Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (293) (remove)
Language
- English (293) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (293)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (293)
Keywords
- global justice (23)
- populism (12)
- democracy (9)
- gender (8)
- European Union (7)
- climate change (7)
- critical theory (7)
- Frankfurt School (6)
- deliberative democracy (6)
- human rights (6)
- justice (6)
- migration (6)
- natural resources (6)
- representation (6)
- attachment (5)
- cosmopolitanism (5)
- Brazil (4)
- COVID-19 (4)
- China (4)
- Walter Benjamin (4)
- ideology (4)
- responsibility (4)
- Critical Theory (3)
- Gender (3)
- critique (3)
- decolonization (3)
- discrimination (3)
- domination (3)
- education (3)
- exploitation (3)
- immigration (3)
- improvement (3)
- inequality (3)
- non-domination (3)
- participatory governance (3)
- post-truth (3)
- poverty (3)
- reparations (3)
- representative claim (3)
- republicanism (3)
- social investment (3)
- sovereignty (3)
- Adorno (2)
- Brexit (2)
- Carl Schmitt (2)
- Catherine Lu (2)
- Cross-national (2)
- Democracy (2)
- Donald Trump (2)
- Education (2)
- Estudios organizacionales (2)
- Estudos organizacionais (2)
- Europe (2)
- France (2)
- Franz L. Neumann (2)
- Germany (2)
- Global Justice (2)
- India (2)
- Iris Marion Young (2)
- Italy (2)
- Poland (2)
- Recognition (2)
- Reconhecimento (2)
- Saward (2)
- Teoria crítica (2)
- Theodor Adorno (2)
- Theodor W. Adorno (2)
- Thomas Pogge (2)
- USA (2)
- anthropology (2)
- authoritarianism (2)
- autonomy (2)
- capitalism (2)
- citizen engagement (2)
- colonialism (2)
- common ownership (2)
- constructivist turn (2)
- critical realist democratic theory (2)
- cultural capital (2)
- deliberation (2)
- deliberative systems (2)
- democratic backsliding (2)
- democratic boundary problem (2)
- democratic innovation (2)
- development (2)
- digital divide (2)
- distributive justice (2)
- diversity (2)
- equality (2)
- equity (2)
- feminism (2)
- feminist epistemology (2)
- freedom (2)
- global democracy (2)
- health (2)
- ideology critique (2)
- inclusion (2)
- indigenous peoples (2)
- intergenerational justice (2)
- intergenerational transmission (2)
- justification (2)
- life plans (2)
- mental health (2)
- minipublics (2)
- nationalism (2)
- oligarchy (2)
- partial compliance (2)
- participation (2)
- partisanship (2)
- pluralism (2)
- political economy (2)
- political epistemology (2)
- postcolonial studies (2)
- public opinion (2)
- public participation (2)
- public sphere (2)
- representative claims (2)
- self-determination (2)
- social justice (2)
- social media (2)
- social sciences (2)
- sociology (2)
- solidarity (2)
- special rights (2)
- structural injustice (2)
- tax sheltering (2)
- trade (2)
- trans-sequential analysis (2)
- transnationalism (2)
- universalism (2)
- university (2)
- value creation (2)
- welfare state (2)
- welfare state reform (2)
- 11th September (1)
- 2016 US Presidential Election (1)
- 2016 US presidential election (1)
- API (1)
- Adolescence (1)
- Adorno Theodor (1)
- Aesthetic Objectivity (1)
- Aesthetic Subjectivity (1)
- Affirmative action (1)
- Africa (1)
- African philosophy (1)
- Aid (1)
- Alexandrian commentaries (1)
- Alkoholkonsum (1)
- Altruism (1)
- American Empire (1)
- Anti-Semitism (1)
- Antisemitismus (1)
- Arabic-Islamic authors (1)
- Arbeitsteilung (1)
- Arendt, Hannah (1)
- Aristotle (1)
- Aristòtil (1)
- Aristóteles (1)
- Article 7 (1)
- Atmosphere (1)
- Atmospheric modeling (1)
- Attitudes (1)
- Aufgabenteilung (1)
- Austen Jane (1)
- Austin (1)
- Australia (1)
- Australian/New Zealand families (1)
- Authoritarianism (1)
- Autoritarismus (1)
- Autorrespeito (1)
- Ação afirmativa (1)
- BRIC (1)
- Belt and Road Initiative (1)
- Bernard Harcourt (1)
- Bielik-Robson (1)
- Big Data (1)
- Binnenwanderung (1)
- Biodiversity (1)
- Blanchot (1)
- Canadian foreign policy (1)
- Capabilities (1)
- Ceteris paribus laws (1)
- Child development (1)
- Chinese Communist Party (1)
- Chris Armstrong (1)
- Citizenship (1)
- Ciudadanía (1)
- Civil liberties (1)
- Co-production (1)
- Collective Action Problems (1)
- Communication (1)
- Communist Party of China (1)
- Comparative Capitalism (1)
- Comparative Political Economy (1)
- Comparative politics (1)
- Competition policy (1)
- Comunicación (1)
- Comunicação (1)
- Con man (1)
- Conditionality (1)
- Conflict (1)
- Constitución del sujeto (1)
- Constituent moments (1)
