar invariance are established across the eight samples. The findings indicate that knowledge about nuclear weapons in the general, non-expert public can be reliably measured cross-nationally.
- Published
- 2021
19. The Vlaams Belang: A Mass Party of the 21st Century
- Author
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Judith Sijstermans
- Subjects
party membership ,Populismus ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,organizational structure ,Politikwissenschaft ,media_common.quotation_subject ,membership ,Political communication ,Public administration ,politische Macht ,decision making ,Political science (General) ,Politics ,Grassroots ,centralization ,Belgium ,Entscheidungsfindung ,Political science ,Mitgliedschaft ,political power ,Social media ,mass parties ,political communication ,Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture ,politische Kommunikation ,media_common ,politische Willensbildung, politische Soziologie, politische Kultur ,Belgien ,Zentralisierung ,Partei ,populism ,Democracy ,language.human_language ,Populism ,Flemish ,vlaams belang ,ddc:320 ,language ,Organisationsstruktur ,party ,JA1-92 ,Vlaams Belang - Abstract
Throughout its 40-year history, the Vlaams Belang (VB, Flemish Interest) has established itself as an important player within the Belgian party system, albeit with significant electoral fluctuations. In 2019, it became the second largest party in Flanders. The party developed and maintained a mass-party organisation by investing significantly in local party branches and in a rigid vertically articulated structure. It relies heavily on social media, particularly Facebook, to communicate to supporters beyond the more limited group of party members. Using both modern and traditional tools, VB representatives aim to create communities of supporters bonded to the party, facilitating dissemination of the party’s messages. Despite this investment in a grassroots organisation, the VB’s decision-making remains highly centralised. Social media and local branches allow informal consideration of members’ views, but the party has not created significant mechanisms for internal democracy. While it is often claimed that political parties have moved away from the “mass-party” model, this article demonstrates that the VB still maintains characteristics of the mass party, albeit with a modern twist. New social media tools facilitate attempts to foster communities and disseminate party messages among a wider group of supporters, both formal members and more informal sympathisers.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Exploring Embodied Place Attachment Through Co‐Creative Art Trajectories: The Case of Mount Murals
- Author
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Pieter Van den Broeck, Karin Hannes, Ann Heylighen, and Ruth Segers
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Bewohner ,Place attachment ,public space ,co‐regulating ,Sociology & anthropology ,öffentlicher Raum ,HM401-1281 ,codetermination ,Belgium ,inhabitant ,Kunst ,Sociology (General) ,Sociology ,Action research ,Built environment ,co-regulating ,Cultural Sociology, Sociology of Art, Sociology of Literature ,art ,Belgien ,Mitbestimmung ,embodied place attachment ,co-creative art ,co‐creative art ,relational resonating ,sense of belonging ,language.human_language ,Mount ,Body language ,Flemish ,Expression (architecture) ,Aesthetics ,Embodied cognition ,Soziologie, Anthropologie ,language ,ddc:301 ,Kultursoziologie, Kunstsoziologie, Literatursoziologie - Abstract
The built and living environment in the Flemish region in Belgium is evolving noticeably. It is densifying at an ever-faster pace and, along the way, becoming increasingly unfamiliar to its inhabitants. Many people face profound difficulties in autonomously and positively dealing with such drastic changes, causing their feeling of home to waver. Triggered by these challenges and supported by the local authority of a Flemish town, the experimental and co-creative art project ‘Mount Murals’ set out to stimulate new embodied interactions between and among local residents of various ages and backgrounds and with their built environment. These include remembering place-related sentiments, being aware of body language that plays between participants while co-creating and sensing an invigorating stimulus when seeing results. Awakening intrinsic appreciation in people for their own environment and associated social relationships stimulates an inclusive dealing with estranged relationships in space. Referring to the relational neuroscience principles attachment, co-creating and co-regulating as a modus of relational resonating, we explore how and under which conditions Mount Murals’ co-creative art trajectory supports an evolving embodied place attachment, an essential element of the sense of belonging, in participants. By embedding assets inherent to art creation in action research and starting with meaningful everyday objects, Mount Murals carries forward an art expression that considers the co-creation process and its co-creative products as equally important. ispartof: Social Inclusion vol:9 issue:4 pages:116-129 status: Published online
- Published
- 2021
21. In and Out of Control
- Author
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Olof Reichenberg
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,Economics ,Denmark ,Job control ,media_common.quotation_subject ,competence ,Control (management) ,Applied psychology ,Italien ,Western Europe ,soziale Ungleichheit ,Sociology & anthropology ,Task (project management) ,Erwachsener ,soziale Schichtung ,Belgium ,Allgemeine Soziologie, Makrosoziologie, spezielle Theorien und Schulen, Entwicklung und Geschichte der Soziologie ,ddc:330 ,occupation ,General Sociology, Basic Research, General Concepts and History of Sociology, Sociological Theories ,Berufsforschung, Berufssoziologie ,Westeuropa ,media_common ,Occupational Research, Occupational Sociology ,Class (computer programming) ,Belgien ,social inequality ,adult ,Wirtschaft ,Dänemark ,Beruf ,Discretion ,job control ,task discretion ,job skills ,occupations ,PIAAC ,social stratification ,Arbeitssoziologie ,sociology of work ,Italy ,Soziologie, Anthropologie ,soziale Klasse ,ddc:301 ,social class ,Psychology ,Job skills ,Kompetenz - Abstract
The present study aimed to predict job control (i.e., task discretion) based on class and occupation with skill use as a (hypothesized) mechanism in four Western European countries by using the OECD adult skill survey (PIAAC). The countries were Denmark, Belgium, Italy, and the United Kingdom (UK). The study used a Bayesian approach that included multilevel models combined with measurement models. The study uses the international standard classification of occupations with two digits (clustering variable) as well as the European socioeconomic classification (ESeC) measured with three social classes. The results indicate that greater worker technical skills (computer use) and social skills (e.g., negotiate and influence) predict higher levels of job control. Social classes interact with skills to predict job control (except Belgium). Occupational computer skills predict job control (in Belgium and Italy). In conclusion, the study supports predictions by neo-Durkheimians, neo-Weberians, New Structuralists, and relational approaches to inequality.
