Lehrmodul 14: Bestandsaufnahme
In: Zeitschrift für Konfliktmanagement: Konfliktmanagement, Mediation, Verhandeln ; ZKM, Band 12, Heft 6
ISSN: 2194-4210
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In: Zeitschrift für Konfliktmanagement: Konfliktmanagement, Mediation, Verhandeln ; ZKM, Band 12, Heft 6
ISSN: 2194-4210
In: Zeitschrift für Konfliktmanagement: Konfliktmanagement, Mediation, Verhandeln ; ZKM, Band 10, Heft 5
ISSN: 2194-4210
In: Zeitschrift für Konfliktmanagement: Konfliktmanagement, Mediation, Verhandeln ; ZKM, Band 10, Heft 3
ISSN: 2194-4210
In: Zeitschrift für Konfliktmanagement: Konfliktmanagement, Mediation, Verhandeln ; ZKM, Band 9, Heft 2
ISSN: 2194-4210
In: Zeitschrift für Konfliktmanagement: Konfliktmanagement, Mediation, Verhandeln ; ZKM, Band 8, Heft 4
ISSN: 2194-4210
In: Zeitschrift für Konfliktmanagement: Konfliktmanagement, Mediation, Verhandeln ; ZKM, Band 8, Heft 6
ISSN: 2194-4210
In: International arbitration law library 4
Foreword to the Second Edition --Preface by the Authors --Abbreviations --Introduction --Challenges of Conflict Management --International Commercial Arbitration --Alternatives to Arbitration --Synthesis --Conclusion --List of Individuals --Bibliography.
In: Konflikt-Dynamik: Verhandeln, Vermitteln und Entscheiden in Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 94-101
ISSN: 2510-4233
In: Konflikt-Dynamik: Verhandeln, Vermitteln und Entscheiden in Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft, Band 3, Heft 4, S. 276-277
ISSN: 2510-4233
In: Konflikt-Dynamik: Verhandeln, Vermitteln und Entscheiden in Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft, Band 3, Heft 4, S. 288-293
ISSN: 2510-4233
In: Interdisziplinäre Studien zu Mediation und Konfliktmanagement 2
In: Zeitschrift für Friedens- und Konfliktforschung: ZeFKo = ZeFKo studies in peace and conflict, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 45-75
ISSN: 2524-6976
ZusammenfassungDie gestiegenen normativen Ansprüche an Friedensmediation werden von Praktiker*innen bisweilen als verwirrend und einengend wahrgenommen. Bei genauer Betrachtung der Normen und der darin formulierten Verhaltenserwartungen lassen sich diese jedoch präzise definieren und bieten weitaus mehr Spielraum als vermutet. Mehr noch, sie lassen sich in der Vermittlungspraxis als wertvolles Orientierungssystem nutzen, mit dem im Idealfall verhindert werden kann, dass Friedensprozesse und -vereinbarungen scheitern, schaden oder rechtlich nichtig sind. An einigen Stellen steht allerdings noch eine dezidierte Übersetzung dieses Wissens in die praktische Handlungslogik und faktischen Abläufe von Friedensprozessen sowie eine strukturierte Vorgehensweise aus, mit der sich die zentralen normativen Dilemmata handhaben lassen, die der Friedensmediation inhärent sind.
In: Zeitschrift für Konfliktmanagement: Konfliktmanagement, Mediation, Verhandeln ; ZKM, Band 8, Heft 1
ISSN: 2194-4210
This paper presents the first outcomes of a large-scale project to comprehensively map the follower/followee relationships between public accounts in the Australian Twittersphere. Using custom network crawling technology, we have conducted a snowball crawl of Twitter accounts operated by Australian users to identify more than one million users and map their interconnections. In itself the map provides an overview of the major clusters of densely interlinked users, centred largely around shared topics of interest (from politics through arts to sport) and/or sociodemographic factors (geographic location, age groups); additionally, in combination with our investigation of participation patterns in specific thematic hashtag discussions on Twitter (from #spill for the 2010 Rudd/Gillard leadership challenge to #qldfloods for the January 2011 floods in southeast Queensland), the map enables us to examine which areas of the underlying follower/followee network are activated in the discussion of specific current topics. Our work, conducted as part of a three-year ARC Discovery project investigating public communication through social media in Australia, demonstrates the possibilities inherent in the current 'computational turn' (Berry 2010) in Digital Humanities, as well as adding to the development and critical examination of methodologies for dealing with 'big data' (boyd and Crawford 2011). Our map of the Twittersphere is the first of its kind for the Australian part of the global Twitter network and provides the first independent and scholarly estimation of the size of the total Australian Twitter population. Our tools and methods for doing Twitter research, released under Creative Commons licences through our project website, provide the basis for replicable and verifiable Digital Humanities research on the processes of public communication which take place through this important social network. ; Australian Academy of the Humanities; the ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences
BASE
This paper presents the first outcomes of a large-scale project to comprehensively map the follower/followee relationships between public accounts in the Australian Twittersphere. Using custom network crawling technology, we have conducted a snowball crawl of Twitter accounts operated by Australian users to identify more than one million users and map their interconnections. In itself the map provides an overview of the major clusters of densely interlinked users, centred largely around shared topics of interest (from politics through arts to sport) and/or sociodemographic factors (geographic location, age groups); additionally, in combination with our investigation of participation patterns in specific thematic hashtag discussions on Twitter (from #spill for the 2010 Rudd/Gillard leadership challenge to #qldfloods for the January 2011 floods in southeast Queensland), the map enables us to examine which areas of the underlying follower/followee network are activated in the discussion of specific current topics. Our work, conducted as part of a three-year ARC Discovery project investigating public communication through social media in Australia, demonstrates the possibilities inherent in the current 'computational turn' (Berry 2010) in Digital Humanities, as well as adding to the development and critical examination of methodologies for dealing with 'big data' (boyd and Crawford 2011). Our map of the Twittersphere is the first of its kind for the Australian part of the global Twitter network and provides the first independent and scholarly estimation of the size of the total Australian Twitter population. Our tools and methods for doing Twitter research, released under Creative Commons licences through our project website, provide the basis for replicable and verifiable Digital Humanities research on the processes of public communication which take place through this important social network. ; Australian Academy of the Humanities; the ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences
BASE