- Constituent power (1)
- Constituição do sujeito (1)
- Constitution (1)
- Constitution of the subject (1)
- Constitutions (1)
- Coordination Of Control Modes (1)
- Cost And Quality Management (1)
- Crisis (1)
- Critical theory (1)
- Cuidado em saúde (1)
- Cuidado en salud (1)
- Czech Republic (1)
- Dangerous Climate Change (1)
- Data quality (1)
- Decomposition methods (1)
- Democratization (1)
- Demographic change (1)
- Dependence (1)
- Desreconhecimento (1)
- Deutsch (1)
- Development Discourse (1)
- Deviant behavior in inexact sciences (1)
- Dialogue (1)
- Disrecognition (1)
- Diversidad (1)
- Diálogo (1)
- Doctors In Management (1)
- Dominated States (1)
- Domination (1)
- Doppelverdienerpaare (1)
- Doris Salcedo (1)
- Driver (1)
- Dual Career Couple (1)
- Dual-earner couples (1)
- EU (1)
- EU global approach to migration and mobility (1)
- EU migration (1)
- EU migration law and policy (1)
- Eastern Europe (1)
- Educación (1)
- Educational inequalities (1)
- Educational transitions (1)
- Eligibility (1)
- Employment career (1)
- Empowerment (1)
- Energy policy (1)
- Epistles of the Sincere Brethren (1)
- Epístolas de los Hermanos de la Pureza (1)
- Epístoles dels Germans de la Puresa (1)
- Equality (1)
- Equidad (1)
- Erfahrung (1)
- Erich Fromm (1)
- Erich Nadel (1)
- Erkenntnistheorie (1)
- Escola de Frankfurt (1)
- Escuela de Frankfurt (1)
- European Comparison (1)
- European democratic deficit (1)
- European integration (1)
- Event history analysis (1)
- Experience (1)
- Familie (1)
- Familie-Beruf (1)
- Familienform (1)
- Fear-invoking (1)
- Fearminimising (1)
- Feasibility (1)
- Federal Republic of Germany (1)
- Felix Weil (1)
- Field experiments (1)
- FinTech (1)
- First birth (1)
- Food supply (1)
- Forensic Architecture (1)
- Frankfurter Schule (1)
- Franz Rosenzweig (1)
- Fraser (1)
- Friedrich Pollock (1)
- Friendship (1)
- Functionalist Theory (1)
- G. A. Cohen (1)
- Gender and Development (1)
- Gender and educational differences (1)
- Gender gap (1)
- Gender relations (1)
- Genus (1)
- German (1)
- German Romanticism (1)
- Geschlechtsunterschiede (1)
- Global Citizenship Education (1)
- Global Health (1)
- Global Health Ethics (1)
- Global justice (1)
- Gnosticism (1)
- Goethe Johann Wolfgang von (1)
- Governance (1)
- Great Recession (1)
- Growth curve (1)
- HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (1)
- HIV prevention technologies (1)
- HIV/AIDS (1)
- HIV/Aids (1)
- Habermas (1)
- Hamlet (1)
- Hannah Arendt (1)
- Hausarbeit und Kinderbetreuung (1)
- Health (1)
- Health Care (1)
- Heat stress (1)
- Heimat (1)
- Herbert Marcuse (1)
- Hermann Cohen (1)
- Hermeneutik (1)
- Honneth (1)
- Horizontal sex segregation (1)
- Horkheimer (1)
- Hospital Governance (1)
- Housework (1)
- Hu Jintao (1)
- Human Right (1)
- Human agency (1)
- Human population dynamics (1)
- Hungary (1)
- ISDS (1)
- IT infrastructure (1)
- Ibagué (1)
- In-work poverty (1)
- Inclusión (1)
- Inequality (1)
- Information (1)
- Injustice (1)
- Injustiça (1)
- Institutional intersubjectivity (1)
- Institutions (1)
- Instrumentalism (1)
- Integralidad en salud (1)
- Integralidade em saúde (1)
- Integrality in health (1)
- Intergenerational effects (1)
- Internal energy marke (1)
- International Development (1)
- International comparison (1)
- Internet use (1)
- Intersubjectivity (1)
- Intersubjetividad (1)
- Intersubjetividade (1)
- Intersubjetividade institucional (1)
- Investigación (1)
- Issue congruence (1)
- J.A. Hobson (1)
- J.S. Mill (1)
- John Rawls (1)
- Justice (1)
- Justification (1)
- Jürgen Habermas (1)
- Karen Horney (1)
- L.T. Hobhouse (1)
- Lagos (1)
- Legitimacy (1)
- Liberdade social (1)
- Life course (1)
- Lifeworld (1)
- Linda Radzik (1)
- Longitudinal analysis (1)
- Ludwig Boltzmann (1)
- Luta por reconhecimento (1)
- Maria Mies (1)
- Marranism (1)
- Mass-elite (1)
- Max Horkheimer (1)
- Max Weber (1)
- Measurement (1)
- Measurements, methods and theories (1)
- Medidas, métodos e teorias (1)
- Medidas, métodos y teorías (1)
- Melancholy (1)
- Memory (1)
- Men who have sex with men (1)
- Michel Foucault (1)
- Migration (1)
- Mika Rottenberg (1)
- Millennium Development Goals (1)
- Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (1)
- Minutis rectis laws (1)
- Monopoly (1)
- Moral progress (1)
- Morphologie (1)
- Motherhood (1)
- Motherhood penalty (1)
- Mothers (1)
- Mundo da vida (1)
- Muslims (1)
- NASA (national aeronautics and space administration) (1)