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- 2021
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22. The emergence of a metropolisation strategy for the Greater Region
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Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Schelkmann, Petra, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, and Schelkmann, Petra
- Abstract
This chapter describes the process by which a cross-border metropolitan region develops, using the example of the Greater Region. Between 2008 and 2010 the idea of a cross-border, polycentric metropolitan region in the Greater Region was investigated and further developed within the ESPON project 'Metroborder'. In recent years, driven by policy declarations, strategic approaches for implementing this metropolitan region have been developed. A Spatial Development Strategy of the Greater Region with a focus on the metropolitan dimensions of the sub-regions provides the foundation for this. The issue of governance in relation to the crossborder interactional area (in the narrower conception of this area) is also discussed.
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- 2022
23. Spatial planning in border regions: A balancing act between new guiding principles and old planning traditions?
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Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, and ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft
- Abstract
This chapter presents the foundations of spatial planning in the sub-regions of the Greater Region and the Upper Rhine region. It provides a picture of current developments concerning the guiding principles for spatial development and introduces the existing spatial structures of these border regions. Furthermore, the planning systems in Belgium (Wallonia), Germany, France and Luxembourg are described, and differences are identified that necessitate ongoing discussions between the partners about planning traditions and (new) strategies of spatial development.
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- 2022
24. In and Out of Control: How Class and Occupation Conditions the Relationship between Job Skills and Job Control (Task Discretion) in Four Western European Countries
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Reichenberg, Olof and Reichenberg, Olof
- Abstract
The present study aimed to predict job control (i.e., task discretion) based on class and occupation with skill use as a (hypothesized) mechanism in four Western European countries by using the OECD adult skill survey (PIAAC). The countries were Denmark, Belgium, Italy, and the United Kingdom (UK). The study used a Bayesian approach that included multilevel models combined with measurement models. The study uses the international standard classification of occupations with two digits (clustering variable) as well as the European socioeconomic classification (ESeC) measured with three social classes. The results indicate that greater worker technical skills (computer use) and social skills (e.g., negotiate and influence) predict higher levels of job control. Social classes interact with skills to predict job control (except Belgium). Occupational computer skills predict job control (in Belgium and Italy). In conclusion, the study supports predictions by neo-Durkheimians, neo-Weberians, New Structuralists, and relational approaches to inequality.
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- 2022
25. Selected cross-border forms of cooperation and INTERREG funding in Europe
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Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, and ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft
- Abstract
This paper presents an introduction to forms of cooperation on European, intergovernmental, federal state, regional and municipal levels. The EU Community Initiative INTERREG is described as a significant funding instrument for cross-border cooperation. This excursus thus provides background knowledge for many of the papers in this volume.
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- 2022
26. The use of cultural heritage as a resource for developing tourism in the border areas of the Greater Region and the Upper Rhine region
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Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Schafranski, Franz, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, and Schafranski, Franz
- Abstract
Cultural tourism is one of the most quickly growing tourism segments. Cultural heritage is an important resource for developing cultural tourism. In rural areas, tourism plays an important role in safeguarding employment, income and supply structures, but in contrast to the situation in urban regions, resources for developing cultural tourism are scarcely used. As the border regions are largely rural in character, the question arises as to the role cultural tourism and cultural heritage currently play there. This paper investigates the use of cultural heritage in the tourism sector in the border areas of the Greater Region and the Trinational Metropolitan Region of the Upper Rhine and uses this as a basis for proposals concerning the further utilisation of cultural heritage as a resource for developing tourism.
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- 2022
27. Cross-border everyday lives on the Luxembourg border? An empirical approach: the example of cross-border commuters and residential migrants
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Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Wille, Christian, Roos, Ursula, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Wille, Christian, and Roos, Ursula
- Abstract
Luxembourg is characterized by phenomena of mobility that include cross-border commuters and residential migrants. While both groups have been mainly examined from a socioeconomic perspective, this paper adopts a sociocultural approach. We will focus on the question of the extent to which cross-border mobility in everyday life promotes cross-border lifeworlds. This will involve examining people's social contacts at their place of work and/or place of residence as well as the spatial organization of practices of the everyday life of both groups. The paper gives insights into everyday lives at the EU's internal borders, whose organization into nation states is subordinate and at the same time constitutive.
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- 2022
28. Exploring Women's Uptake of Active Labour Market Programmes: The Role of Household Composition Across Migrant Origin Groups
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Kasztan Flechner, Tair, Neels, Karel, Wood, Jonas, Biegel, Naomi, Kasztan Flechner, Tair, Neels, Karel, Wood, Jonas, and Biegel, Naomi
- Abstract
Active labour market policies, like training, aim to increase the employability of unemployed population subgroups. Research indicates that the most vulnerable groups - such as women of migrant origin - are less likely to participate in the most effective programmes. Prior studies have established that household composition affects the labour market outcomes of women without and with a migration background. In contrast, research has not addressed the potential relevance of household composition in relation to women's training uptake. Using hazard models and longitudinal microdata from the employment office and social security registers, we analyse the extent to which women's household composition such as the presence and the origin of their partner or the presence of children is associated with the uptake of occupation‐specific training in Flanders (Belgium). Our results suggest that, even when we control for previously identified determinants of training uptake such as the human capital of unemployed women, training uptake in most groups varies by household composition. More specifically, the results suggest that women with a partner of non‐migrant origin show higher cumulative uptake than women with a migrant origin partner or single women, and that the presence of children in the household reduces women's training participation. Furthermore, household composition is found to be a stronger differentiating factor in uptake for migrant origin women than for non‐migrant origin women.
