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t is becoming less and less controversial that we ought to aggressively combat climate change. One main reason for doing so is concern for future generations, as it is they who will be the most seriously affected by it. Surprisingly, none of the more prominent deontological theories of intergenerational justice can explain why it is wrong for the present generation to do very little to stop worsening the problem. This paper discusses three such theories, namely indirect reciprocity, common ownership of the earth and human rights. It shows that while indirect reciprocity and common ownership are both too undemanding, the human rights approach misunderstands the nature of our intergenerational relationships, thereby capturing either too much or too little about what is problematic about climate change. The paper finally proposes a way to think about intergenerational justice that avoids the pitfalls of the traditional theories and can explain what is wrong with perpetuating climate change.
In den letzten drei Jahrzehnten haben sich die politischen, ökonomischen, sozialen und kulturellen Strukturen unserer Welt auf verschiedenen Ebenen radikal verändert. Das Interesse am Islam ist nicht nur in wissenschaftlichen Arbeiten und Zeitschriften gestiegen, sondern auch in allen anderen westlichen Medien. Dieses Interesse wurde unter Anderem durch die Islamisch-Iranische Revolution von 1979, die Fatwa gegen den Buchautor von „Die satanischen Verse“ Salman Rushdie 1989, die Golfkriege Anfang der 90er Jahre, den Balkankonflikt als auch die Einwanderung von Migranten mit islamischem Hintergrund in Europa gefördert...
The role of social groups in making historical events succeed takes shape according to two important factors: Their ability to change and the kind of their contribution to the development of that change in a way or another. The role of social groups especially emerges at times of revolutions and their subsequent changes on the political, socioeconomic and even intellectual levels. The most active and capable group to achieve change is the group of youth and students. In the revolutionary movements in Latin America, for instance, students prominently contributed to the fall down of long-lasting totalitarian dictatorships such in Chile, Brazil and Argentina. In the Arab uprisings in 2010-2011, students‘ roles varied from one country to another based on three axes of context, networks and contentious practices. This article expands on the role of Egyptian student movement in thriving for change despite the intensified restrictions by the state and how it continued its protest under repressive circumstances as a political actor...
Political rationality as a theory is important in its own right. Government leaders must calculate political costs such as the resources needed to generate support for a policy, the implications of a policy decision for re-election, and the possibility of provoking hostility for decisions not well received. Bounded rationality approach has yielded an enhanced understanding of how government organizations may produce unexpected or even unpredicted policy or program results. With public organizations not operating under full rationality conditions, administrators aspiring toward rationality may nonetheless find their goals undermined by a variety of forces, such as informational uncertainties and non-rational elements of organisational decision-making...
After five years of the Syrian war, we can recognize “four” conflicting parties on the ground – Assad, ISIS, rebel groups and the Kurds. Each one of these conflicting parties has regional and international backers, who ironically do not agree with each other about whom they are fighting for or against. The Syrian regime is backed by Iran, Russia, Hezbollah and Iraqi militias. ISIS is backed by the flood of global Jihadists from all over the world. Rebel groups are backed by Gulf States, Turkey, Jordan and the US. The Kurds are supported by the US. While in the media, we always say “the Syrian conflict, crisis or war”, I wonder what makes this war that much Syrian. It is rather a war on the land of Syria, in which more than 50% of Syria’s population have been displaced, over 220 thousand have been killed, and many more have been injured or imprisoned. According to Amnesty international, more than 12.8 million Syrian people are in “urgent need of humanitarian assistance”. In addition to this humanitarian catastrophe, most of the Syrian land and infrastructure have been destroyed. So what is that Syrian about the Syrian “war”?...
Practicing politics within religious frameworks is more likely to increase states‘ fragility. While employing religious references in political discourses could foster positive outcomes such as avoiding dangerous eruptions of violence under authoritarian regimes, it could also increase the space for political and religious elites to instrumentalise religion for their own interests. Such patterns of instrumentalisation are more common in the Middle East; especially the dominant religion in the region is Islam, which enjoys a decentralised mode of function...
Religion in the Middle East seems to define allies and enemies inside and outside the political borders. On the one hand, Shiite Iran is allies with the Iraqi government, the Houthi rebels in Yemen, Hezbollah in Lebanon, revolutionary forces in Bahrain and the Syrian regime. On the other hand, Sunni Saudi Arabia and other Gulf States, Egypt, Turkey and Sunni elements in the region form an alliance against what they call the expansion of the Iranian influence. There is an unmistaken pattern of alliance in the Middle East, in which states, monarchies and forces seem to define their allies and enemies based on sectarian dimensions, and by which we witness a minority oppressing a majority when it is possible and vice versa across the Middle East including Israel...
