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Academics in a Century of Displacement : The Global History and Politics of Protecting Endangered Scholars
Academics in a Century of Displacement : The Global History and Politics of Protecting Endangered Scholars
Autore Dakhli Leyla
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (387 pages)
Disciplina 304.8
Altri autori (Persone) LaborierPascale
WolffFrank
Collana Migrationsgesellschaften Series
ISBN 3-658-43540-2
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Contents -- Contributors -- Introduction -- Endangered Scholars: Globalizing the Long History of an Emergent Category. Introduction -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Toward Chronology Without Linearity -- 2.1 Western Philanthropic Universalism and Academic Internationalization in the Interwar Period -- 2.2 Relief for Persecuted Scholars in the 1930s -- 2.3 From Postwar Displacement to Cold War Migration -- 2.4 The Postcolonial World and the Emergence of the Global South -- 2.5 International Advocacy Initiatives: From Spontaneous Relief Funds to Universal Programs -- 3 Examining Protection and Endangerment -- References -- Discovering the Endangered Scholar -- An Exceptional Welcome: The Russian Academic Exile in Prague (1920-1939)-State Policy and Experiences -- 1 Historical and Political Parameters of the Russian Action -- 2 Russian Action and the Diversity of Its Achievements -- 3 The Ephemeral Magnitude of the Russian Action -- References -- Persecuted Scholars as Employees? German-Speaking Scholars at Risk and the Global History of Higher Education -- 1 The Modern University, Academic Labor Relations, and Professional Mobility -- 2 Displacement and the Professional World of Universities: The Case of Republican Turkey -- 3 Placement Policies and Procedures: The Case of Latin America -- 4 Struggle Over Competence: Placement Policies at the Carnegie Corporation -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Saved by the Seminary: German Refugee Rabbis' Careers During and After the Holocaust-A Transnational Perspective -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Modern Judaism and a New Rabbinate -- 2.1 Historic Connections -- 3 Flight and Expulsion of Wissenschaft des Judentums, of Rabbinical Students and the Communal Rabbinate -- 3.1 A Unique Rescue Effort by Their American Peers -- 4 Professional Challenges After Immigration -- 4.1 The "Last Generation" of the German Rabbinate.
4.2 Refugee Returns -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Refuge in Research: Walter Ruben's Exile and Internment in Turkey -- 1 The Internment of German Nationals -- 1.1 Producing a Life in Exile -- 1.2 Religion and Relief -- 2 Walter Ruben: An Indologist in Ankara -- 2.1 Serving the Republic of Turkey -- 2.2 Walter Ruben in Kırşehir -- 3 Life After Exile -- 4 Conclusion: Scholarship in Exile -- References -- Toward Categorization -- 'Desire Is Born Out of Collapse': The Paradoxical Consequences of Forced Migrations (Argentina, 1958-2015) -- 1 De-institutionalization, Discontinuous State Policies, and Forced Migrations -- 1.1 Groups of Agents by Age (as of 2015) -- 2 Forced Internationalization: Paradoxical Consequences -- 3 Indicators, Case Studies, and a Future Conceptual Construction -- References -- Overlapping Categories? Some Thoughts from the French Office for the Protection of Refugees and Stateless Persons (Ofpra) Archive -- 1 Overlapping Categories -- 1.1 Refugees as Elites in Exile -- 1.2 Scientists as Targets of Government Persecution in Their Countries of Origin -- 2 Categories in Tension -- 2.1 Difficulties of Reclassification -- 2.2 Scientists in Danger but Not Refugees -- 3 Conclusion -- References -- The Forced Migrations of Scholars During the Uruguayan Dictatorship: Refuge and Academic Labor Market Overlap? -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Conditions for Carrying Out a Survey on a Population with Heterogeneous Properties -- 2.1 Temporalities of Academic Migrations and Their Delimitations -- 2.2 Overlapping Dangers -- 2.3 Methodological Issues Inherent to Research on Forced Academic Migrations -- 3 The Impact of Exile on the Trajectories of Highly Qualified Migrants in the Context of Dictatorship -- 3.1 An Interweaving of Exiles and International Influences: Disparity Between Disciplines.