- National Planning Office for Philosophy and Social Sciences (1)
- Neoplatonism (1)
- Neue Kriege (1)
- Non-ideal theory (1)
- Nordamerika (1)
- Norms (1)
- Organisation familialer Beziehungen (1)
- Organizational Studies (1)
- Organizational studies (1)
- Outcome Responsibility (1)
- Outsourcing (1)
- Pandemic Ethics (1)
- Parental unemployment (1)
- Parenting styles (1)
- Parkinson’s disease (1)
- Partnerbeziehung (1)
- Paul Valéry (1)
- Pavel Florenskij (1)
- Pendeln (1)
- Pendler (1)
- Perception (1)
- Pesquisa (1)
- Physics (1)
- Planned economy (1)
- Pledge and Review (1)
- Pluralerwerb (1)
- Pluralisierung (1)
- Policy preferences (1)
- Political constructivism (1)
- Political interest (1)
- Political normativity (1)
- Political realism (1)
- Political trust (1)
- Postmoderne (1)
- Poverty measurement (1)
- PrEP (1)
- Privatization (1)
- Procedural Ethics (1)
- Proceduralism (1)
- Professionalism (1)
- Progresso moral (1)
- Propensity score matching (1)
- Proust (1)
- Psicanálise (1)
- Psychoanalyse als Methode qualitativer Forschung (1)
- Psychoanalysis (1)
- Public Health Ethics (1)
- Public sphere depoliticization (1)
- Quotas (1)
- Q‐method (1)
- Rainer Forst (1)
- Ramon Llull (1)
- Rationing (1)
- Rawls (1)
- Rawls, John (1)
- Rechtsextremismus (1)
- Reciprocal recognition (1)
- Reconhecimento recíproco (1)
- Reconhecimento social (1)
- Reconocimiento social (1)
- Refugees (1)
- Regression discontinuity (1)
- Relativismus (1)
- Religion (1)
- Replication (1)
- Representation (1)
- Research (1)
- Scales (1)
- Searle (1)
- Second Law of Thermodynamics (1)
- Self-respect (1)
- Semblance and Truth (1)
- Sen (1)
- Shakespeare (1)
- Sigmund Freud (1)
- Skill formation (1)
- Slovakia (1)
- Social freedom (1)
- Social isolation (1)
- Social mobility (1)
- Social norms (1)
- Social policy (1)
- Social recognition (1)
- Social technologies (1)
- Socialism (1)
- Socialismo (1)
- Sociology (1)
- Solipsism (1)
- Sophie Kwaak (1)
- Sovereign Debt (1)
- Sozialisationstheorie (1)
- Spanish reproductive bioeconomy (1)
- State Civil Disobedience (1)
- Stoa (1)
- Structural poverty (1)
- Struggle for recognition (1)
- Surrealism (1)
- Sustainable Development Goals (1)
- Systematic review (1)
- TTIP (1)
- Technocratic democracy (1)
- Tecnologias sociais (1)
- Teoría crítica (1)
- Th. Adorno (1)
- The Right to Sustainable Development (1)
- Theodore W. Adorno (1)
- Tiefenhermeneutik (1)
- Timor-Leste (1)
- Topic modelling (1)
- Tragic Dilemmas (1)
- Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) (1)
- Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) (1)
- Transitory poverty (1)
- Transnational democracy (1)
- Trauerspiel (End Of) (1)
- Trump (1)
- Typicality (1)
- UNSCR 1325 (1)
- Umzug (1)
- United States politics (1)
- Urban Heat Island (1)
- Urbanism (1)
- Utopianism (1)
- Value (1)
- Venezuela (1)
- Vergleichende Politische Ökonomie (1)
- Voting advice applications (1)
- Voting age (1)
- Vulnerability (1)
- WTO (1)
- Wahrheit (1)
- Well-being (1)
- Willingness (1)
- Wirtschaftsregulierung (1)
- Wohnortwechsel (1)
- Women (1)
- Work–family conflict (1)
- World Trade Organization (1)
- Youths (1)
- activism (1)
- actor-network theory (1)
- added value (1)
- aesthetic theory (1)
- affect (1)
- affected interests (1)
- agonism (1)
- alcohol consumption (1)
- all-affected principle (1)
- analysis (1)
- anarchy (1)
- anti-education (1)
- anti-immigrant sentiments (1)
- application programming interface (1)
- artworld/socialworld (1)
- assistance (1)
- assisted reproductive technologies-ARTs (1)
- associationalism (1)
- asylum (1)
- atonement (1)
- attitude (1)
- attitudes (1)
- audience (1)
- authoritarian capitalism (1)
- authoritarian populism (1)
- authoritarian statism (1)
- authorization (1)
- autonomy education (1)
- autores araboislámicos (1)
- autors araboislàmics (1)
- background adjustment (1)
- bargaining power (1)
- basic structure (1)
- behavior (1)
- belonging (1)
- berufliche räumliche Mobilität (1)
- binarity (1)
- biografske migracijske študije (1)
- biographical analysis (1)
- biographical migration research (1)
- biographical research (1)
- body politic (1)
- bruno latour (1)
- caesura (1)
- campaigns (1)
- candidates (1)
- capabilities approach (1)
- capacity (1)
- carbon (1)
- care (1)
- child care (1)
- childcare (1)
- christians (1)
- citation (1)
- cities (1)
- citizens (1)
- citizenship (1)
- civic education (1)
- climate engineering (1)
- collaboration (1)
- collaborative governance (1)