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- 2022
29. Cross-border cooperation in the energy sector
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Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Baur, Frank, Dröschel, Barbara, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Baur, Frank, and Dröschel, Barbara
- Abstract
The recent history of the Greater Region has been strongly characterised by fossil fuels. The area thus faces significant challenges as a model region in terms of the cross-border activities necessary to meet the requirements of climate protection and the energy transition. Based on the targets defined in Europe, this paper presents examples of approaches to action and projects undertaken in the field of energy in the Greater Region. Experiences gathered in the area - including those of the authors - reveal the need for action, firstly in relation to the implementation of structures and networks, and secondly to the potential development of research excellence in the field of energy/climate protection. As relevant actors in the energy transition, the municipalities have a particular role to play here.
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- 2022
30. Safeguarding the provision of public services in rural border areas - a case study of the Greater Region
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Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Mangels, Kirsten, Wohland, Julia, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Mangels, Kirsten, and Wohland, Julia
- Abstract
In the context of demographic change and the associated shrinking and aging of the population, the safeguarding of public services in rural areas faces great challenges. Rural border areas find themselves in a unique situation due to their location, and must overcome additional challenges if they want to cooperate with their neighbours in the provision of public services. This paper examines cross-border cooperation in public service provision in rural areas of the Greater Region. The area examined here comprises the German territorial authorities on the German-French border within the Greater Region. An analysis of the responsibilities for and understanding of public services in Germany and France, a concise inventory of education and healthcare services, a written survey of German territorial authorities in the German-French border area, and case studies of projects (e.g. INTERREG A projects) are used to demonstrate the successes, problems and opportunities of cross-border approaches.
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- 2022
31. The Greater Region: a cross-border vocational education and training area?
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Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Dörrenbächer, H. Peter, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, and Dörrenbächer, H. Peter
- Abstract
In recent years cross-border vocational education and training has become increasingly significant due to the intensification of European integration and increased cross-border relations, as well as demographic and economic disparities between neighbouring border regions. This paper reviews past and present forms of crossborder cooperation in vocational education and training in the Greater Region. The most recent framework agreements on vocational education and training form the focus of discussion. The question of whether the Greater Region can be described as a cross-border vocational education and training area is also addressed.
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- 2022
32. A short profile of the Greater Region and the Upper Rhine region
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Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, and ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft
- Abstract
The institutionalisation of border regions has a long history. Initial forms of cooperation usually emerged in relation to a specific event. The 1970s were decisive for the emergence of cross-border organisations in both the Greater Region and the Upper Rhine region. Over the decades the structures were consolidated, although regionally specific adaptations and developments continue both on a conceptual and practical level. The European INTERREG A programme has played a significant role in improving cross-border cooperation, and INTERREG continues to be an important factor in the implementation of cross-border projects. Efforts to further develop the institutional framework and cooperation structures in recent years demonstrate that there are still many challenges but also unexploited potential in the Greater Region and the Upper Rhine region.
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- 2022
33. Collective Housing in Belgium and the Netherlands: A Comparative Analysis
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De Vos, Els, Spoormans, Lidwine, De Vos, Els, and Spoormans, Lidwine
- Abstract
Collective housing (CH) is undergoing a revival in Belgium. Since 2009, the Flemish Government Architect and his team have been advocating CH, stressing its importance as a task for architects given the demand for affordable housing and the need to reduce the environmental impact of housing. This support for CH has converged with the work of the non-profit citizen organization Samenhuizen ("Living together") and the ad hoc initiatives taken by individual households and architects. In the Netherlands too, where there is a longer tradition of CH, the phenomenon is once more on the rise because of the housing crisis. As it is a developing topic, the terminology used for CH is also evolving. Drawing on publications on the subject in both Belgium and the Netherlands as well as on interviews with relevant stakeholders, this article sheds light on two widely published cases in both countries (pioneering and current, greenfield and conversion). These cases are compared in regard to thematic areas, based on an extensive literature study on collaborative housing by Lang et al. (2018). In addition to such aspects as the balance between "individuality" and the "collective" we compare the role played by architects in both countries. Besides similarities, we show that the historical context, and especially the housing policy of each country, has a great influence and that the role of the architect is essential in the development of older and contemporary cohousing projects.
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- 2022
34. Exploring Embodied Place Attachment Through Co‐Creative Art Trajectories: The Case of Mount Murals
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Segers, Ruth, Hannes, Karin, Heylighen, Ann, Van den Broeck, Pieter, Segers, Ruth, Hannes, Karin, Heylighen, Ann, and Van den Broeck, Pieter
- Abstract
The built and living environment in the Flemish region in Belgium is evolving noticeably. It is densifying at an ever‐faster pace and, along the way, becoming increasingly unfamiliar to its inhabitants. Many people face profound difficulties in autonomously and positively dealing with such drastic changes, causing their feeling of home to waver. Triggered by these challenges and supported by the local authority of a Flemish town, the experimental and co‐creative art project Mount Murals set out to stimulate new embodied interactions between and among local residents of various ages and backgrounds and with their built environment. These include remembering place‐related sentiments, being aware of body language that plays between participants while co‐creating and sensing an invigorating stimulus when seeing results. Awakening intrinsic appreciation in people for their own environment and associated social relationships stimulates an inclusive dealing with estranged relationships in space. Referring to the relational neuroscience principles attachment, co‐creating and co‐regulating as a modus of relational resonating, we explore how and under which conditions Mount Murals’ co‐creative art trajectory supports an evolving embodied place attachment, an essential element of the sense of belonging, in participants. By embedding assets inherent to art creation in action research and starting with meaningful everyday objects, Mount Murals carries forward an art expression that considers the co‐creation process and its co‐creative products as equally important.