3.2 Friendships and New Family Structures as Bulwarks Against Career Hindrances -- 4 Democratic Academic Design Invented in Exile -- 5 Experimental Sciences Versus Human and Social Sciences? -- 5.1 A Lesser Known Political Narrative in Terms of Reintegration in Uruguay -- 6 Concluding Remarks -- References -- A Support Network for Endangered Scholars during the Late Cold War. The Committee of Mathematicians and a Broad Human Rights Coalition in France -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Cause Entrepreneurs: The French Initiators of the CM -- 3 A Broader Activist Front -- 4 Genealogies of Principles and Forms of Political Action -- 5 "Allied" Professional Groups: Committed Psychiatrists and Cause Lawyers -- 6 Competition, Confrontation, Cooperation -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- "L'intelligence qu'on assassine": Endangered Intellectual as a Contested Category During the Algerian Civil War -- 1 A "War Against Culture" -- 2 The CISIA: Welcoming Intelligence and Francophonie? -- 3 Over-Selection of the "Pieds-gris" -- 4 Being Welcomed as an Endangered Intellectual -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Contemporary Challenges -- Are African Scholars at Risk? The Invisibility of Africans in Relief Policies for Endangered Academics -- 1 Individual Situations of Endangerment and Micro-Rescue Initiatives Matter: The Case of Cameroon -- 1.1 Insidious Risks and Micro-Rescue Networks: From Jean-Marc Ela to Carlson Anyangwe -- 1.2 The International Recognition of Cameroon as Risky for Scholars: Lessons from the Case of Patrice Nganang -- 2 The Place of Danger Matters: The Recent Rise of African Scholars in Risk Categories -- 2.1 A Path Dependency of Initial Relief Policies and the Categorization of Academic Risks -- 2.2 Categorizing Academic Endangerment in Post-Cold War Africa: A Disjunction in Endogenous and Exogenous Qualification -- 3 Conclusion -- References.
Constraints on Academic Freedom in the People's Republic of China: A Transnational Issue -- 1 The Ubiquitous Presence of the Community Party in Chinese Universities -- 2 Universities in China Under Xi Jinping: Ideological Tightening and Repression -- 3 Attacks on Academic Freedom Beyond China's Borders -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Intellectuals in Exile: Toward a Comparative Approach to the Conditions of Creativity and Unequal Opportunities -- 1 Chances of Integration: Symbolic and Social Capital -- 2 Turning Points and Effects of Exile: Politicization, Reflexivity, Cultural Mediation -- 3 Conclusion -- References -- Exiled Scholars and Legal Insecurity in Germany: An Auto-Ethnographic Account -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Topographies of Legal Insecurity for Exiled Scholars: Navigating the Categories of German Migration Law -- 3 Administrative Discretion Enhances Legal Insecurity -- 4 Surviving the Legal Restrictions of Residence, Work, and Mobility -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Intellectuals in Exile and Endangered Scholars: Evolving Categories in the Contemporary Middle East -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Forced into Exile -- 2.1 A Journey Among Many Others: Sadiq Jalal al-Azm -- 2.2 The Long History of Mid-Eastern Intellectual Displacement and Its Echoes -- 2.3 Who Is an Arab Scholar and What Kind of Risk Are They Facing Today? -- 2.4 Three Voices from the Middle East in Exile -- 3 Amr Hamzawy: Exile (2017) -- 4 Rana Issa: Chronicles of a Mothalovin' Penslayer (2020) -- 5 Nisrine al-Zahre: Running with Your Shoelaces Undone: Fragments from the Life of an Academic Exile (April 2021) -- 5.1 An Invisible Joker -- 5.2 Becoming an Unbearable Reflection of One's Contemporaries -- 5.3 Allodoxia -- 5.4 Setting Up Projects -- 5.5 Disqualification -- 5.6 Complaining -- References.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910845484303321
Dakhli Leyla  
Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Akzeptanzkommunikation in der Energie- und Rohstoffwirtschaft : Chancen und Grenzen Für Kleine und Mittlere Unternehmen Zur Verbesserung des Akzeptanzniveaus Am Beispiel des Freistaats Sachsen
Akzeptanzkommunikation in der Energie- und Rohstoffwirtschaft : Chancen und Grenzen Für Kleine und Mittlere Unternehmen Zur Verbesserung des Akzeptanzniveaus Am Beispiel des Freistaats Sachsen
Autore Walter Stefanie
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2023
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (254 pages)
ISBN 3-658-40798-0
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione ger
Record Nr. UNINA-9910725927403321
Walter Stefanie  
Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2023
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Amok at Schools : Prevention, Intervention and Aftercare in School Shootings
Amok at Schools : Prevention, Intervention and Aftercare in School Shootings
Autore Böhmer Matthias
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (258 pages)
Disciplina 371.782
ISBN 3-658-38859-5
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910831005103321
Böhmer Matthias  
Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Breaking Free from the Chains of Role Ascriptions : From Female Powerlessness to Powerful Solutions in Career, Partnership and Family
