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During fieldwork, anthropologists are given many names that point to their intersectional placement regarding race, class, gender, nationality, and religion. Yet, careful consideration of vernacular forms of designation reveals that such generalizing categories do not always reflect the ways in which people are named and positioned in a given context. While acknowledging the relevance of intersectionality, this paper discusses the relationship between naming and social positionality through a comparative consideration of names employed to designate Dulley in Angola and Santos in Senegal. It explores how these designators, ascribed to the researchers by their interlocutors, contextually identify their positionality. Through concrete examples, it shows how this process of emplacement can both enable and restrict one's possibilities of action and experience.
Highlights
• We present a novel alternative to the die-in-the-cup experiment.
• Participants’ payoffs depend on their reported mothers’ birthdays.
• We find that subjects lied to obtain real monetary payoffs.
• The extent of lying is small and insensitive to several design variations.
Abstract
We ask a representative sample of German household decision-makers to enter their mother's birthday, with potential payments depending on the month and the day they state. Thus, we create an incentive to lie. Compared to the die-under-the-cup experiment, our alternative has a lower probability that the income-maximizing outcome is true. Furthermore, it is better suited for online surveys and samples in which gambling is socially stigmatized. We conduct different variations of this game to crystalize design recommendations for researchers interested in our tool. Participants lied to receive higher payoffs, but only with real monetary incentives and only to a relatively small extent. Our results are largely insensitive to several design elements that we vary, such as the probability of being paid and the magnitude of the payoffs.
Does political conflict with another country influence domestic consumers' daily consumption choices? We exploit the volatile US-China relations in 2018 and 2019 to analyze whether US consumers reduce their visits to Chinese restaurants when bilateral relations deteriorate. We measure the degree of political conflict through negativity in media reports and rely on smartphone location data to measure daily visits to over 190,000 US restaurants. A deterioration in US-China relations induces a significant decline in visits not only to Chinese but also to other foreign ethnic restaurants, while visits to typical American restaurants increase. We identify consumers' age, race, and cultural openness to moderate the strength of this ethnocentric effect.
The 2011 Arab Spring marked the opening of the Central Mediterranean Route for irregular border crossings between Libya and Italy, which produced heterogeneous reductions of bilateral smuggling distances between country pairs in the Mediterranean region. We exploit this source of spatial and temporal variation in bilateral distance along land and sea routes to estimate the elasticity of irregular migration intentions for African and Near East countries. We estimate an elasticity of migration intentions to smuggling distances exceeding −3, mainly driven by countries with weak rule of law and high internet penetration. Our findings are consistent across irregular migration measures both at the aggregate and individual levels. We show that irregular migration elasticity is higher for youth, relatively skilled individuals and those with an informative advantage (having a social network abroad or a mobile phone).
Starting from the editorial committee's proposal concerning strategies for the recognition of Global South researches, in this letter I indicate a number of broader impasses related to neoliberal academia in a context in which ecological crisis emerges as a major crisis of capital. To do so, I resort to concepts drawn from feminist, decolonial, and post-structuralist literature and bring them into dialogue with a Marxist framework of analysis.
Die ethnografische Feldstudie untersucht die Lebenswege von jungen muslimischen Männern, die in einer armutsbetroffenen und stigmatisierten Hochhaussiedlung in der urbanen Peripherie aufwachsen. Sie vergleicht die Lebenswege derjenigen, die ein Hochschulstudium aufnehmen (college boys) mit der Gruppe derjenigen, die sich in der informellen Ökonomie der 'Straße' mit dem Drogenhandel als wichtigstem Zweig betätigen (corner boys). Die Lebensverläufe der jungen Männer, deren Familien meist im Zuge der Anwerbemigration ab den 1960er Jahren aus Marokko oder aus der Türkei eingewandert sind, werden anhand der Lebensverlaufstheorie (life course theory) von Glen Elder und Janet Giele erklärt. Die ethnografischen Beschreibungen werden methodisch um biografische Interviews mit college boys und corner boys und um Expertinneninterviews mit Fachleuten aus Organisationen wie Kitas, Schulen oder einer Moschee ergänzt. Die ethnografischen Beobachtungen werden auch ins Verhältnis zu Befunden aus der interdisziplinären sozialwissenschaftlichen Literatur gesetzt, die wiederum mit den in der Studie erhobenen und sehr persönlichen Lebensgeschichten von corner boys und college boys kombiniert werden. Der Forscher hatte während der Feldarbeit eine Doppelrolle, da er nicht nur als Ethnograf tätig war, sondern auch für die Stadt als Streetworker bzw. Sozialarbeiter in der Hochhaussiedlung beschäftigt war. Insofern gibt die Feldstudie auch einen Einblick in die staatlichen Unterstützungssysteme der Sozialen Arbeit.