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- 2022
35. Social status, political priorities and unequal representation
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Traber, Denise, Hänni, Miriam, Giger, Nathalie, Breunig, Christian, Traber, Denise, Hänni, Miriam, Giger, Nathalie, and Breunig, Christian
- Abstract
Researchers on inequalities in representation debate about whether governments represent the preferences of the rich better than those of less affluent citizens. We argue that problems of high- and low-status citizens are treated differently already at the agenda-setting stage. If affluent and less affluent citizens have different priorities about which issues should be tackled by government, then these divergent group priorities explain why government favours high- over low-status citizens. Due to different levels of visibility, resources and social ties, governments pay more attention to what high-status citizens consider important in their legislative agenda and pay less attention to the issues of low-status citizens. We combined three types of data for our research design. First, we extracted the policy priorities (most important issues) for all status groups from Eurobarometer data between 2002 and 2016 for 10 European countries and matched this information with data on policy outcomes from the Comparative Agendas Project. We then strengthen our results using a focused comparison of three single country studies over longer time series. We show that a priority gap exists and has representational consequences. Our analysis has important implications for the understanding of the unequal representation of status groups as it sheds light on an important, yet so far unexplored, aspect of the political process. Since the misrepresentation of political agendas occurs at the very beginning of the policy-making process, the consequences are potentially even more severe than for the unequal treatment of preferences.
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- 2022
36. Measuring public knowledge on nuclear weapons in the post-Cold War: dimensionality and measurement invariance across eight European countries
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Fialho, Fabrício M. and Fialho, Fabrício M.
- Abstract
Research on public opinion and international security has extensively examined attitudes toward nuclear weapons, but the diffusion of basic knowledge about nuclear weapons among the everyday citizens has nevertheless been mostly missed. This study proposes a working definition and advances a measurement model of knowledge on nuclear weapons in the general public. It analyzes data from two novel surveys conducted in 2018 (N = 6559) and 2019 (N = 6227) where respondents from Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, and the United Kingdom answered a web survey on attitudes and factual knowledge on nuclear weapons. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analytic models are used to examine the dimensionality and to assess the measurement invariance of a scale of knowledge about nuclear weapons. A bifactor measurement model, where a strong general factor represents the construct of interest and specific factors account for the presence of testlets due to questionnaire design, is established and validated. Configural, metric, and scalar invariance are established across the eight samples. The findings indicate that knowledge about nuclear weapons in the general, non-expert public can be reliably measured cross-nationally.
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- 2022
37. How Do Changes in Gender Role Attitudes Towards Female Employment Influence Fertility? A Macro-Level Analysis
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Arpino, Bruno, Esping-Andersen, Gøsta, Pessin, Léa, Arpino, Bruno, Esping-Andersen, Gøsta, and Pessin, Léa
- Abstract
This study explores whether the diffusion of gender-equitable attitudes towards female employment is associated with fertility. We argue that any positive effect on fertility requires not only high levels of gender-equitable attitudes overall, but also attitude convergence between men and women. We analyse 27 countries using data from the World Values Surveys and European Values Studies. We find support for a U-shaped relationship between changes in gender role attitudes and fertility: an initial drop in fertility is observed as countries move from a traditional to a more gender-symmetric model. Beyond a certain threshold, additional increases in gender egalitarianism become positively associated with fertility. This curvi-linear relationship is moderated by the difference in attitudes between men and women: when there is more agreement, changes are more rapid and the effect of gender egalitarian attitudes on fertility strengthens.
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- 2022
38. Räume und Identitäten in Grenzregionen: Politiken - Medien - Subjekte
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Wille, Christian, Reckinger, Rachel, Kmec, Sonja, Hesse, Markus, Wille, Christian, Reckinger, Rachel, Kmec, Sonja, and Hesse, Markus
- Abstract
Die Raum- und Identitätsforschung arbeitet mit Unterscheidungen und Relationen. Diese sind als heuristische Instrumente besonders in Grenzregionen gewinnbringend, wenn soziale und geopolitische Markierungen auseinanderfallen. Die Beiträge des Bandes setzen hier an. Anhand empirischer Erhebungen in Deutschland, Frankreich, Belgien und Luxemburg untersuchen sie Raum- und Identitätskonstruktionen in grenzüberschreitenden Bezügen, wie sie sich in alltäglichen, institutionellen und medialen Praktiken manifestieren. Die Ergebnisse werden mit sensiblem Blick für quer liegende Räume und Identitäten diskutiert und an gouvernementale Fragen der Normierung und Subjektivierung rückgebunden., Empirical inquiries about space and identity as a result of social practice in the border regions between Germany, France, Belgium, and Luxembourg.
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- 2022
39. Measuring and comparing planning cultures: risk, trust and co-operative attitudes in experimental games
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Li, Keyang, Dethier, Perrine, Eika, Anders, Samsura, D. Ary A., Krabben, Erwin van der, Nordahl, Berit, Halleux, Jean-Marie, Li, Keyang, Dethier, Perrine, Eika, Anders, Samsura, D. Ary A., Krabben, Erwin van der, Nordahl, Berit, and Halleux, Jean-Marie
- Abstract
Cultural impacts in planning increasingly receive attention from both academics and practitioners around Europe. However, comparative planning cultures studies face the challenges of lacking systematic comparison and empirical evidence, especially at the micro level of planning actors’ behaviour in interaction. This article aims to fill these gaps by (1) operationalizing the concept of planning culture; and (2) measuring and comparing it. We base our operationalization on the culturized planning model (Knieling, J., & Othengrafen, F. (Eds.). (2009). Planning cultures in Europe: Decoding cultural phenomena in urban and regional planning. Farnham: Ashgate). We complement its explanatory power by building a link between planning culture and planning outcome through attitudes of planning actors. This article focuses on three attitudes: risk, trust and co-operation. To measure and compare these attitudes, we adopt three experimental economic games and conduct an experiment with public and private planning practitioners in three European countries: Belgium, the Netherlands and Norway. Both cross-country and public-private differences in these attitudes are tested in the experiment. Our experimental findings suggest that Dutch planning actors value risk aversion and trust; Norwegian planning actors value cooperation; while (French-speaking) Belgian planning actors do not value these variables that much.