Breaking Free from the Chains of Role Ascriptions : From Female Powerlessness to Powerful Solutions in Career, Partnership and Family
Autore Lackner Martina
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (184 pages)
ISBN 3-658-43839-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Foreword -- Greetings from Supporters -- Dear Readers! -- Acknowledgment -- Contents -- About the Author -- The Commentators -- 1 On the Power and Roles of Men and Women -- Abstract -- 2 Where Do We Come from and What Does that Do to Us? -- Abstract -- 2.1 Transgenerational Transmission -- 2.2 Development of Self-Worth and Ego-Strength -- 2.3 The Importance of the Family of Origin -- Literature -- 3 The Power of Our Past and Origin -- Abstract -- 3.1 Dysfunctional Family Constellations -- 3.1.1 Unrelated Parents -- 3.1.2 Dominant father and adapted mother -- 3.1.3 Dominant Mother and Self-Insecure Father -- 3.1.4 Competing Parents -- 3.1.5 Insecure and Fearful Parents -- 3.2 Functional Family Constellations -- Literature -- 4 When Hormones Take the Lead -- Abstract -- Literature -- 5 The Balancing Act between Partnership, Motherhood, and Career -- Abstract -- 5.1 Power at First Sight? -- 5.2 Partnerships-from Career Supporters to Career Brakes -- 5.2.1 The Classic: Side by Side with the "Yes-but" Man -- 5.2.2 We are definitely not a team: Wrong partner choice and competitive relationships -- 5.2.3 The Ideal Case: "Honey, I'm in!"-The Couple as a Team -- 5.3 Excursus: Partner Search and Motherhood -- 5.3.1 Partner Search on an Equal Footing -- 5.3.2 Motherhood and the Traps and Illusions of Women -- 5.4 Excursion: Large Family Instead of Small Family -- 5.5 Women and Their Side Stages: Girlfriend, Mother, Mother-in-law, and Network Partners -- Literature -- 6 Leadership in Conflict-Discrepancy between Desire and Reality -- Abstract -- 6.1 High demand and blind spot-this is how women lead -- 6.2 Covert or Secret Leadership -- 6.2.1 The Secret Boss -- 6.2.2 Leading Pleasurably in Secret -- 6.3 The Denied Leadership Claim -- 6.4 Renouncing Leadership as a Protective Measure -- Literature.
7 Power and Powerlessness: The Experienced Leadership -- Abstract -- 7.1 And Daily Greet Dogma, Dominance and Dismantling -- 7.2 Career Break Motherhood? -- 7.3 Backgrounds for the Devaluation of Mothers by Superiors -- 7.4 Lack of Personal Responsibility and Its Consequences -- Literature -- 8 Principles of Violence in German Companies -- Abstract -- 8.1 Our Collective Heritage -- 8.2 The Fear of Leadership of Competent Women -- 8.3 The Consequence: Women Do Not Reach Their Full Power -- 8.4 Women's Blind Spots as an Indication of Fear-Violence Spirals -- 8.5 Burying the Hatchet -- 8.6 The Brake Block Fear -- Literature -- 9 Tools and Strategies for Dealing with Powerfully Aggressive People -- Abstract -- 9.1 How Do I Extricate Myself from Power-Impotence Relationships? -- 9.2 Exiting Power-Impotence Spirals -- 10 Conclusion -- Addendum -- Glossary -- Book Recommendations.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910847083803321
Lackner Martina  
Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Careful Interventions : On Care and Participation in Design for Migration and Arrival
Careful Interventions : On Care and Participation in Design for Migration and Arrival
Autore Krüger Maximilian
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (243 pages)
Disciplina 304.8
ISBN 3-658-44009-0
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Abstract -- List of Publications -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Part I Foundations -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Motivation for This Work -- 1.2 Main Contribution of the Dissertation -- 2 Related Work -- 2.1 Participation and Design -- 2.1.1 Participatory Design -- 2.1.2 Critical Perspectives on Participation (in Design) -- 2.2 HCI and Migration -- 2.3 The Notion of Care -- 2.3.1 Conceptualisations of Care -- 3 Context and Background -- 3.1 The Project ``nett.werkzeug'' -- 3.2 The Applications -- 3.2.1 nett.language -- 3.2.2 nett.map -- 3.2.3 nett.work -- 3.2.4 nett.doc -- 3.2.5 Other Tools -- 4 Methodology -- 4.1 Participatory Design -- 4.2 Data Collection, Analysis and Limitations -- 4.2.1 Data Collection -- 4.2.2 Data Analysis -- 4.2.3 Limitations of `Methods' -- 4.3 Examining my Position -- Part II Main Part -- 5 Finding Language Classes: Designing a Digital Language Wizard with Refugees and Migrants -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Related Work -- 5.2.1 Who is a Refugee and Who is a Migrant? and Why does it (not) Matter? -- 5.2.2 Refugees and ICT: Technology Support for the General Challenges of Resettlement -- 5.2.3 Language Learning and ICT: Technology Support for Overcoming Language Barriers -- 5.3 Method -- 5.3.1 Setting -- 5.3.2 General Project Background -- 5.4 Findings -- 5.4.1 Regulation -- 5.4.2 Orientation -- 5.4.3 Temporality -- 5.4.4 Diversity -- 5.5 Wizard Design -- 5.5.1 Wizard Flow -- 5.5.2 Low-threshold Solution -- 5.6 Evaluation: Lessons and Limitations -- 5.6.1 Evaluation Results -- 5.6.2 Integration with Other Systems -- 5.6.3 Designing with Diverse Stakeholders -- 5.6.4 Sustainability of the Tool -- 5.7 Conclusion -- 6 It Takes More Than One Hand to Clap: On the Role of `Care' in Maintaining Design Results -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Related Works -- 6.2.1 Sustainability.