Im Ergebnis entsteht die Geschichte eines sozialräumlich segregierten Milieus seit der Migration der Großeltern nach Deutschland. Sowohl für college boys als auch für corner boys dient die harte Lohnarbeit ihrer Eltern und Großeltern als negative Kontrastfolie. College boys streben nach beruflichem Erfolg und Anerkennung durch Bildungsabschlüsse. Corner boys hingegen leisten Widerstand gegen die Arbeitsethik und andere dominante Normen und wenden sich von der Lohnarbeit im Allgemeinen ab. In den Lebensverläufen von college boys wirken bestimmte Schutzfaktoren, die ihnen einen Bildungsaufstieg trotz armutsgeprägter Lebensverhältnisse ermöglichen. Zu diesen Schutzfaktoren zählen ein stabiler Familienkontext mit engen Bindungen, die Organisation eines strukturierten Alltags in Kindheit und Jugend mit Aktivitäten wie Nachhilfe und Sportvereinen und der praktizierte Islam mit seiner engen Verbindung von Glaube, Bildung und Abstinenz.
Durch die Arbeit entsteht ein Perspektivwechsel auf Hochhaussiedlungen der untersuchten Art. Statt der üblichen symbolischen Abwertung erscheinen sie durch die beschriebenen intergenerationalen Bildungsaufstiege als Orte mit besonders hoher sozialer Mobilität. Auf der anderen Seite wird mit den corner boys aber auch eine Gruppe beschrieben, in der sich Prekarität aufgrund von Ausgrenzungserfahrungen und einer anschließenden Resignation verfestigt hat. Die college boys bekommen Raum zur Entfaltung, während die corner boys metaphorisch gesprochen im Raum der Hochhaussiedlung gefangen bleiben. Die Faktoren, die diesen Unterschied erklären, werden in der Arbeit beleuchtet.
Animal agriculture is responsible for at least 16.5% of global yearly CO2e (carbon dioxide equivalent) emissions (Twine 2021: 3) and thus partially causal for the corresponding climate change, and its disastrous consequences for millions (Romanello et al. 2023: 1-2). At the same time, animal agriculture restricts and damages the bodily autonomy of animals regularly (Hampton et al. 2021: 28) which could be unethical depending on the underlying ethical theory. The policy option of veganism by law is, nevertheless, rarely considered. The definitions of veganism range from an individual ethic of the abstention from consuming animal products to a political philosophy calling for the abolition of animal agriculture (Mancilla 2016: 1-3). Because veganism through the cessation of animal agriculture could be the policy solution to the aforementioned issues concerning the rights of present and future generations affected by climate change and the rights of animals, I explore arguments for and against the implementation of veganism by law.
Although a veganized agriculture would provide 52% of the required emission reductions for the 2°C target of the Paris climate accord (Eisen and Brown 2022: 6), and could allow for greater animal welfare, current policies of many governments promote the opposite. For example, 82% of the subsidies of the European Union’s Common Agricultural Policy are routed towards the production of animal products and animal feed (Kortleve et al. 2024: 1-2). Moreover, for American adults the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (2020: 96) promotes the consumption of 720ml of cow milk or other dairy per day and recommends a protein intake through meat and eggs between 652 g and 936 g per week.
In this bachelor thesis I outline the current state of animal agriculture, its emissions and the associated harm towards animals and humans. The empirical findings are dissected ethically with a consequentialist approach and a deontological approach. The ethical analysis concerning the decisions of individuals is then converted into a political philosophy regarding the duties of states towards present and future generations and animals including corresponding policy implications.
The normative argument is mainly based on the example of industrialized animal agricul-ture, the area where most of the interaction between animals and humans occurs. Nevertheless, other sectors where animals are used for human consumption or entertainment are discussed in less detail, in order to analyze the arguments for veganism by law.
In short, using the recommended political argument structure of Abel et al. (2021: 6) the following hypothesis acts as the basis for the political and philosophical discussion and is revised where necessary:
Moral claims: The state should protect present and future generations and animal rights.