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- 2022
40. No time to waste: Exploring timeprints of radioactive waste management options in Belgium
- Author
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Frenay, Sacha, Parotte, Céline, Frenay, Sacha, and Parotte, Céline
- Abstract
Following the work of Barbara Adam (1998) and Ulrike Felt (2016), we draw particular attention to 'timeprints' in the assessment and selection of radioactive waste management (RWM) options. Using the example of Belgium, we identify four different timeprints mobilized (un)consciously by stakeholders when assessing RWM options, namely trajectorism, promise economy, radioactive waste identity, and multi-situated timeprints. We show that each of these timeprints has a significant impact on the RWM option to be considered and actively determines future radioactive waste management pathways in the form of 'tacit governance'., In Anlehnung an die Arbeiten von Barbara Adam (1998) und Ulrike Felt (2016) legen wir besonderes Augenmerk auf die zeitlichen Abläufe bei der Bewertung und Auswahl von Optionen für die Entsorgung radioaktiver Abfälle (radioactive waste management - RWM). Anhand des Beispiels Belgien identifizieren wir vier verschiedene 'timeprints', die von den Interessenvertretern bei der Bewertung von RWM-Optionen (un)bewusst eingesetzt werden, nämlich 'trajectorism', wirtschaftliche Versprechen, Identität radioaktiver Abfälle und 'multi-situated timeprints'. Wir zeigen auf, dass jede dieser 'timeprints' einen wesentlichen Einfluss auf die in Betracht zu ziehenden RWM-Optionen hat und die zukünftigen Entsorgungswege für solche Abfälle in Form einer 'tacit governance' aktiv mitbestimmt.
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- 2022
41. Coordinating the digital transformation of inter-organizational public services – The case of e-invoicing in Belgium
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Veiko Lember, Stijn Wouters, and Joep Crompvoets
- Subjects
Digitalisierung ,electronic government ,Knowledge management ,Technology (Applied sciences) ,Öffentliche Verwaltung, Militärwissenschaft ,öffentliche Verwaltung ,digitalization ,Inter organizational ,Belgium ,Technology Assessment ,ddc:350 ,050602 political science & public administration ,Administrative Science ,Technikfolgenabschätzung ,digital transformation ,inter-organizational coordination ,coordination instruments ,Digitale Transformation ,interorganisatorische Koordination ,Koordinationsinstrumente ,Belgien ,Technik, Technologie ,business.industry ,Public administration ,05 social sciences ,Digital transformation ,Verwaltungswissenschaft ,öffentliche Dienstleistung ,0506 political science ,0509 other social sciences ,050904 information & library sciences ,business ,ddc:600 ,public service - Abstract
Digital transformation has the potential to profoundly change the way public administrations deliver public services to its users. One of the challenges involved in the inter-organizational networks that often govern integrated digital services is to identify what coordination instruments are effective. In this paper we examine this issue through a case study that deals with the transformation of invoicing services in Belgian public administrations at the federal and Flemish (regional) level. We review the coordination instruments and study how they evolved over time. Our findings suggest that transformation (1) might in part depend on the choice of instruments and multiple mechanisms. The mix of appropriate coordination instruments is likely to change as digital transformation objectives and governance challenges evolve over time. (2) Digital transformation might be a step-by-step process involving multiple rounds of digitalization and its specific implementation contingent on the service itself. Die digitale Transformation hat das Potenzial, die Erbringung von Verwaltungsleistungen tiefgreifend zu verändern. Eine der Herausforderungen in organisationsübergreifenden Netzwerken, die integrierte digitale Dienstleistungen steuern, ist die Identifizierung effektiver Koordinationsinstrumente. In diesem Beitrag untersuchen wir diese Frage anhand einer Fallstudie zur Transformation der Rechnungsstellung in der belgischen öffentlichen Verwaltung. Wir untersuchen die Koordinationsinstrumente und ihre Entwicklung. Die Untersuchungsergebnisse deuten zum einen darauf hin, dass Transformation zum Teil von der Wahl der Koordinationsinstrumente und verschiedener Koordinationsmechanismen abhängt. Je nachdem, welche Ziele und Governance-Herausforderungen mit der digitalen Transformation in einem konkreten Fall verbunden sind und wie sie sich über Zeit entwickeln, ist ein unterschiedlicher Mix an Koordinationsinstrumenten geeignet. Zum anderen zeigen die Ergebnisse, dass die digitale Transformation der Verwaltung ein schrittweiser Prozess ist, dessen konkrete Umsetzung von der jeweiligen Dienstleistung abhängt.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Mothers and Parental Leave in Belgium: Social Inequalities in Eligibility and Uptake
- Author
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Leen Marynissen, Jonas Wood, and Karel Neels
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,Turkish ,Social Sciences ,work-family balance ,RIGHTS ,Sociology & anthropology ,sozioökonomische Faktoren ,First birth ,Sociology ,Belgium ,Elternurlaub ,Social Sciences - Other Topics ,050602 political science & public administration ,EMPLOYMENT ,Mutterschaft ,050207 economics ,media_common ,Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie ,Belgien ,social inequality ,inclusiveness ,05 social sciences ,demographic factors ,POLICY ,Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary ,CHILD-CARE ,0506 political science ,General partnership ,Familie-Beruf ,language ,ddc:300 ,Parental leave ,Family Sociology, Sociology of Sexual Behavior ,ddc:301 ,Family Policy, Youth Policy, Policy on the Elderly ,Psychology ,Familiensoziologie, Sexualsoziologie ,demographische Faktoren ,Social Psychology ,Inequality ,Social Issues ,media_common.quotation_subject ,socioeconomic factors ,soziale Ungleichheit ,HM401-1281 ,eligibility ,Belgian Administrative Socio‐Demographic Panel (BASD‐Panel) ,0502 economics and business ,recourse ,Sociology (General) ,Social inequality ,LABOR ,Social sciences, sociology, anthropology ,FAMILY FORMATION ,parental leave ,social inequalities ,motherhood ,belgium ,Inanspruchnahme ,Single mothers ,language.human_language ,mothers ,Soziologie, Anthropologie ,Register data ,Familienpolitik, Jugendpolitik, Altenpolitik ,CAPABILITIES ,Demographic economics ,GENDER - Abstract