- collective agency (1)
- collectivization (1)
- comentarios alejandrinos (1)
- comentaris alexandrins (1)
- communication (1)
- commuting (1)
- comparative (1)
- comparative research (1)
- complicity (1)
- conditionality (1)
- consequence (1)
- consequences (1)
- consequentialism (1)
- constelação (1)
- constellation (1)
- constituency campaigns (1)
- constituent power (1)
- consumer (1)
- consumer and corporate responsibility (1)
- conséquence (1)
- conséquences (1)
- content analysis (1)
- conversation analysis (1)
- cord blood banking (1)
- counter-democracy (1)
- counter-governance (1)
- crisis (1)
- critical republicanism (1)
- critique of common sense notions in qualitative-interpretive social research (1)
- critique of reason (1)
- cross-national (1)
- cross-national comparison (1)
- crossnational comparison Germany and Poland (1)
- crowdfunding (1)
- cryotechnology (1)
- cryovalue (1)
- cultural diversity (1)
- cultural factors (1)
- cultural imperialism (1)
- cultural neuroscience (1)
- cultural reproduction (1)
- culture (1)
- dalit women (1)
- data production (1)
- data protection (1)
- data-sharing (1)
- decentralization (1)
- degrowth (1)
- deliberative system (1)
- democracia tecnocrática (1)
- democracia transnacional (1)
- democratic commitments (1)
- democratic consolidation (1)
- democratic deficit (1)
- democratic equality (1)
- democratic governance (1)
- democratic ideals (1)
- democratic innovations (1)
- democratic legitimacy (1)
- democratic system (1)
- democratic theory (1)
- dependency theory (1)
- depth-hermeneutics (1)
- despolitização da esfera pública (1)
- dialectics (1)
- dialética (1)
- digital economy (1)
- digital inequality (1)
- dignity (1)
- dignité (1)
- direct democracy (1)
- direct democratic instruments (1)
- discourse (1)
- discourse analysis (1)
- discursive institutionalism (1)
- disease onset (1)
- displacement (1)
- disproportionate information processing (1)
- dissidence (1)
- distribution (1)
- division of household labor (1)
- division of labor (1)
- divorce (1)
- doctors (1)
- domestic work; (1)
- dopamine (1)
- duplicity (1)
- déficit democrático da Europa (1)
- early home literacy (1)
- earnings (1)
- economic justice (1)
- economic participation (1)
- economic regulation (1)
- economic sanctions (1)
- education policy (1)
- education politics and policy (1)
- educational adequacy (1)
- educational aims (1)
- educational attainment (1)
- educational equality (1)
- educational justice (1)
- educational resources (1)
- effectiveness (1)
- egalitarian liberalism (1)
- egalitarianism (1)
- eggs-öocytes (1)
- electoral systems (1)
- electronic commerce (1)
- elites (1)
- emancipation (1)
- emancipação (1)
- embodiment (1)
- emergency (1)
- emergency powers (1)
- endurance (1)
- enlightenment (1)
- epistemic capabilities (1)
- epistemic injustice (1)
- equality of opportunity (1)
- esclarecimento (1)
- estrogen status (1)
- ethnographic knowledge production (1)
- ethnomethodology and conversation analysis (1)
- event-event networks (1)
- exchange value (1)
- exclusion (1)
- failure (1)
- fair trade (1)
- fairness (1)
- family (1)
- family functioning (1)
- family policy (1)
- family roles (1)
- family type (1)
- father-child relations (1)
- fieldwork (1)
- financial industry (1)
- financial technology (1)
- firms (1)
- fisheries policy (1)
- for-profit schools (1)
- forensic interrogation (1)
- free movement (1)
- fringe politics (1)
- future generations (1)
- game (1)
- gender differences (1)
- gender essentialism (1)
- gender ideologies (1)
- gender inequality (1)
- gender justice (1)
- gender knowledge (1)
- gender mainstreaming (1)
- genderroles (1)
- generalised system of preferences (1)
- genome editing (1)
- geoengineering (1)
- geschlechtsspezifische Faktoren (1)
- global care chains (1)
- global commons (1)
- global distributive justice (1)
- global educational justice (1)
- global egalitarianism (1)
- global equality (1)
- global governance (1)
- global health (1)
- global health justice (1)
- global imaginary (1)
- global inequality (1)
- global institutional reform (1)
- global poverty (1)
- globalization (1)
- government satisfaction (1)
- green politics (1)
- grid-group cultural theory (1)
- group agency (1)
- health research (1)
- hermeneutics (1)
- heteronormativity (1)
- heterotopia (1)
- higher education governance (1)
- historic injustice (1)
- historical institutionalism (1)
- horizontale Mobilität (1)