When the Iranian revolution embarked against Muhammad Reza Shah’s regime in the late 70s, it wasn’t a social revolution aiming at changing the society, but rather a political one with legitimate demands similar to what Syrians once were looking forward to achieve in 2011. When all this started in Iran, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the most central and inspirational figure in the Iranian revolution was still in exile. This is a story that happened 35 years ago and we cannot but see the rhyming of its events with the current Syrian imbroglio...
Using religious frameworks in political contestation and mobilisation processes has become more eminent in recent decades spiralling an intricate debate on the conceptualisation and implementation of such references in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region The contradiction, it is argued, mainly lies in the compromising nature of politics and the relatively dogmatic nature of religion. Accentuated by inaccurate media coverage and primordial analytical frameworks, it has become tempting to see religion as responsible for conflicts and underachievement in the MENA region...
Im Zuge der (wieder) zunehmenden Aufmerksamkeit verschiedenster IB-Theorien für postkoloniale Problemlagen hat unter ‚nördlichen‘ IB-Forschern das Interesse an Dialog und Auseinandersetzung mit den IB-Communities des ‚globalen Südens‘ zugenommen. Dieser Beitrag will Möglichkeiten und Hindernisse dieses Dialogs für den Fall der südamerikanischen IB-Communities aufzeigen. Es soll gewissermaßen eine ‚Bedienungsanleitung‘ erstellt werden, um dem interessierten Außenseiter das Verständnis der Interessenlagen, theoretischen Präferenzen und der konkreten Arbeitssituationen südamerikanischer IB-Forscher zu erleichtern. Dies geschieht selbstredend unter Betonung der Unvollständigkeit der Beschreibung sowie der Perspektivenabhängigkeit des Beobachters.
Die bisher nicht lückenlos aufgeklärte, vermutlich aber Gruppen der organisierten Kriminalität zuzurechnende Ermordung von über 40 Lehramtsstudenten in der südmexikanischen Kleinstadt Ayotzinapa Ende 2014 hat ebenso wie die seit dem Abschuss eines Militärhubschraubers im Mai 2015 eskalierende Gewalt im westlichen Bundesstaat Jalisco wieder einmal schmerzlich in Erinnerung gerufen, dass in Mexiko bereits seit fast neun Jahren ein blutiger Gewaltkonflikt im Gange ist, der angesichts der wirtschaftlichen Erfolge des „Aztec tiger“ teils fast schon vergessen schien.
Die aktuelle Debatte um Pornographie stellt sich andere Fragen als in den kämpferischen 70er Jahren. In den interdisziplinären Beiträgen des Sammelbandes wird Pornographie als kulturelles Artefakt behandelt, als Begriff, der in Diskurse über Sexualität und Moderne, über Identität und Jugend verwoben ist. Die Autor_innen arbeiten mit empirisch-sozialwissenschaftlichen Methoden Fragen nach dem Nutzer_innenverhalten von Onlinepornographie und jugendlichem Pornokonsum auf, bieten theoriegeleitete Zugänge zur Unbestimmbarkeit von Pornographie, zu ihrer notwendigen Einbettung in andere gesellschaftliche Kontexte sowie künstlerische Interventionen zu ihrem emanzipatorischen Potential. Die Beiträge bieten einen gelungenen Einblick in den aktuellen Stand der Debatte dieses noch jungen Feldes.
This report was written by the organizers of the workshop "Accounting for Combat-Related Killings," which took place at the Goethe University Frankfurt in July 2014. Scholars from Israel, the United Kingdom, the United States,, Canada, and Germany came together to present and discuss case studies on the discourse practices involved in accounting for combat-related killings in different national and transnational contexts. Intending to reflect on the methodological skills needed to analyze newly available process data, the workshop brought together scholars using different methodological approaches (here mainly ethnomethodology and critical discourse analysis). In regard to the global trend towards increasing numbers of so called permanent, asymmetric, small, and permanent wars, the report turns to concepts, methods, and empirical findings that foster understandings of the difficulties war generates at social, cultural and political levels as well as the manner in which these predicaments are negotiated, denied, or deflected. The report summarizes the workshop by presenting the papers in a specific order, beginning with accounting in combat, followed by tribunals of accounting, and finally the sedimentation of accounting in cultural representations.