6.2.2 Sustaining and Maintaining Design Results -- 6.2.3 HCI & -- Migration -- 6.3 Background and Methods -- 6.3.1 Context -- 6.3.2 Methods -- 6.4 Findings -- 6.4.1 The Foundation: Underlying Motivations -- 6.4.2 Complex Social Constellations -- 6.4.3 Technological Choices and Skillbuilding -- 6.5 Discussion -- 6.5.1 Expanding Care -- 6.5.2 Expanding Networks -- 6.5.3 Managing the Research Agenda -- 6.6 Conclusion -- 7 ``What is the Topic of the Group, Please?'' On Migration, Care and the Challenges of Participation in Design -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Related Work -- 7.2.1 Co-design, Participation and its Problems -- 7.2.2 ICT & -- Migration -- 7.2.3 Notions of Care in HCI -- 7.3 Setting & -- Methodology -- 7.3.1 Setting -- 7.3.2 Outcome and Participants -- 7.3.3 Methodology -- 7.3.4 Positionality -- 7.3.5 Project Chronology -- 7.4 Findings -- 7.4.1 Motive -- 7.4.2 Power -- 7.4.3 Conflict -- 7.4.4 Culture -- 7.5 Discussion -- 7.6 Conclusion and Lessons for Participatory Practitioners -- 8 Adverse Complicities-On the Difficulties of Challenging the Status Quo in Migration Research -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Background and Positionalities -- 8.2.1 Max Krüger -- 8.2.2 Ana María Bustamante Duarte -- 8.2.3 Anne Weibert -- 8.3 The Limits -- 8.3.1 The Role of Funding -- 8.3.2 The Role of the Researcher and Our Collaborators -- 8.4 Conclusion: Necessary Reflections -- 9 On Activism and Academia-Reflecting Together and Sharing Experiences Among Critical Friends -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Background and Related Work -- 9.2.1 Epistemological Encounters: what is an Activist Academic? -- 9.2.2 Participatory Paradox: Action-oriented or Activist Research? -- 9.2.3 Activist Academia: Who are we to Talk about how Activism should be Done? -- 9.3 Methods -- 9.4 Reflections from Afar and from within -- 9.4.1 Relations to Collaborators.
9.4.2 Experiencing and Perpetuating Oppression -- 9.4.3 Relations to the Academy: what Counts as Research, what Counts as Knowledge? -- 9.4.4 Activism in the Academy: Changing Everyday Academic Practices -- 9.5 Discussions to Care -- 9.5.1 The Means do not Justify the Ends, they are the Ends -- 9.5.2 Relations Within our Academic Communities -- 9.6 Conclusions -- Part III Lessons Learned -- 10 Discussion -- 10.1 Three Kinds of Actors, Three Kinds of Care -- 10.1.1 Voluntary and Professional Supporters -- 10.1.2 Researchers & -- Designers -- 10.1.3 Precarious Migrants -- 10.2 Care as a Resource: Sustainability & -- Participation -- 10.3 Care as a Problem -- 10.3.1 Problematic Aspects of Care -- 10.3.2 Reflections on nett.werkzeug -- 10.4 What Are We To Do? -- 11 Conclusion and Outlook -- Bibliography.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910847073703321
Krüger Maximilian  
Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Complexity and Entrepreneurship : Complexity Research and Its Implications on Entrepreneurship Processes
Complexity and Entrepreneurship : Complexity Research and Its Implications on Entrepreneurship Processes
Autore Liening Andreas
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (667 pages)
ISBN 9783658440329
9783658440312
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Preface to the Second Edition -- Preface -- Greetings -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 About the Presumption and Limits of Knowledge -- 1.2 Economy and its Subsectors as Complex Systems -- 1.3 Scientific Approaches-Complexonomics -- 1.4 Complexity Science Substantiates Entrepreneurship as an Independent Business Discipline -- 1.5 Objectives and Content-'Run Through' -- 1.5.1 The Fourfold Objective -- 1.5.2 On the Structure and Contents -- 1.6 About the Approach: On Mathematics, Simulations, and the Papillon Spiral -- 1.6.1 About Mathematics -- 1.6.2 About Visualisations and Simulations -- 1.6.3 The Papillon Spiral -- References -- Part I Background and History -- 2 How do we Respond To Complexity?-A (not only) Behavioural Economic Consideration for Entrepreneurs -- 2.1 Crises, Chaos, Opportunities-Demands on our Thinking -- 2.1.1 'Time of Crisis'-'Time of Opportunity'-The World is Becoming More Complex… -- 2.1.2 How Rational is Man? -- 2.2 Behaviour in Simple Situations-Behavioural Anomalies are Observable -- 2.2.1 Anomalies in the Information Process -- 2.2.2 Information Perception -- 2.2.2.1 'Selective Perception'-Selective Perception of Information -- 2.2.2.2 'Availability'-Availability of Information -- 2.2.2.3 'Framing'-Presentation of Information -- 2.2.3 Information Processing -- 2.2.3.1 'Mental Accounting'-Mental Account Management in Information Processing -- 2.2.3.2 'Anchoring'-Anchoring of Information Processing -- 2.2.3.3 'Representativeness'-Representativeness in Information Processing -- 2.2.3.4 'Information-Sources-Effect'-Information Source Effect in Information Processing -- 2.2.4 Information Evaluation -- 2.2.4.1 'Reference-Point'-Reference Point in the Context of Information Evaluation -- 2.2.4.2 'Loss Aversion'-Loss Aversion in Information Evaluation.