- household structure (1)
- housework (1)
- housework/division of labor (1)
- human values (1)
- hunger (1)
- hči (1)
- illiberalism (1)
- imperfect duty (1)
- imperialism (1)
- indirect reciprocity (1)
- individual responsibility (1)
- individualism-collectivism (1)
- industry sector (1)
- inequality of educational opportunity (1)
- information and communication technologies (1)
- inquiries (1)
- institutional change (1)
- institutional ethics (1)
- institutional reconstruction (1)
- institutional reform goals (1)
- integracijska transmisija (1)
- integration (1)
- inter-disciplinarity (1)
- interactions and institutions (1)
- interdisciplinary (1)
- interdisciplinary critical theory (1)
- intergenerational relations (1)
- internalized heterosexism (1)
- international civil society (1)
- international distributive justice (1)
- international domination (1)
- international global justice (1)
- international law (1)
- international organizations (1)
- international patents (1)
- international regimes (1)
- international relations (1)
- interpretative authority (1)
- intersectionality (1)
- investor protection (1)
- investor-state arbitration (1)
- irreversibility (1)
- isomorphism (1)
- jeu (1)
- jihadist globalism (1)
- job-related spatial mobility (1)
- journey to work (1)
- just war theory (1)
- justice globalism (1)
- justice in market exchanges (1)
- labour standards (1)
- land rights (1)
- latent class analysis (1)
- latour (1)
- laws of war (1)
- leadership (1)
- left and right (1)
- legal (1)
- legislative behavior (1)
- legislative studies (1)
- legislators (1)
- legitimacy (1)
- legitimation crisis (1)
- liability (1)
- liability model (1)
- liberal democracy (1)
- liberalism (1)
- liberdade (1)
- liberty (1)
- literature (1)
- living conditions (1)
- local cultures (1)
- loneliness (1)
- longitudinal (1)
- lotteries (1)
- low-fee private schools (1)
- low-wage (1)
- market globalism (1)
- marxism (1)
- masculinity (1)
- mass culture (1)
- materiality (1)
- maternal health (1)
- measurement (1)
- megaregional trade agreements (1)
- megaregionalism (1)
- migrant rights (1)
- migrants’ and human rights protection (1)
- migration and development (1)
- military (1)
- mimesis (1)
- misrepresentation (1)
- mitigation (1)
- mlade muslimanske priseljenke (1)
- mobility (1)
- model (1)
- modernity (1)
- moral cosmopolitanism (1)
- morphology (1)
- mother-daughter relationship (1)
- mothers (1)
- multigenerational effects (1)
- multilateralism (1)
- multiple correspondence analysis (1)
- multipolarity (1)
- multivariate analysis (1)
- musical performance (1)
- muslims (1)
- myth (1)
- narrative structure (1)
- national imaginary (1)
- national security (1)
- nationaler Vergleich Deutschland und Polen (1)
- natives (1)
- negative dialectics (1)
- negative emissions (1)
- negative freedom (1)
- neo-classical economics (1)
- neocolonialism (1)
- neoliberalism (1)
- neoplatonisme (1)
- neoplatonismo (1)
- network analysis (1)
- network dynamics (1)
- network research (1)
- nomos of the earth (1)
- non-citizens (1)
- non-compliance (1)
- non-governmental organisations (1)
- non-human animals (1)
- non-ideal justice (1)
- nonhuman animals (1)
- normative values (1)
- normativity (1)
- odnos mati (1)
- office accountability (1)
- online auctions (1)
- online marketplaces (1)
- online reading behavior (1)
- opportunity freedom (1)
- opposition (1)
- orgueil (1)
- othering (1)
- out-of-work benefits (1)
- parliamentary debate (1)
- part-time employment (1)
- participatory observation (1)
- party competition (1)
- party families (1)
- party politics (1)
- patient and public involvement (1)
- perfect duties (1)
- performative social science (1)
- performativity (1)
- permanent sovereignty (1)
- personality (1)
- personalization (1)
- plastic packaging (1)
- plural acquisition (1)
- pluralization (1)
- polarization (1)
- political capacity (1)
- political corruption (1)
- political ecology (1)
- political institutions (1)
- political legitimacy (1)
- political participation (1)
- political psychology (1)
- political realism (1)
- political representation (1)
- political theory (1)
- political trust (1)
- politische Steuerung (1)
- population (1)
- populist party support (1)
- post-factual (1)
- post-home (1)
- post-metaphysical (1)
- post-modernism (1)
- post-socialist country (1)
- postmemoryv (1)
- practice theory (1)
- precautionary principle (1)
- prejudice (1)
- pride (1)
- principle of fairness (1)
