Dimensions of Storytelling in German Literature and Film ed. by Kristy R. Boney and Jennifer Marston William
In: Feminist German studies, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 101-103
ISSN: 2578-5192
137723 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Feminist German studies, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 101-103
ISSN: 2578-5192
In: Small wars & insurgencies, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 159-180
ISSN: 1743-9558
In: Journal of Gender Studies
This article explores the role of gender in volunteering with refugees in Germany and how female volunteers, who outnumber male volunteers considerably, understand their involvement differently from men. Drawing upon quantitative data from two studies with volunteers in refugee work in Germany from 2015 and 2016, I discuss the motivations of female volunteers to engage in refugee support work, the meaning they give to their experience of working with refugees and the values they wish to demonstrate through their voluntary work. The article centrally maintains that refugee support work can be classed as a form of care work and is informed by an ethics and values of care. However, other results unveil that women interpret their care work as an expression of their political attitudes, specifically about anti-racism and anti-right-wing activism, as well, and thereby have recourse to a supposedly male political justification for engaging in volunteering. Thus, this article argues that these two forms of motivation for volunteering, care and politics, do not need to be mutually exclusive. Crucially, voluntary refugee support work represents a unique opportunity for women's political activism for anti-racism and cultural openness.
In: Problems & perspectives in management, Band 17, Heft 1, S. 42-55
ISSN: 1810-5467
Formal education plays a big role in the construction and development of students' competence and skill. A survey on the fashion engineering education in Indonesia found that most students had not appropriately applied the competence and skill they learned. Many of them did not say anything despite experiencing loss, were reluctant to ask for exchange or compensation, littered the product's waste, and had no interest in using do-it-yourself (DIY) skills to make their own products. Therefore, this study is aimed at depicting the importance of learning the Consumer Education materials, the application of living values in the Consumer Education materials, and the effectiveness of consumer living values on students' character-building. In this survey-based study, the ex post facto approach was used in order to evaluate the results of Consumer Education learning through reflective assessment sheet. The research population was 123 students of Fashion Engineering Education Study Program in higher education institutions in Yogyakarta Province who had passed the Consumer Education course in the odd semester in Indonesia in 2017. The sample was established through the stratified proportional random sampling technique, while the descriptive statistical analysis was applied to the findings of reflective assessment. The results show the students agree that learning Consumer Education course is imperative for day-to-day life and the Consumer Education materials are found to be effective in consumers' character-building. This study has not internalized of the values through advice, example, discussion, role playing, and participation in the activities of consumption events around daily life. Further studies are needed for developing a relevant curriculum, training in designing content, strategies, instruments, and evaluation of learning.
Latin American women are on the move today, taking their demands to the streets throughout the region in unprecedented numbers. What these demands reveal is a growing frustration and anger among women with the distance between official democratic promises and protections and the limited gains in basic rights, even the reversal of minimal achievements in places like Central America and Brazil. Feminists are weaving together different struggles into an intersectional movement explicitly linking gender demands to the end of a neoliberal capitalist model of development and its devastating social, economic and ecological effects on Latin America's overwhelming majority. A critical Latin American feminism aimed at apprehending the present predicament of women in the region, I suggest, needs to extend its commitment to producing knowledge from below and to the left, by reaching further, and engaging critically with Marx and his feminist critics. Given the widespread impact of the present capitalist modernity, tethered to neo-extractivism, not only on the lives of peasant and indigenous Latin Americans but also of increasingly broader sectors of rural and urban society and in particular, on the lives of women, it is imperative that we understand the structural nature of the relation between women, capitalism and nature.
BASE
This article explores the role of gender in volunteering with refugees in Germany and how female volunteers, who outnumber male volunteers considerably, understand their involvement differently from men. Drawing upon quantitative data from two studies with volunteers in refugee work in Germany from 2015 and 2016, I discuss the motivations of female volunteers to engage in refugee support work, the meaning they give to their experience of working with refugees and the values they wish to demonstrate through their voluntary work. The article centrally maintains that refugee support work can be classed as a form of care work and is informed by an ethics and values of care. However, other results unveil that women interpret their care work as an expression of their political attitudes, specifically about anti-racism and anti-right-wing activism, as well, and thereby have recourse to a supposedly male political justification for engaging in volunteering. Thus, this article argues that these two forms of motivation for volunteering, care and politics, do not need to be mutually exclusive. Crucially, voluntary refugee support work represents a unique opportunity for women's political activism for anti-racism and cultural openness. ; Peer Reviewed
BASE
Open government data (open data) initiatives have been at the forefront of the strategy to make more transparent, responsive, and accountable government, and thereby lead to open innovation across the public and private sector. Governments around the world often understand that open data is disclosing their data to the public as much as possible and that open data success is the result of a data and technology-related endeavor rather than the result of organizational, institutional, and environmental attributes. According to the resource-based theory, however, managerial capability to mobilize tangible and intangible resources and deploy them in adequate places or processes under the leadership of capable leaders during the information technology (IT) project is a core factor leading to organizational performance such as open data success. In this vein, this study aims to analyze managerial factors as drivers and challenges of open data success from the resource-based theory. Findings illustrate that managerial factors are the driving forces that often boost or hinder open data success when institutional, socio-economic, and demographic factors are controlled. Discussion illustrates theoretical and practical implications for the managerial factors as drivers and challenges of open data success in terms of the comparison between technological determinism and the socio-technical perspective.