2.2.4.3 'Weighting of Probabilities'-Probabilities in Information Evaluation -- 2.2.4.4 'Survivorship Bias'-Bias in Favour of the Survivors -- 2.2.5 Control Behaviour -- 2.2.5.1 Anomalies due to the Need for Control -- 2.2.5.2 'Overconfidence'-Overestimating One's Own Abilities -- 2.2.5.3 'Regret Aversion' -- 2.2.5.4 'Illusion of Control' -- 2.2.5.5 'Home Bias'-Preferring the Familiar -- 2.2.5.6 'Herding'-The J-Pattern -- 2.3 Behaviour in Complex Situations -- 2.3.1 Four Observable Strategies -- 2.3.1.1 'Trial and Error'-Experimentation -- 2.3.1.2 'Fading Out' -- 2.3.1.3 'Rational Behaviour'-Rational Approach -- 2.3.1.4 'Simplicity'-Reduction to Simple Factors -- 2.3.2 The Oil Spot Theory-"Recursive Consequences Spiral Out of Control" -- 2.3.3 Intuition as a Successful Strategy for Coping with Complex Challenges? -- References -- 3 Canvas-From the Mechanistic to the Complex View of the World -- 3.1 A Brief Look into History-About Newtonian Physics and Analogies in Economics -- 3.1.1 A Brief Look into the History of Economics and the Worldview at the Beginning of the Modern Era -- 3.1.1.1 Physiocracy and the Mechanical Man -- 3.1.1.2 The Classical National Economy -- 3.1.1.3 The Neoclassicism and its Image of Man -- 3.1.1.4 The Historical Human Image of Economics: Controversial Receptions of the Entrepreneur -- 3.1.2 About Classical Mechanics and Newtonian Physics-'natura non facit saltus' -- 3.1.2.1 From the Principle of Mimesis to the Modern Understanding of Science (Liening, 1996) -- 3.1.2.2 The "Laplacian Demon" as a Symbol of Determinism -- 3.1.2.3 "Everything is reversible"-Reversibility -- 3.1.2.4 "From a follows b"-(strong) Causality -- 3.1.2.5 Systems are Decomposable-Summativity -- 3.1.3 Analogy between Classical Mechanics and Economics -- 3.1.3.1 The Influence of Classical Mechanics on Economics.