In recent decades, many Western European countries introduced parental leave policies to support the work–family combination in families with young children. However, these parental leave schemes often exhibit employment‐based eligibility criteria, so the question arises to which extent social inequalities emerge in the access to parental leave, and as a result thereof also in the uptake of parental leave. Although research on parental leave increasingly addresses the issue of inclusiveness, only a limited number of studies has yet examined individual‐level differentials in parents’, and especially mothers’, eligibility. Using detailed register data, we develop an individual‐level indicator of eligibility in Belgium and deploy it to document differentiation in mothers’ eligibility by age at first birth, partnership status, migration background and education. In addition, we examine to what extent differential eligibility can explain inequalities in parental leave uptake. Our results show that a considerable share of mothers—specifically very young, single, low educated mothers and mothers with a migration background—do not meet the eligibility criteria and thus are structurally excluded from parental leave in Belgium. Furthermore, differential eligibility can account for a large part of the age and educational gradients in parental leave use, as well as differences by migration background. Eligibility cannot (fully) account for lower parental leave use by single mothers and mothers with a Moroccan or Turkish migration background. Our findings suggest that a reconsideration of eligibility criteria may be instrumental in increasing the inclusiveness of parental leave policies.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Social status, political priorities and unequal representation
- Author
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Nathalie Giger, Miriam Hänni, Christian Breunig, and Denise Traber
- Subjects
inequality ,Sociology and Political Science ,representation ,Ungleichheit ,Denmark ,Frankreich ,Großbritannien ,Sociology & anthropology ,government policy ,Priorität ,Belgium ,political priorities ,Allgemeine Soziologie, Makrosoziologie, spezielle Theorien und Schulen, Entwicklung und Geschichte der Soziologie ,Regierungspolitik ,sozialer Status ,Österreich ,Sociology ,Political science ,Netherlands ,media_common ,Belgien ,Great Britain ,Representation (systemics) ,Dänemark ,Bundesrepublik Deutschland ,Europe ,Italy ,Austria ,Ungarn ,political agenda ,France ,ddc:301 ,Europa ,Social status ,Inequality ,Politikwissenschaft ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Italien ,Federal Republic of Germany ,Politics ,priority ,General Sociology, Basic Research, General Concepts and History of Sociology, Sociological Theories ,Positive economics ,Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture ,Niederlande ,Repräsentation ,Spanien ,politische Willensbildung, politische Soziologie, politische Kultur ,Hungary ,social status ,Soziologie, Anthropologie ,Spain ,ddc:320 ,Inequality, Representation, Social status, Political Priorities ,politische Agenda - Abstract
Researchers on inequalities in representation debate about whether governments represent the preferences of the rich better than those of less affluent citizens. We argue that problems of high‐ and low‐status citizens are treated differently already at the agenda‐setting stage. If affluent and less affluent citizens have different priorities about which issues should be tackled by government, then these divergent group priorities explain why government favors high‐ over low‐status citizens. Due to different levels of visibility, resources and social ties, governments pay more attention to what high‐status citizens consider important in their legislative agenda and pay less attention to the issues of low‐status citizens. We combined three types of data for our research design. First, we extracted the policy priorities (most important issues) for all status groups from Eurobarometer data between 2002 and 2016 for 10 European countries and match this information with data on policy outcomes from the Comparative Agendas Project. We then strengthen our results using a focused comparison of three single country studies over longer time series. We show that a priority gap exists and has representational consequences. Our analysis has important implications for the understanding of the unequal representation of status groups as it sheds light on an important, yet so far unexplored, aspect of the political process. Since the misrepresentation of political agendas occurs at the very beginning of the policy‐making process, the consequences are potentially even more severe than for the unequal treatment of preferences. published
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Maurice Wilmotte (1861–1942), „le plus français des Belges', und die deutsche Romanistik (mit einem Anhang unveröffentlichter Briefe)
- Author
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Frank Rutger Hausmann
- Subjects
Wilmotte, Maurice ,université de Liège ,deutsch-französische Mittler ,Belgien ,Romanic languages ,PC1-5498 ,French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature ,PQ1-3999 - Abstract
Der aus Lüttich stammende Marc Wilmotte gilt heute als der Begründer der belgischen Romanistik. Seine als Student in Paris bzw. Halle a.S., Berlin und Bonn gemachten Erfahrungen fasste er in einer Denkschrift zusammen, die er im Jahr 1886 dem Brüsseler Ministerium des Inneren und des öffentlichen Unterrichtswesens einreichte, das den Fünfundzwanzigjährigen mit der Ausbildung in den romanischen Sprachen betraute. Wilmotte erkannte die Qualität der deutschen Universität zwar durchaus an, stand aber als überzeugter Belgier und Wallone Frankreich viel näher. Nach Ausbruch des Ersten Weltkriegs und der widerrechtlichen Besetzung seiner Heimat ging Wilmotte zu Deutschland auf Distanz. Seine Briefe an den Halleschen Lehrer Hermann Suchier und ausgewählte Publikationen ermöglichen eine Rekonstruktion dieses Prozesses, der sich auch bei anderen ausländischen Romanisten beobachten lässt, die zuvor an deutschen Universitäten studiert hatten.