Empirical claims: Animal agriculture is a major contributor to climate change and its corresponding effects and violates the wellbeing of animals regularly.
Conclusion: The state should enforce veganism by law.
Highlights
• Investigates the effect of a nearly fare-free public transport ticket.
• In-depth analysis of the 9-Euro-Ticket using qualitative empirical research.
• Low-income people's mobility and social participation benefits from affordable PT.
• This study reveals six main findings of interest for policy and practice.
From June to August 2022, the financial barrier to public transport use almost completely disappeared in Germany due to the 9-Euro-Ticket. It enabled anyone with access to public transport infrastructure across Germany to use public transport for 9 euros per person per month. As this completely changed the conditions for public transport use, especially for low-income households with children, the following research questions arise: (1) what effect does the 9-Euro-Ticket have on the travel practices and social participation of low-income households with children? (2) how and by what were the travel practices shaped by the 9-Euro-Ticket? and (3) what happened to the interviewees’ travel practices after the measure expired? To answer these questions, twelve qualitative interviews were conducted with low-income households with children in the Hanover region.
This study found that the 9-Euro-Ticket removed the financial constraint of public transport use, changed the travel practices of most interviewees and had a wide range of positive meanings. The respondents associate the 9-Euro-Ticket with freedom, joy at being able to offer their children something, along with financial and psychological relief. Additionally, the 9-Euro-Ticket enabled the interviewees to engage in leisure activities, to visit relatives, contributed to integration, had an empowering effect, especially for women and children, and thus represents a measure to increase social participation. After the three months of the 9-Euro-Ticket, financing public transport use challenges low-income households again and financial constraints prevent them from reaching certain places and engaging in out-of-home activities.
How can older adults participate equally in digitisation processes across Europe, and what inclusive research strategies are needed? This Zine summarizes findings from a “Research Innovation Lab on Ageing in a Digital Age”, funded by the VolkswagenStiftung, aiming to bring together 29 docs and postdocs anchored in 26 different disciplines coming from 11 countries, at all stages of their work, to address cutting edge questions relating to ageing in a digital age. Five groups worked together over five days in Frankfurt, Germany, in July 2023 in a creative and interactive hackathon, specific to developing non-technical solutions to social issues of this topic. Moreover, four distinguished experts presented keynote speeches and proposals from various conceptual, methodological and empirical perspectives.
ISOE-Newsletter Nr. 3/2024
(2024)
Ein Landkreis macht’s vor: So geht guter Umgang mit Grundwasser +++ Wie Kommunen nachhaltige Ernährung mit planetarer Gesundheit verbinden und fördern können +++ Ökosysteme im Klimawandel: Die Bedeutung von sozial-ökologischen Kipppunkten für die Savannen Namibias +++ Kunst erfahren – Biodiversität wertschätzen? Tanzperformance zur Bedeutung von Insekten in der Stadt +++ Kunststoffe in Lebensmittelverpackungen reduzieren +++ Aktuelle Beiträge im ISOE Blog +++ Aus dem ISOE +++ Das ISOE in den Medien +++ Termine +++ Publikationen
ISOE-Newsletter Nr. 1/2024
(2024)
Wissenschaftsfreiheit: Für Demokratie und Vielfalt – gegen Rechtsextremismus +++ Leseempfehlung: Wie gelangt unser Wissen aus der Forschung an die richtigen Stellen? Erfolgsfaktoren für gelingenden Wissenstransfer +++ ISOE-Lecture mit Lisen Schultz an der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt: Soziale Ökologie für Entscheidungsträger*innen +++ Transdisziplinäre Forschung: ISOE startet Runde Tische zu Waldkonflikten +++ Forschungsprojekt CapTain Rain: Wie gelingt die Anpassung an Starkregen? Innovative Lösungen in Jordanien +++ Aktuelle Beiträge im ISOE Blog +++ Aus dem ISOE +++ Das ISOE in den Medien +++ Termine +++ Publikationen
ISOE-Newsletter Nr. 2/2024
(2024)
Wissenschaftskommunikation zu Risiken von Ewigkeitschemikalien +++ Gemeinsam statt gegeneinander: Waldkonflikte konstruktiv lösen +++ Künstlerische Forschung: Projektstipendium „Insectopolis“ vergeben +++ Sommersemester 2024: Soziale Ökologie und Transdisziplinarität in der Lehre +++ Ökologische Kipppunkte in der mongolischen Steppe erkennen und vermeiden +++ Aktuelle Beiträge im ISOE Blog +++ Aus dem ISOE +++ Das ISOE in den Medien +++ Termine +++ Publikationen