3.1.3.2 An Illustrative Linear, Static Supply-Demand Model: Multicopter Engineers Wanted for a Startup -- 3.1.3.3 The Cobweb Model-Dynamisation of a Linear Supply-Demand Model: "Multicopter engineers wanted for a startup" -- 3.1.3.4 Background Information: Mathematical Considerations on a Linear Cobweb Model -- 3.1.3.5 Philosophical Consideration of the Analogy Formation between Classical Mechanics and Economics-The Danger of Knowledge in the Essential Spell of Technology -- 3.2 The Collapse of the Laplacian Worldview -- 3.2.1 First Doubts… -- 3.2.2 The Weather Forecast and the Butterfly Effect -- 3.3 A Paradigm Shift is Announced-Characteristics of the New Approach -- 3.3.1 Paradigm Shift in Economics -- 3.3.2 Describing the World with Systems and Models-What is a System, What is a Model? -- 3.3.2.1 Historical -- 3.3.2.2 The Concept of System -- 3.3.2.3 Basic Characteristics of Systems -- 3.3.2.4 What are Models? -- 3.4 Modeling and Simulation of Complex Systems -- 3.4.1 Systems Dynamics-The 'new' Language -- 3.4.2 Simulations with Counterintuitive System Behaviour -- 3.4.2.1 Positive Feedback Loops -- 3.4.2.2 Negative Feedback Loops -- 3.4.2.3 Double Feedback Loops -- 3.4.3 System Archetypes-Dealing with Complexity -- 3.4.3.1 Equilibrium Process with Delay -- 3.4.3.2 Limits of Growth -- 3.4.3.3 Problem Shifting -- 3.4.3.4 Eroding Goals -- 3.4.3.5 Escalation -- 3.4.3.6 Success to the Successful -- 3.4.3.7 Tragedy of the Commons -- 3.4.3.8 Error Corrections -- 3.4.3.9 Growth and Underinvestment -- 3.4.4 Why are Simulations so Important? -- 3.4.5 Simulation of a 'Complex System' Using the Example of a Supply-demand Model-"Multicopter Engineers Wanted for a StartUp" -- 3.4.6 First Steps to Understanding Complexity -- 3.4.6.1 On the Irreversibility of Time and Catallaxy -- 3.4.6.2 What does Complexity Mean?-The End of Reductionism?.
3.4.7 Consequences for the Example of the Supply-Demand Model -- 3.5 First Conclusion-Summary of Important Aspects and a Brief Plea for a (Free) Market Economy and the Consideration of Entrepreneurship as a Complex Phenomenon -- 3.5.1 Complexity and Behavioural Economics -- 3.5.2 Complexity, the Laplacian Demon, and Economics -- 3.5.3 Complexity and (Free) Market Economy -- 3.5.4 Complexity and Entrepreneurship -- 3.5.5 Outlook -- References -- Part II Theory and Empiricism-Recent Developments in Complexity Research -- 4 Theory-Theoretical Approaches to Complexity -- 4.1 (Strange) Attractors and Fractals -- 4.1.1 Attractors of All Kinds -- 4.1.1.1 What is a Phase Space? -- 4.1.1.2 What is Meant by an Attractor? -- 4.1.1.3 'Benign' Attractors -- 4.1.1.4 Background Information: The Ratio and the Recurrence-Rational Numbers -- 4.1.1.5 Background Information: Excursion to "Square Root of 2" (Liening, 2005, p. 40 ff.) -- 4.1.1.6 'Strange' or 'Chaotic' Attractors -- 4.1.2 Fractals for Describing Deterministic Chaos -- 4.1.2.1 Self-similarity or Scale Invariance as a Characteristic of a Fractal -- 4.1.2.2 The Tree as an Analogy to the Fractal -- 4.1.2.3 The 'Mandelbrot Set' or: About the Emergence of Self-Similar Structures -- 4.1.2.4 About the Length of a Fractal Edge-'How long is the Coast of Britain'?-Koch Curves and Similar Considerations -- 4.1.2.5 Background Information: Calculation of the Area of the Koch Island -- 4.1.2.6 The Oddity of Fractional Dimensions -- 4.1.2.7 Background Information: (Box-)Dimensions -- 4.2 Bifurcations -- 4.2.1 Bifurcations in Dynamic Systems -- 4.2.1.1 What are Bifurcations? -- 4.2.1.2 The Discovery of Bifurcations -- 4.2.1.3 Bifurcation Scenario Using the Example of the Logistic Function -- 4.2.1.4 Intermittency and Bifurcations -- 4.2.2 Evidence of Erratic Behaviour -- 4.2.2.1 The Li/Yorke Theorem.
4.2.2.2 Lyapunov Exponents -- 4.2.2.3 Background Information: Basic Calculation of the Lyapunov Exponent -- 4.3 Catastrophe Theory -- 4.3.1 René Thom's Theory -- 4.3.1.1 'Catastrophes' from a Scientific Perspective -- 4.3.1.2 About Singularities, Manifolds and Catastrophe Sets -- 4.3.2 Hermann Haken's Criticism -- 4.4 Synergetics-The Theory of Self-Organisation -- 4.4.1 The Basic Idea of Synergetics -- 4.4.1.1 Explaining Self-Organisation Phenomena -- 4.4.1.2 About the Laser -- 4.4.1.3 Swarm Intelligence-The Migration of Birds (Liening & -- Mittelstädt, 2008, pp. 41-43) -- 4.4.2 Interpreting Companies and Innovations Synergistically -- 4.4.2.1 Partial and Total Systems in Synergetics -- 4.4.2.2 The Mathematical Trick: The 'Slaving Principle' -- 4.4.3 Critical Remark -- 4.5 Order and Chaos only in the Computer? About Definitions, Bolzano-Weierstraß and 'Controlling Complexity' -- 4.5.1 'Working definitions' -- 4.5.1.1 The Genesis of the Term 'Chaos'-Sharpening of the Complexity Concept -- 4.5.1.2 Preliminary Interpretation of the Concept of Chaos -- 4.5.1.3 Definitions of Chaos and Complexity -- 4.5.1.4 'Order' as a Counter-concept to 'Chaos'? -- 4.5.2 Does Chaos Only Exist in the Computer? -- 4.5.2.1 Ignis Fatuus?-Does the Computer Generate Chaos? -- 4.5.2.2 The First Argument: Increased Computational Accuracy in Complex Systems Does Not Lead to More Accurate Results -- 4.5.2.3 The Second Argument: The 'Shadow Lemma' -- 4.5.2.4 Third Argument: The 'L-Density Argument' -- 4.5.2.5 Background Information: The Proof of the Purely Algebraic "Butterfly Effect" in the Logistic Equation: The L-Density Argument -- 4.5.3 'Controlling Complexity'-Can Chaos be Controlled? -- 4.5.3.1 Chaotic Systems and Control-A Contradiction? -- 4.5.3.2 A Little Hope-Influence Possibilities in Chaotic Systems.