- privacy (1)
- private household (1)
- problem-related drinking (1)
- problematischer Konsum (1)
- procedural preferences (1)
- production and analysis of culture (1)
- profession (1)
- programme sémantique (1)
- proliferation of prefixes (1)
- property (1)
- proportionality in war (1)
- préjugé (1)
- psychoanalysis (1)
- psychoanalysis as a method of qualitative research (1)
- psychosocial studies (1)
- psychotherapy (1)
- public policy (1)
- punctuated equilibrium theory (1)
- qualified market access (1)
- qualitative interviews (1)
- quality of democracy (1)
- quantitative methodology (1)
- racial justice (1)
- radical democratic theory (1)
- radicalization (1)
- realism (1)
- reception (1)
- reciprocity (1)
- recombinant DNA (1)
- reconciliation (1)
- reconstruction (1)
- reflection (1)
- reflexivity (1)
- reform capacity (1)
- refugees (1)
- regime complexes (1)
- regional authority (1)
- relació com a principi dinàmic (1)
- relación como principio dinámico (1)
- relation as dynamic principle (1)
- relation between trajectory of suffering and agency (1)
- relational alienation (1)
- relational and non-relational (1)
- relational equality (1)
- relational sovereignty (1)
- relativism (1)
- religion (1)
- relocation (1)
- remedial responsibility (1)
- remittances (1)
- research (1)
- research ethics (1)
- research funding (1)
- revolution (1)
- rhetoric (1)
- right to life (1)
- right-wing authoritarianism (1)
- right-wing extremism (1)
- rights (1)
- rising powers (1)
- robo-advice (1)
- rule (1)
- scheduled castes (1)
- science and technology studies (1)
- sea-level rise (1)
- second-best justifications (1)
- second-hand market (1)
- security (1)
- segregation (1)
- self-views (1)
- semantic programme (1)
- semi-education (1)
- sentience (1)
- settler colonialism (1)
- shame (1)
- shape-shifting representation (1)
- situations (1)
- skill-level (1)
- slavery (1)
- social (1)
- social belonging (1)
- social change (1)
- social inclusion (1)
- social inequality (1)
- social mobility (1)
- social movements (1)
- social norms (1)
- social policy (1)
- social rights (1)
- social-connection (1)
- solar radiation management (1)
- special claims (1)
- speech acts (1)
- speech production (1)
- speech reception (1)
- state policies (1)
- state theory (1)
- statelessness (1)
- states (1)
- strategy (1)
- structural alienation (1)
- structure narrative (1)
- subjectivity (1)
- subnational politics (1)
- sustainability (1)
- sustainable consumption (1)
- sustainable development (1)
- systems theory (1)
- taxonomy (1)
- technical (1)
- temporalisation (1)
- temporality (1)
- temporary labour migration (1)
- territorial rights (1)
- terrorism (1)
- text analysis (1)
- the nonidentical (1)
- the people (1)
- the right to asylum (1)
- theory of socialisation (1)
- therapeutic practice (1)
- thermostatic policy change (1)
- trade justice (1)
- tragic choices (1)
- transcription (1)
- transference of reproductive capacity-TRCs (1)
- transitional justice (1)
- transnational democratic inclusion (1)
- transnational education (1)
- transnational migration (1)
- transnational populism (1)
- truth (1)
- two-mode networks (1)
- typology (1)
- uncertainty reduction (1)
- unemployment (1)
- unfair trading practices (1)
- urban extent (1)
- urban governance (1)
- urbanicity (1)
- urbanization (1)
- used products (1)
- utopia (1)
- value (1)
- value construction (1)
- value of liberty (1)
- vednost o spolu (1)
- visualisation (1)
- voter turnout (1)
- vulnerability (1)
- welfare egalitarianism (1)
- welfare rights (1)
- welfare states (1)
- well-being (1)
- wellbeing (1)
- woman (1)
- women's labor migration from Turkey to Germany (1)
- women’s participation (1)
- women’s quota (1)
- work-family balance (1)
- world poverty (1)
- world-systems theory (1)
- young Muslim migrant women (1)
- Ärzteschaft (1)
- Адорно (1)
- Горкгаймер (1)
- Франкфуртская школа (1)
- Франкфуртська школа (1)
- Хоркхаймер (1)
- анти-образование (1)
- анти-освіта (1)
- индивидуальность (1)
- масова культура (1)
- массовая культура (1)
- напівосвіта (1)
- образование (1)
- освіта (1)
- полу-образование (1)
- індивідуальність (1)
Institute
- Gesellschaftswissenschaften (293) (remove)