- Published
- 2016
45. Grenzüberschreitender Kinderschutz in der Großregion. Fallstricke und Herausforderungen
- Author
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Christian Schröder and Ulrike Zöller
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handicapped assistance ,Luxembourg ,060106 history of social sciences ,Frankreich ,0507 social and economic geography ,Kind ,child protection ,Federal Republic of Germany ,Belgium ,Sozialwesen, Sozialplanung, Sozialarbeit, Sozialpädagogik ,cross-border cooperation ,Luxemburg ,0601 history and archaeology ,child ,Belgien ,children's rights ,social work ,youth welfare ,Social Work, Social Pedagogics, Social Planning ,05 social sciences ,Behindertenhilfe ,grenzüberschreitende Zusammenarbeit ,Transnationalisierung ,06 humanities and the arts ,Kinderrechte ,social support ,transnationalization ,Sozialarbeit ,Bundesrepublik Deutschland ,ddc:360 ,Soziale Probleme und Sozialdienste ,France ,Social problems and services ,Jugendhilfe ,soziale Unterstützung ,050703 geography ,Kinderschutz - Abstract
Leseprobe ----- Bibliographie: Schroder, Christian/Zoller, Ulrike: Grenzuberschreitender Kinderschutz in der Grosregion. Fallstricke und Herausforderungen, Diskurs Kindheits- und Jugendforschung / Discourse. Journal of Childhood and Adolescence Research, 4-2020, S. 447-452. https://doi.org/10.3224/diskurs.v15i4.08
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Meeting Boundaries: Exploring the Faces of Social Inclusion beyond Mental Health Systems
- Author
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Sophie Thunus, Carole Walker, and UCL - SSS/IRSS - Institut de recherche santé et société
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mental health care ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,lcsh:HM401-1281 ,Context (language use) ,ethnography ,psychiatrische Versorgung ,ddc:150 ,Ethnographie ,Belgium ,Systems theory ,deinstitutionalisation ,social inclusion ,systems theory ,psychische Gesundheit ,0502 economics and business ,Ethnography ,050602 political science & public administration ,Psychology ,Service user ,Sociology ,Belgien ,Psychological Disorders, Mental Health Treatment and Prevention ,business.industry ,Gesundheitsversorgung ,05 social sciences ,social integration ,Public relations ,health care ,Mental health ,0506 political science ,inclusion ,lcsh:Sociology (General) ,Psychologie ,psychische Störungen, Behandlung und Prävention ,psychiatric care ,Mental health care ,soziale Integration ,business ,Inclusion (education) ,Inklusion ,mental health ,050203 business & management - Abstract
This article examines social inclusion in the context of the deinstitutionalisation of mental health care. It draws on a scientific evaluation of the Belgian reform of mental health care (2010), designed to assess the influence of organisational mechanisms on the social and care trajectories of service users. The findings highlight the ongoing challenge for mental health systems to support the inclusion of service users within the community, and the increasingly difficult access to mental health care for people with complex and chronic mental health problems. Drawing from Systems Theory (Luhmann, 2013) and the analysis of subjective experiences, this article delves into the complex processes of social inclusion using the empirically-grounded concepts of the patient role and the impatient role. By acknowledging the relational dimensions of social inclusion, this article argues that complementarities between two faces of the mental health system are key to achieving inclusion beyond the walls of institutions and within society at large.
- Published
- 2020
47. The emergence of a metropolisation strategy for the Greater Region
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Schelkmann, Petra, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, and ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft
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state spatial planning ,Landesplanung ,Luxembourg ,Raumplanung und Regionalforschung ,Frankreich ,Federal Republic of Germany ,Entwicklungsstrategie ,development strategy ,Greater Region ,Metropolitan border region ,Belgium ,cross-border cooperation ,Luxemburg ,ddc:710 ,Regionalplanung ,Landscaping and area planning ,transportation ,Städtebau, Raumplanung, Landschaftsgestaltung ,Belgien ,state planning ,zoning ,Area Development Planning, Regional Research ,grenzüberschreitende Zusammenarbeit ,spatial development strategy ,Bundesrepublik Deutschland ,Raumordnung ,transport ,Raumplanung ,regional planning ,France ,politics ,spatial planning - Abstract
This chapter describes the process by which a cross-border metropolitan region develops, using the example of the Greater Region. Between 2008 and 2010 the idea of a cross-border, polycentric metropolitan region in the Greater Region was investigated and further developed within the ESPON project 'Metroborder'. In recent years, driven by policy declarations, strategic approaches for implementing this metropolitan region have been developed. A Spatial Development Strategy of the Greater Region with a focus on the metropolitan dimensions of the sub-regions provides the foundation for this. The issue of governance in relation to the crossborder interactional area (in the narrower conception of this area) is also discussed.