4.5.3.3 An Alternative (synergetic) Approach: Complexity as an Opportunity.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910872188203321
Liening Andreas  
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Creating the University of the Future : A Global View on Future Skills and Future Higher Education
Creating the University of the Future : A Global View on Future Skills and Future Higher Education
Autore Ehlers Ulf-Daniel
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (634 pages)
Altri autori (Persone) EigbrechtLaura
Collana Zukunft der Hochschulbildung - Future Higher Education Series
ISBN 3-658-42948-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910847393003321
Ehlers Ulf-Daniel  
Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
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Die Datafizierte Schule
Die Datafizierte Schule
Autore Bock Annekatrin
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2023
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (218 pages)
Altri autori (Persone) BreiterAndreas
HartongSigrid
JarkeJuliane
JornitzSieglinde
LangeAngelina
MacgilchristFelicitas
ISBN 3-658-38651-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione ger
Record Nr. UNINA-9910725929003321
Bock Annekatrin  
Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2023
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Datenreport Zivilgesellschaft
Datenreport Zivilgesellschaft
Autore Krimmer Holger
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2019
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (XXIII, 176 S. 2 Abb. in Farbe.)
Disciplina 320.4
Collana Bürgergesellschaft und Demokratie
Soggetto topico Political science
Public policy
Governance and Government
German Politics
Public Policy
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / General
Soggetto non controllato Political science
ISBN 3-658-22958-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione ger
Nota di contenuto Summary: Zivilgesellschaft im Überblick -- Organisierte Zivilgesellschaft -- Zivilgesellschaftliches Engagement -- Zivilgesellschaft als Arbeitsmarkt -- Finanzierung der Zivilgesellschaft -- Politische und gesellschaftliche Einstellungen: soziokulturelle Grundlagen von Selbstorganisation -- Weiterführende Informationen: Datensätze in Steckbriefen; Forschungsdatenzentren und weitere Datenzugänge -- Synopse zu Längsschnitt-Datenerhebungen mit Zivilgesellschaftsbezug.
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Krimmer Holger  
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Development at Work : Postcolonial Imaginaries, Global Capitalism, and Everyday Life at a Factory in Tunisia
Development at Work : Postcolonial Imaginaries, Global Capitalism, and Everyday Life at a Factory in Tunisia
Autore Weißenfels André
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (322 pages)
Collana Politik und Gesellschaft des Nahen Ostens Series
ISBN 3-658-43870-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Geleitwort -- Acknowledgements -- Abstract -- Notes -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Setting the Scene -- 1.2 Research Question -- 1.3 Empirical, Methodological, and Theoretical Contributions -- 1.4 Structure of the Thesis -- 2 Method and Methodology -- 2.1 What Ethnography Has to Offer to Political Science -- 2.1.1 The Political -- 2.1.2 Ethnographic Sensibility -- 2.2 Finding My Topic -- 2.3 Gathering Data -- 2.3.1 Participant Observation -- 2.3.2 Interviews -- 2.3.3 Archival Work -- 2.4 Analysis -- 2.4.1 Participant Observation and the Importance of the Everyday -- 2.4.2 Discourse Analysis and Coding -- 2.5 Ambivalence, or, How Seriously I Take What People Tell Me -- 2.5.1 Agency and Discourse -- 2.5.2 Writing About Other People's Realities -- 2.6 Methodological Limits -- 2.6.1 A Suggestive Link Between Old Newspapers and Contemporary Realities at CERAT -- 2.6.2 Insufficient Sample Size for Generalizable Conclusions About Global Capitalism -- 3 Conceptual Framework: Towards a Multilayered Understanding of Development -- 3.1 What We Look at When We Research "Development" -- 3.2 Development as a Project of Postcolonial Nation-State Building -- 3.2.1 Nation-Building Projects in WANA -- 3.2.2 Same Story, Different Lenses -- 3.3 Development as an Imaginary -- 3.3.1 The Development Imaginary in WANA -- 3.3.2 Same Story, Different Lenses: -- 3.4 Development as the Unfolding of Global Capitalism -- 3.4.1 Dependency Theory -- 3.4.2 Uneven and Combined Development: Fifty Shades of Capitalism -- 3.5 What We Gain from a Development Perspective -- 4 Context: A Brief History of Tunisia's Political Economy -- 4.1 1956-1961: The First Five-Year Plan. Attempted Economic Decolonization -- 4.1.1 The Colonial Heritage -- 4.1.2 De-Colonization 1956-1961.