The COVID-19 pandemic has both highlighted and exacerbated global health inequities, leading for calls for responses to COVID to promote social justice and ensure that no one is left behind. One key lesson to be learnt from the pandemic is the critical importance of decolonizing global health and global health research so that African countries are better placed to address pandemic challenges in contextually relevant ways. This paper argues that to be successful, programmes of decolonization in complex global health landscapes require a complex three-dimensional approach. Drawing on the broader discourse of political decolonization that has been going on in the African context for over a century, we present a model for unpacking the complex task of decolonization. Our approach suggests a three-dimensional approach which encompasses hegemomic; epistemic; and commitmental elements.
Introduction
(2022)
Episodes of liberalization in autocracies: a new approach to quantitatively studying democratization
(2022)
This paper introduces a new approach to the quantitative study of democratization. Building on the comparative case-study and large-N literature, it outlines an episode approach that identifies the discrete beginning of a period of political liberalization, traces its progression, and classifies episodes as successful versus different types of failing outcomes, thus avoiding potentially fallacious assumptions of unit homogeneity. We provide a description and analysis of all 383 liberalization episodes from 1900 to 2019, offering new insights on democratic “waves”. We also demonstrate the value of this approach by showing that while several established covariates are valuable for predicting the ultimate outcomes, none explain the onset of a period of liberalization.
Although scholars hypothesized early on that social belonging is an important predictor for voting behavior, its role for populist voting remains empirically ambiguous and underexplored. This contribution investigates how different aspects of social belonging, that is, quality, quantity, and perception of one's own social relationships, relate to electoral abstention and to populist voting on the left and right. Employing multilevel regression models using data from four waves of the European Social Survey, this study finds that all measures of social belonging foster turnout, but they exert an incoherent influence on populist voting depending on the party's ideological leaning. While social belonging plays a subordinate role for left populist support, strong social belonging reduces the probability to support populist parties on the right. With that, the study analysis offers a nuanced view on how different dimensions of social belonging relate to electoral behavior. By doing so, this study sheds light on what aspects of social belonging encourage, or inhibit, which form of “protest at the ballot box.”
In this article, we propose to develop a realist interpretation of political progress—that is, an analysis of what it means to achieve better conditions of life in society under political power according to realist standards. Specifically, we are interested in identifying the criteria according to which political realism defines a change in the status quo as a desirable change...
Cryovalues beyond high expectations: endurance and the construction of value in cord blood banking
(2022)
Cryopreservation attracts attention as a practice grounded in high expectations: current life is suspended for future use—to generate life, to save life, and to resurrect life. But what happens when high expectations in cryobanking give way to looming uselessness and the risk of failure? Based on ethnographic insights into the case of umbilical cord blood (CB) banking in Germany, this contribution investigates the liminal state of “non-failure.” Averting failure amid a lack of success in this field requires putting effort into the construction of value. The resulting practices and dynamics overflow generic stories of commercialization and instrumentalization of biological material and are best grasped as an expanded version of the recently coined notion of “cryovalue.” The long-term availability of cryopreserved CB facilitates the steady yield of social and economic capital beyond and after promise. Moreover, the value construction is reoriented from CB itself toward the socio-technical cryo-arrangements in which it is embedded. In exemplifying how it expands the understanding of the diversity of valuation and valorization practices, continuities, and economic endurance in cryoeconomies and bioeconomies, the paper advocates the study of their ambivalent and allegedly uneventful sites.