- Published
- 2022
48. Diversity of Perceptions of Disability in the Workplace vs. Cultural Determinants in Selected European Countries
- Author
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Dorota Kwiatkowska-Ciotucha, Urszula Załuska, Cyprian Kozyra, Alicja Grześkowiak, Marzena Żurawicka, and Krzysztof Polak
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Economics ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,soziale Probleme ,Großbritannien ,perception ,Einstellung ,ddc:150 ,Belgium ,handicapped ,Psychology ,Bulgarien ,Labor Market Research ,Workplace ,Bulgaria ,berufliche Integration ,Belgien ,Greece ,Polen ,attitudes towards people with disability ,culture dimensions ,analysis of survey results ,semiotic analysis ,EU-SILC ,Great Britain ,Wirtschaft ,Bundesrepublik Deutschland ,Europe ,Soziale Probleme und Sozialdienste ,Sozialpsychologie ,Social Psychology ,Social Problems ,Arbeitsmarkt ,Federal Republic of Germany ,ddc:330 ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,Wahrnehmung ,Spanien ,Sweden ,Arbeitsmarktforschung ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,occupational integration ,Griechenland ,ddc:360 ,Attitude ,Psychologie ,Behinderter ,Spain ,attitude ,öffentliche Meinung ,public opinion ,labor market ,Poland ,Social problems and services ,Schweden - Abstract
The perception of people with disability (PwD) is of key importance for the full inclusion of this group in the labour market. The article presents selected results of research on the perception of PwD in the workplace. The analyses are based on the results of semiotics research conducted in Poland and of quantitative study in the form of computer-assisted Internet interviews (CAWI) carried out on representative samples from eight European countries. Opinions of Internet users were collected in Belgium, Bulgaria, Greece, Spain, Germany, Poland, Sweden and Great Britain. The results of semiotic analyses on texts mainly from Polish culture made it possible to identify the prevailing images of disability in Polish popular culture and inspired the authors to seek diversity in perceptions of disability depending on social and cultural patterns in a given country. The results of the international survey were used to compare all eight countries with regard to the relationship between the dimensions of culture according to G. Hofstede, and openness to people with disability in the workplace. The conducted research indicates that the perception of the issue of disability is significantly related to the selected dimensions of culture according to G. Hofstede.
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- 2022
49. How Do Gendered Labour Market Trends and the Pay Gap Translate into the Projected Gender Pension Gap? A Comparative Analysis of Five Countries with Low, Middle and High GPGs
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Gijs Dekkers, Karel Van den Bosch, Mikkel Barslund, Tanja Kirn, Nicolas Baumann, Nataša Kump, Philippe Liégeois, Amílcar Moreira, Nada Stropnik, and Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa
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inequality ,Luxembourg ,Ungleichheit ,Arbeitsmarktentwicklung ,Slovenia ,Social Sciences ,Gender Pension Gap ,dynamic microsimulation ,labor market trend ,pension ,Social Security ,Sociology ,Belgium ,gender-specific factors ,Schweiz ,Slowenien ,Social Sciences - Other Topics ,Luxemburg ,gender relations ,soziale Sicherung ,Frau ,REFORMS ,Social sciences, sociology, anthropology ,BISMARCK ,Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie ,Rente ,Belgien ,Portugal ,EU-SILC 2013 ,EU-SILC 2018 ,General Social Sciences ,WOMEN ,PENALTY ,Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary ,Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung ,geschlechtsspezifische Faktoren ,woman ,ddc:300 ,Women's Studies, Feminist Studies, Gender Studies ,Geschlechterverhältnis ,Switzerland - Abstract
This article explores how the Gender Pension Gap (GPG)—the relative difference in average pension received by men and women—might evolve in the future in various European countries, given past, current, and projected future labour market behaviour and earnings of women and men, and current pension regulations. The GPG reflects career inequalities between women and men, though these are partly mitigated by the redistributive impact of the public retirement pensions. They are further mitigated by survivor benefits. This study aims to document both mechanisms in the projections of the GPG. As the GPG varies widely across European countries, we analyse countries with a high (Luxembourg), high and low middle (Belgium and Switzerland Portugal), and low (Slovenia) GPG. We find that the GPG will fall significantly in all five countries over the coming decades. The fundamental drivers behind this development are discussed. In addition to the base scenario, we simulate two variants to show the impact of the Gender Pension Coverage Gap and of survivor pensions. Additionally, we project the GPG if current labour market gender gaps were to remain at their present level, and, conversely, if these were to disappear overnight. These alternative scenarios, one of which also serves as a robustness test, suggest that the future decline of the GPG is largely the result of labour market developments that have already happened during the past decades.
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- 2022
50. Safeguarding the provision of public services in rural border areas - a case study of the Greater Region
- Author
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Mangels, Kirsten, Wohland, Julia, Pallagst, Karina, Hartz, Andrea, Caesar, Beate, and ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft
- Subjects
Luxembourg ,safeguarding public service provision ,Raumplanung und Regionalforschung ,Frankreich ,rural area ,Federal Republic of Germany ,Abwanderung ,infrastructure ,ländlicher Raum ,Greater Region ,Demographic change ,cross-border approaches and projects ,rural border areas ,Rhineland-Palatinate ,Belgium ,cross-border cooperation ,Luxemburg ,out-migration ,Zuwanderung ,ddc:710 ,Landscaping and area planning ,Städtebau, Raumplanung, Landschaftsgestaltung ,Rheinland-Pfalz ,Belgien ,educational offerings ,Grenzgebiet ,Bevölkerungsentwicklung ,Gesundheitsversorgung ,Area Development Planning, Regional Research ,Infrastruktur ,grenzüberschreitende Zusammenarbeit ,population development ,öffentliche Dienstleistung ,health care ,Bundesrepublik Deutschland ,border region ,Raumplanung ,Bildungsangebot ,France ,spatial planning ,Saarland ,immigration ,public service - Abstract
In the context of demographic change and the associated shrinking and aging of the population, the safeguarding of public services in rural areas faces great challenges. Rural border areas find themselves in a unique situation due to their location, and must overcome additional challenges if they want to cooperate with their neighbours in the provision of public services. This paper examines cross-border cooperation in public service provision in rural areas of the Greater Region. The area examined here comprises the German territorial authorities on the German-French border within the Greater Region. An analysis of the responsibilities for and understanding of public services in Germany and France, a concise inventory of education and healthcare services, a written survey of German territorial authorities in the German-French border area, and case studies of projects (e.g. INTERREG A projects) are used to demonstrate the successes, problems and opportunities of cross-border approaches.
- Published
- 2022
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