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Professionelle Förderung für junge Wissenschaftler/-innen bei Forschungsprojekten zu Bildung, Erziehung und Didaktik: Mit dem GRADE Centre Education (GRADE EDU) hat die Graduiertenakademie GRADE der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt das neunte disziplinübergreifende Zentrum geschaffen. Im Interview berichten Prof. Dr. Tim Engartner, Sprecher des GRADE Centre Education, sowie Dr. Matthias Herrle, Koordinator des GRADE Centre Education und Mitglied im Vorstand, wer von dem neuen Zentrum in welcher Weise profitieren kann und welche Herausforderungen es zu meistern gilt.
Auf Einladung des Forschungsinstituts Gesellschaftlicher Zusammenhalt (FGZ) diskutierten Prof. Dr. Nicole Deitelhoff (Politikwissenschaftlerin an der Goethe-Universität und Sprecherin des FGZ) und Prof. Dr. Michel Friedman (geschäftsführender Direktor des Center for Applied European Studies – CAES) mit zwei streiterfahrenen Gästen über das Thema »Grenzen der Meinungsfreiheit«: mit dem Staranwalt Christian Schertz und dem Kabarettisten Florian Schroeder. Die Diskussion im English Theatre Frankfurt wurde von Oberstufenschülerinnen und – schülern der Dreieichschule aus Langen analysiert, visualisiert und laufend mit Fragen ergänzt.
»Denken braucht Zeit«
(2021)
Denis Thouard, Inhaber der Alfred Grosser-Gastprofessur im Wintersemester 2021/22, spricht im Interview über die heutige Rolle der Geistes- und Sozialwissenschaften, über seine Beschäftigung mit Kant und Schleiermacher und über die Aktualität von Georg Simmel.
Auf der Bad Homburg Conference 2021 wurden ausgewählte Fragen der Klimapolitik aus verschiedenen Perspektiven von internationalen Expertinnen und Experten aus Wissenschaft und Zivilgesellschaft, Wirtschaft und Politik diskutiert. Der UniReport hat einige Stimmen zur Konferenz eingeholt, die jeweils wichtige Erkenntnisse, aber auch Streitpunkte und offene Fragen benennen.
Er kam als junger Syrer Anfang der 60er Jahre nach Frankfurt. Am Studienkolleg der Goethe-Universität lernte er Deutsch, später dann studierte er bei Theodor W. Adorno und Iring Fetscher politische Philosophie. Mit 28 wurde Bassam Tibi Professor für Politikwissenschaft an der Universität Göttingen. Mittlerweile ist er emeritiert, aber seine Expertise ist nicht nur beim Thema Islam immer noch gefragt. Anfang Dezember diskutierte Tibi auf Einladung des Studienkollegs mit Geflüchteten des Academic Welcome Program. Und der Besuch des Adorno-Denkmals auf dem Campus Westend war für den 72-Jährigen natürlich Ehrensache.
Rule in International Relations is increasingly observed as an empirical phenomenon and academically conceptualized. This book describes rule in International Relations using four practice-theoretical dimensions. A method is developed to analyze rule from a practice-theoretical point of view - the Practice Analysis of Rule (PAR). The argumentation is followed that resistance is an important dimension of rule, which enables the researcher to understand the quality of rule. However, the empirical analysis of resistance as an indicator of rule does not allow for the analysis of subtle forms of rule sufficiently, which can have grave consequences in international relations. Therefore, to make this possible, the symbolic dimension is formulated after Bourdieu. In the following, three practice-theoretical dimensions are developed and a methodical approach is presented. Resistance is described as a practice-theoretical dimension. Based on actor-network-theory materiality is described a dimension of rule. At last, iterability is described as dimension of rule which can show the repeatability of practices. It can thus indicate the extent of consolidation of rule in each case. Through the analysis of an empirical case using the four practice-theoretical dimensions the researcher will be enabled to analyze transnational relations of rule in a theory guided and history sensitive manner.
Four years after the Panama Papers scandal, tax avoidance remains an urgent moral-political problem. Moving beyond both the academic and policy mainstream, I advocate the “democratization of tax enforcement,” by which I mean systematic efforts to make tax avoiders accountable to the judgment of ordinary citizens. Both individual oligarchs and multinational corporations have access to sophisticated tax avoidance strategies that impose significant fiscal costs on democracies and exacerbate preexisting distributive and political inequalities. Yet much contemporary tax sheltering occurs within the letter of the law, rendering criminal sanctions ineffective. In response, I argue for the creation of Citizen Tax Juries, deliberative minipublics empowered to scrutinize tax avoiders, demand accountability, and facilitate concrete reforms. This proposal thus responds to the wider aspiration, within contemporary democratic theory, to secure more popular control over essential economic processes.
Unemployment and political trust across 24 Western democracies: evidence on a welfare state paradox
(2021)
Set against the backdrop of the Great Recession, the paper explores the interplay of unemployment experiences and political trust in the USA and 23 European countries between 2002 and 2017. Drawing on harmonized data from the European Social Survey and the General Social Survey, we confirm that citizens’ personal experiences of unemployment depress trust in democratic institutions in all countries. Using multilevel linear probability models, we show that the relationship between unemployment and political trust varies between countries, and that, paradoxically, the negative effect of unemployment on political trust is consistently stronger in the more generous welfare states. This result holds while controlling for a range of other household and country-level predictors, and even in mediation models that incorporate measures of households’ economic situation to explain the negative effect of unemployment on trust. As expected, country differences in the generosity of welfare states are reflected in the degree to which financial difficulties are mediating the relationship between unemployment and political trust. Overlaying economic deprivation, however, cultural mechanisms of stigmatization or status deprivation seem to create negative responses to unemployment experiences, and these render the effect of unemployment on political trust increasingly negative in objectively more generous welfare states.