The Russian invasion of Ukraine illustrates the increasingly judicialized nature of international relations and geopolitics. By viewing aspects of the invasion as illegal – in particular through the identification of war crimes and crimes against humanity – the international response draws attention to the political geographies of international criminal investigation. Human rights groups, academics, journalists, and open-source forensic investigations have joined forces to collect, evaluate and analyze the violent nature of war crimes. While similar shifts in evidence gathering have been observed in the case of the Bosnia-Herzegovina war and the Assad regime's violence against Syrian citizens, the use of evidence-gathering technologies and evidence-securing institutions in the case of Ukraine is distinctive. In this scholarly intervention we seek to illustrate the intimate geopolitics of evidence gathering by zooming in on two different elements that shape evidential procedures in Ukraine: i) the blurring of civilian/military boundaries; and ii) the challenges of access. By evaluating what is new and what is similar to previous war sites, we suggest that these two areas reflect a geopolitics of evidence gathering, highlighting its global-local intimacies. Both these areas are well positioned to foster new research on the (geo)legal nature of war crimes in political geography and beyond.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine illustrates the increasingly judicialized nature of international relations and geopolitics. By viewing aspects of the invasion as illegal – in particular through the identification of war crimes and crimes against humanity – the international response draws attention to the political geographies of international criminal investigation. Human rights groups, academics, journalists, and open-source forensic investigations have joined forces to collect, evaluate and analyze the violent nature of war crimes. While similar shifts in evidence gathering have been observed in the case of the Bosnia-Herzegovina war and the Assad regime's violence against Syrian citizens, the use of evidence-gathering technologies and evidence-securing institutions in the case of Ukraine is distinctive. In this scholarly intervention we seek to illustrate the intimate geopolitics of evidence gathering by zooming in on two different elements that shape evidential procedures in Ukraine: i) the blurring of civilian/military boundaries; and ii) the challenges of access. By evaluating what is new and what is similar to previous war sites, we suggest that these two areas reflect a geopolitics of evidence gathering, highlighting its global-local intimacies. Both these areas are well positioned to foster new research on the (geo)legal nature of war crimes in political geography and beyond.
Das partizipative Forschungsprojekt "Allein aber vernetzt? Digitale (Un)gleichheiten und soziale Netzwerke bei alleinlebenden Menschen" beschäftigte sich von 2021-2024 mit Alleinlebenden im Alter, ihren Beziehungsnetzwerken und der Frage welche Rolle digitale Geräte und die Digitalisierung aller Lebensbereiche in diesem Zusammenhang spielen. Durch die Zusammenarbeit mit einer Gruppe von Ko-Forschenden in Frankfurt und Egelsbach stand die Perspektive der Gruppe im Mittelpunkt.
Im vorliegenden White Paper wird das Projekt sowie zentrale Ergebnisse und die erarbeiteten Handlungsempfehlungen der deutschen Teilstudie vorgestellt. Diese wurde vom BMBF gefördert und ist Teil des europäischen Verbundprojektes "EQualCare - Alone but connected? Digital (in)equalities in care work and generational relationships among older people living alone" der Joint Programming Initiative (JPI) “More Years Better Lives”.
Soziodizee des Kapitalismus
(2024)
Mitigating climate change necessitates global cooperation, yet global data on individuals’ willingness to act remain scarce. In this study, we conducted a representative survey across 125 countries, interviewing nearly 130,000 individuals. Our findings reveal widespread support for climate action. Notably, 69% of the global population expresses a willingness to contribute 1% of their personal income, 86% endorse pro-climate social norms and 89% demand intensified political action. Countries facing heightened vulnerability to climate change show a particularly high willingness to contribute. Despite these encouraging statistics, we document that the world is in a state of pluralistic ignorance, wherein individuals around the globe systematically underestimate the willingness of their fellow citizens to act. This perception gap, combined with individuals showing conditionally cooperative behaviour, poses challenges to further climate action. Therefore, raising awareness about the broad global support for climate action becomes critically important in promoting a unified response to climate change.