"Die Flüchtlinge", "die Rassisten" und "Wir" – zu den Ambivalenzen im aktuellen Flüchtlingsdiskurs
(2015)
Dies ist der dritte Artikel unseres Blogfokus zu Flucht und Migration. Die vehemente Verurteilung der verbalen und gewaltvollen Übergriffe auf Geflüchtete, die zivilgesellschaftliche Solidarität, mit der Geflüchtete an Bahnhöfen, in Vereinen und Nachbarschaften Willkommen geheißen werden, die kleinen und großen Gesten privater Flüchtlingshilfe – all dies sind wichtige Signale gegen rassistische Hetze und Abschreckungspolitik. Der Flüchtlingshilfediskurs bleibt dennoch ambivalent und lässt sich aktuell an mindestens drei Fragen diskutieren: Wann verfehlen Positionierungen ‚gegen Rechts‘ das Ziel, rassistische Verhältnisse in der Gesellschaft aufzubrechen? Wann läuft das private Engagement im Flüchtlingsbereich Gefahr, politisches Handeln zu ersetzen? Und welche Schwierigkeiten gehen mit der Konjunktur des ‚Helfer-Wirs‘ einher? Eine Gratwanderung.
Dies ist der vierte Artikel unseres Blogfokus zu Flucht und Migration. Seit einigen Jahren ist ein Anstieg von Feldforschungsprojekten in den Sozialwissenschaften in Deutschland zu verzeichnen. Doch wie finden solche Projekte statt? Werden Flüchtlinge zu reinen Gegenständen der Untersuchungen oder können sie in der Forschung involviert werden?
Dies ist der achte Artikel unseres Blogfokus „Salafismus in Deutschland“.
Die salafistische Propaganda kultiviert ein dichotomisches Weltbild, in dem den Muslimen die Rolle des kollektiven Opfers westlicher Expansionsgelüste zufällt. Die historischen Fakten, die dies untermauern sollen, werden jedoch arg strapaziert und sehr einseitig interpretiert. Die Realität ist sehr viel komplexer, als die salafistische Schwarz-Weiß-Malerei der Öffentlichkeit weismachen will...
Teil VIII unserer Serie zum “Islamischen Staat”: "Blogforum 'Kalifat des Terrors: Interdisziplinäre Perspektiven auf den Islamischen Staat".
Die Kurden feiern in diesen Tagen den Sieg über den Islamischen Staat in Kobane. Die Hauptstadt des Distrikts Ain al-Arab im Gouvernement Aleppo in Syrien liegt nahe der syrisch-türkischen Grenze. Seit Anfang 2014 ist Ain al-Arab Zentrum eines der drei selbstverwalteten Kantone Rojavas. Diese Kantone stehen unter der Kontrolle der kurdischen “Partei der Demokratischen Union” (PYD) und ihrer Verbündeten. Die PYD ist eine Schwesterpartei der PKK, sie erkennt Abdullah Öcalan als ideologischen Führer an...
This thesis develops a conceptual framework for a better understanding of the impact of slow-onset climate and environmental changes on human migration in developing countries. Its regional focus is on the West African Sahel, where the majority of the population depends on agriculture and thus is highly vulnerable to environmental changes. Migration from fragile environments is predominantly considered one of several household strategies to adapt to and minimise the risk of environmental stress. Based on qualitative and quantitative data from two selected rural study areas, Bandiagara in Mali and Linguère in Senegal, this thesis analyses the drivers of migration from the two areas.
The findings illustrate that, even though people highly depend on the natural environment, migration motives are manifold and that migration often is not a household strategy to cope with environmental changes. Although environmental conditions shape migration in the region and the migrants’ support is crucial for most households, environmental stress plays a relatively small role as a driver of migration - at least in Mali, where it is considerably less important than in Senegal. On the contrary, migration is often driven by better opportunities elsewhere rather than by livelihood stressors in the home area. Particularly the migration of young people is often an individual rather than a household decision and influenced by individual aspirations, such as aspirations for consumer goods or a better future, rather than by environmental stress.
This thesis claims that research should consider people’s capabilities to migrate or to stay as well as their individual aspirations and preferences - in addition to the household’s needs and the opportunities elsewhere. This is important in order to explain why some people stay in and others migrate from an area affected by environmental stress, though living under similar conditions. Depending on people’s capabilities to choose freely between staying and migrating and their preferences and aspirations for one or the other activity, people can either be “voluntary migrants”, “voluntary non-migrants”, “forced migrants” or “trapped people”.
Moreover, it is important to consider social trends and transformation processes in the analysis of the linkages between environment change and migration. Higher education levels and aspirations to a “modern” lifestyle among young people, for instance, might decrease the impact of environmental factors on migration, despite worsening environmental conditions.