Studies of occupational sex segregation rely on the sociocultural model to explain why some occupations are numerically dominated by women and others by men. This model argues that occupational sex segregation is driven by norms about gender-appropriate work, which are frequently conceptualized as gender-typed skills: work-related tasks, abilities, and knowledge domains that society views as either feminine or masculine. The sociocultural model thus explains the primary patterns of occupational sex segregation, which conform to these norms: Requirements for feminine (masculine) skills increase with women’s (men’s) representation in the occupation. However, the model does not adequately explain cases of segregation that deviate from these norms or investigate the ways in which feminine and masculine skills co-occur in occupations. The present study fills these gaps by evaluating two previously untested explanations for deviations from the sociocultural model. The findings show that requirements for physical strength (a masculine skill) increase with women’s representation in professional occupations because physical strength skills co-occur with substantially higher requirements for feminine skills that involve helping and caring for others. These results indicate that the sociocultural model, and more generally explanations for how gender norms drive occupational sex segregation, can be improved by examining patterns of gender-typed skill co-occurrence.
For some years, the German public has been debating the case of migrant workers receiving German benefits for children living abroad, which has been scandalised as a case of “benefit tourism.” This points to a failure to recognise a striking imbalance between the output of the German welfare state to migrants and the input it receives from migrant domestic workers. In this article I discuss how this input is being rendered invisible or at least underappreciated by sexist, racist, and classist practices of othering. To illustrate the point, I will use examples from two empirical research projects that looked into how families in Germany outsource various forms of reproductive work to both female and male migrants from Eastern Europe. Drawing on the concept of othering developed in feminist and postcolonial literature and their ideas of how privileges and disadvantages are interconnected, I will put this example into the context of literature on racism, gender, and care work migration. I show how migrant workers fail to live up to the normative standards of work, family life, and gender relations and norms set by a sedentary society. A complex interaction of supposedly “natural” and “objective” differences between “us” and “them” are at work to justify everyday discrimination against migrants and their institutional exclusion. These processes are also reflected in current political and public debates on the commodification and transnationalisation of care.
By comparing two distinct governmental organizations (the US military and NASA) this paper unpacks two main issues. On the one hand, the paper examines the transcripts that are produced as part of work activities in these worksites and what the transcripts reveal about the organizations themselves. Additionally, the paper analyses what the transcripts disclose about the practices involved in their creation and use for practical purposes in these organizations. These organizations have been chosen as transcription forms a routine part of how they operate as worksites. Further, the everyday working environments in both organizations involve complex technological systems, as well as multi-party interactions in which speakers are frequently spatially and visually separated. In order to explicate these practices, the article draws on the transcription methods employed in ethnomethodology and conversation analysis research as a comparative resource. In these approaches audio-video data is transcribed in a fine-grained manner that captures temporal aspects of talk, as well as how speech is delivered. Using these approaches to transcription as an analytical device enables us to investigate when and why transcripts are produced by the US military and NASA in the specific ways that they are, as well as what exactly is being re-presented in the transcripts and thus what was treated as worth transcribing in the interactions they are intended to serve as documents of. By analysing these transcription practices it becomes clear that these organizations create huge amounts of audio-video “data” about their routine activities. One major difference between them is that the US military selectively transcribe this data (usually for the purposes of investigating incidents in which civilians might have been injured), whereas NASA’s “transcription machinery” aims to capture as much of their mission-related interactions as is organizationally possible (i.e., within the physical limits and capacities of their radio communications systems). As such the paper adds to our understanding of transcription practices and how this is related to the internal working, accounting and transparency practices within different kinds of organization. The article also examines how the original transcripts have been used by researchers (and others) outside of the organizations themselves for alternative purposes.
The intergenerational transmission of gender: paternal influences on children’s gender attitudes
(2022)
Objective: This study provides the first systematic longitudinal analysis of the influence of paternal involvement in family life—across childhood and adolescence—on the gender-role attitudes of children by the age of 14 or 15.
Background: Recent research suggests that, in post-industrial societies, paternal involvement in family life is increasing. Although previous studies of paternal involvement have considered paternal influences on children's cognitive or socio-emotional development, such studies have not yet addressed paternal influences on children's attitudes toward gender. Relatedly, previous studies on the intergenerational transmission of gender attitudes have analyzed maternal influences, but have neglected the significance of paternal influences. This study engages both strands of the research by analyzing the effects of paternal behaviors on children's attitudes toward gender roles.
Method: Multivariate linear regressions models were estimated on data from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC); a survey with biannual observations over 10 years for 2796 children born between 1999 and 2000.
Results: Fathers' time spent on childcare during childhood was associated with gender-egalitarian attitudes in children by the age of 14 or 15. The most powerful predictor of children's gender-role attitudes, however, was the amount of time fathers spent on housework during children's adolescence, both absolute and relative to the amount of time mothers spent on housework. Fathers' unpaid labor at home was as relevant for children's gender-role attitudes as mothers' paid labor in the workforce. These results held after controlling for maternal domestic behaviors and for the gender-role attitudes of both parents.
Conclusion: Father involvement in childcare and housework during childhood and adolescence play an important role in shaping children's gender-egalitarian attitudes.