4.2 1961-1969: The First 10-Year Plan. Import Substitution Industrialization -- 4.2.1 Widening the Urban-Rural Rift -- 4.2.2 The End of Import Substitution Industrialization -- 4.3 1969-1986: The Second 10-Year Plan and Export-Oriented Development -- 4.3.1 Expanding Unevenness: Excluding the Masses from Corporatist Politics -- 4.3.2 Offshore Legislation: The Loi 72 -- 4.3.3 Results: -- 4.3.4 The Beginnings of Neoliberalism and Public Unrest -- 4.4 1986-2010: Structural Adjustment -- 4.4.1 Reforms: -- 4.4.2 Results: -- 4.5 2010-Today: A Preliminary Assessment. Further SAPs in the Context of the Post-Revolutionary Budget Crisis -- 4.6 Assessing 70 Years of Development -- 5 Analysis Part I: The State's Development Discourse -- 5.1 Development Discourse 1972 -- 5.1.1 A Continuation of the Post-independence Development Project (by Different Means) -- 5.1.2 State Planed Liberalization -- 5.1.3 The Loi 72 and Export-oriented Development -- 5.1.4 The Stakes of Development: "Promotion de l'homme" -- 5.2 Development Discourse 1986 -- 5.2.1 Crisis and Austerity -- 5.2.2 Objectives and Solutions -- 5.2.3 Struggle, Security, and National Unity -- 5.3 Comparison Between 1972 and 1986 -- 5.4 Development Discourse Post-2010/2011 -- 5.5 Why the Development Promise is not a Social Contract -- 5.5.1 What People Expect. A Development Perspective vs. the Social Contract Debate -- 5.5.2 Contract or no Contract? The Development Promise and Regime Legitimacy -- 5.5.3 Hegemony Instead of Social Contract -- 5.5.4 Taking the Superstructure Seriously -- 6 Analysis Part II: Development Imaginaries at CERAT -- 6.1 Disappointed Hopes of Progress, Meritocracy, and Middle Classness -- 6.1.1 Progress in Time -- 6.1.2 Education and the Meritocratic Promise -- 6.1.3 Entrepreneurship -- 6.1.4 Circumstances ("ẓurūf") and Missing Opportunities ("'Imkāniyyāt") -- 6.1.5 Emigration.
6.1.6 Middle Classness -- 6.1.7 Consumerism/Materialism -- 6.1.8 Unkept Promises -- 6.2 "Feels Like Development": Tidiness, Orderliness, Respect, Discipline, Professionalism, Security and Peace of Mind -- 6.2.1 Jaw -- 6.3 Privileged and Stuck at the Same Time -- 6.4 Why Neoliberal Policies do not (Necessarily) Create Neoliberal Subjects -- 6.4.1 Just Another Development Policy -- 6.4.2 Neoliberalism with Bureaucratic Instead of Entrepreneurial Selves -- 7 Analysis Part III: Quality, Standardization, and Bureaucracy -- 7.1 The Enterprise Bureaucracy at CERAT -- 7.2 A Working Definition of Bureaucracy -- 7.3 Facets of Bureaucracy at CERAT -- 7.3.1 QRQC Meeting -- 7.3.2 Saisies -- 7.3.3 Audits -- 7.4 ISO 9001: Measurement and Governmentality -- 7.5 The Bureaucratic Market -- 7.5.1 Governmental Effects: Productivity, Regularity, and Control from Afar -- 7.5.2 Certificates and Trust -- 7.6 How the Enterprise Bureaucracy Plays Out at CERAT -- 7.6.1 Pleasant and Exciting Bureaucracy -- 8 Conclusion -- 8.1 Development as the Unfolding of Global Capitalism -- 8.2 Development as Tunisia's Postcolonial Nation-State Project -- 8.3 Development as Personal Imaginary -- 8.4 Further Research Perspectives -- 8.5 Why We Need Development -- References.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910806194103321
Weißenfels André  
Wiesbaden : , : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, , 2024
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