BASE
In: Interdisciplinary journal for religion and transformation in contemporary society: J-RaT, Band 4, Heft 2, S. 14-39
ISSN: 2364-2807
In: Maastricht journal of European and comparative law: MJ, Band 25, Heft 6, S. 672-688
ISSN: 2399-5548
In recent years, the aim of offender rehabilitation has grown to become one of the most prominent features of European penal policy. European legal texts, however, lack a clear definition of this concept, thus leaving to supranational Courts the responsibility of clarifying its meaning. This article analyses the case law of European Court of Human Rights and the Court of Justice of the European Union as regards rehabilitation. It argues that the Europeanization of criminal justice is generally contributing to a re-conceptualization of this aim of punishment with relevant implications for the national criminal justice system and its actors. Finally, the article underscores the differences in the approach to rehabilitation between the two Courts, trying to assess their potential impact on national law and their significance in the broader context of European penal policy.
In: Learning, culture and social interaction, Band 18, S. 113-123
ISSN: 2210-6561
In: Turkish journal of Middle Eastern studies: Türkiye ortadoğu çalışmaları dergisi, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 101-137
ISSN: 2147-7523
Camp
David süreciyle birlikte ABD ile Mısır arasında bir yakınlaşma başlamıştır. Bu
yakınlaşmanın kritik boyutlarından birisi askeri boyuttur. Askeri alanda Mısır Ordusu
ABD'yle silah antlaşmaları, ortak tatbikatlar, maddi yardımlar, ortak
operasyonlar, istihbarat çalışmaları gibi birçok farklı konuda işbirliği gerçekleştirmiştir.
Bu çalışma içerisinde Sedat ve Mübarek dönemlerinde Mısır ile ABD arasındaki
ilişkinin askeri boyutu incelenmiştir. 2011-2013 yıllarında yaşanan siyasi olayları
daha iyi kavramak adına iki ülke arasındaki bu yakınlaşmayı anlamak faydalı
olacaktır.
In: European review of contract law: ERCL, Band 14, Heft 1, S. 1-23
ISSN: 1614-9939
AbstractThis article analyses a consumer rights approach to protection against discrimination in EU law that has been established with the adoption of the so-called Payment Accounts Directive 2014/92/EU of 23 July 2014 (PAD). The approach has potential to sustainably transform the legal coexistence of, on the one side, EU consumer law and, on the other side, EU anti-discrimination law. In form of a so far unprecedented regulation, it directly links the non-discrimination principle of Article 21 of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights with consumer protection. At the same time, the approach ties in with traditional concepts in consumer law relating to vulnerable consumers and to services of general economic interest. Following the year which has passed since the transposition deadline of 18 September 2016, this article argues that the PAD constitutes a first step towards a consumer-specific anti-discrimination protection of its own kind, the key features of which it seeks to outline.
In: Dissertation for obtaining a scientific degree of doctor of sociological sciences in specialty 22.00.01 - "Theory and History of Sociology". - Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine, Kyiv, 2018
SSRN
Working paper
In: Istoryko-polityčni problemy sučasnoho svitu: zbornyk naukovych statej, Heft 35-36, S. 161-172
ISSN: 2617-2372
The body of the article goes on to discuss the migration and refugee policy issues that went viral in media, as well as became widely discussed by experts and EU power-holding structures. Few researchers have addressed the problem under study and require an in-depth analysis. This paper outlines the evolution of the EU approaches to regulation and management of migration flows forced and caused by 2015 migrant crisis. The main weakness in the previous studies is that they make no attempt to upgrade tools and mechanisms for optimizing modern migration policy. Of particular importance is keynote actors' impact on decision-making and shaping public opinion on migration problems – namely, European executives, NGO's, pressmen as well as migrants and refugees themselves.
This paper has given an account of the Dublin Regulation (2013) that the author considers to be outdated. Since the migrant crisis started, it has been clear that this system is inadequate, and that some of the burden must be borne by Europe's wealthy northern states. There is evidence to suggest migration policy tools to be dramatically reformed, though the European Parliament's planned amendment to Dublin Regulation could face new challenges. The findings of this study support the idea that most of the EU member states managed to pursue a common policy on triggering refugee influx, primarily in Greece and Italy, in addition to a joint stance in terms of fixing a quota on migrants – not including the Visegrad Group.
Keywords: 2015 Migrant crisis, common EU policy, Greece, Hungary, Dublin Regulation, refugees, economic migration
In: New political economy, Band 23, Heft 1, S. 46-65
ISSN: 1469-9923