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In: Interdisziplinäre Wohnungsforschung
In wohnungspolitischen Debatten dient Hamburg vielfach als bundesweites Vorbild. Dennoch ist auch hier die Lage durch kontinuierlich steigende Mieten und Preise für breite Teile der Bevölkerung prekär. Die Beiträge dieses Bandes behandeln die Situation der Wohnungsversorgung in der Hansestadt und geben einen kritischen Überblick über zentrale Akteure, Instrumente und Konfliktfelder. Aus interdisziplinärer Perspektive zeigen sie historische Entwicklungspfade sowie aktuelle Lösungsansätze auf und analysieren relevante Kontroversen. So entsteht ein informativer Überblick über die Forschung zur Hamburger Wohnungspolitik, der auch für Praktiker*innen aus Stadtplanung und Politik neue Erkenntnisse bereithält
In: Edition Politik
Digitization is transforming our world economically, culturally, and psychologically. The influx of new forms of communication, networking, and business opportunities, as well as new types of distraction, self-observation, and control into our societies represents an epochal challenge. Following Bernard Stiegler's concept of pharmacology, Felix Heidenreich and Florian Weber-Stein propose to view these new forms as digital pharmaka. Properly dosed, they can enable new self-relationships and forms of sociality; in the case of overdose, however, there is a risk of intoxication. In this essay, Felix Heidenreich, Florian Weber-Stein, and, in a detailed interview, Bernard Stiegler analyze this complex change in our world and develop new skills to use digital pharmaka
In: Social Sciences
Despite often being dismissed as bizarre, apocalyptic thought has persistent appeal in political life. This book explains apocalyptic thought's political appeal by examining it through the eyes of secular thinkers and makes original contributions to both the history of political thought and contemporary political philosophy
In: Global urban transformations
1 Introduction: Urban transformation and public health in future cities -- Michael Keith and Andreza Aruska de Souza Santos 2 Mental health, stress and the contemporary metropolis -- Nikolas Rose 3 Feminised urban futures, healthy cities and violence against women and girls (VAWG): Transnational reflections from Brazilians in London and Maré, Rio de Janeiro -- Cathy McIlwaine, Miriam Krenzinger, Yara Evans and Eliana Sousa Silva4 Understanding the relationships between wellbeing and mobility in the unequal city: The case of community initiatives promoting cycling and walking in São Paulo and London -- Tim Schwanen and Denver V. Nixon5 Urban (sanitation) transformation in China: A Toilet Revolution and its socio-eco-technical entanglements -- Deljana Iossifova 6 The food environment and health in African cities: Analysing the linkages and exploring possibilities for improving health and wellbeing -- Warren Smit7 Urban mental health and the moral economies of suffering in a 'broken city': Reinventing depression among Rio de Janeiro urban dwellers -- Leandro David Wenceslau and Francisco Ortega 8 Violence as a language of construction and deconstruction in Rio de Janeiro and Brazil -- Luiz Eduardo Soares9 Conclusion: City DNA, public health and a new urban imaginary -- Michael Keith and Andreza Aruska de Souza SantosIndex
In: The Anthropology of History
What stands behind the propensity to remember victims of mass atrocities by their personal names? Grounded in ethnographic and archival research with Last Address and Memorial, one of the oldest independent archives of Soviet political repressions in Moscow and a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, the book examines a version of archival activism that is centred on various practices of documentation and commemoration of many dead victims of historical violence in Russia to understand what kind of historicity is produced when a single name is added to an endless list. What do acts of accumulation of names of the dead affirm when they are concretised in monuments and performance events? The key premise is that multimodal inscriptions of names of the dead entail a political, aesthetic and conceptual movement between singularity and multitude that honours each dead name yet conveys the scale of a mass atrocity without reducing it to a number. Drawing on anthropology, history, philosophy, and aesthetic theory, the book yields a new perspective on the politics of archival and historical justice while it critically engages with the debates on relations and distinctions between names and numbers of the dead, monumental art and its political effects, law and history, image and text, the specific one and the infinite many
In: Kritische Landforschung. Umkämpfte Ressourcen, Transformationen des Ländlichen und politische Alternativen
Ländliche Räume sind wieder »in«: In Zeiten der Corona-Krise gelten sie als vermeintlich sicherere Orte, Investor*innen entdecken das Land als einträgliches Geschäftsfeld und Eigentümer*innen profitieren von Preissteigerungen bei Grund und Boden. Gleichzeitig entwickeln sich ländliche Räume stark auseinander: in prosperierende und abgehängte Regionen. Die Beiträger*innen des Bandes liefern eine Bestandsaufnahme der Forschung zu ländlichen Ungleichheiten und bieten Ansatzpunkte für eine kritische Landforschung und progressive Perspektiven auf ländliche Räume. Neben theoretischen Überlegungen geht es dabei auch um sozialen Wandel, die Neuordnung von Stadt-Land-Verhältnissen sowie die Themen Migration, Identität und Populismus
In: Memory Studies: Global Constellations
This book explores the ways in which memories of Stalin-era repression and displacement manifest across times and places through diverse forms of materialization. The chapters of the book explore the concrete mobilities of life stories, letters, memoirs, literature, objects, and bodies reflecting Soviet repression and violence across borders of geographical locations, historical periods, and affective landscapes. These spatial, temporal, and psychological shifts are explored further as processes of textual circulation and mediation. By offering novel multi-sited and multi-media analyses of the creative, political, societal, cultural, and intimate implications of remembrance, the collection contributes fresh interdisciplinary perspectives to both the field of memory studies and the study of Soviet repression. The case studies in this collection focus on the personal, autobiographical, and intimate representations, experiences, and practices related to the remembrance of Stalinist repression and displacement as they are mediated through memoirs, fiction, interviews, and versatile commemorative practices. Taken together, the book asks: what happens to memories, life stories, testimonies, and experiences when they travel in time and space and between media and are (re)interpreted and (re)formulated through these transfers? What kinds of memorial forms are gained through processes of mediation? What types of spaces for remembering, telling, and feeling are created, negotiated, and contested through these shifts? What are the boundaries and intersections of intimate, familial, community, national, and transnational memories? By analytically contextualizing the various case studies within broader memory discourses in a range of geographical and political contexts, the book offers rich and multilayered interpretations of the enduring ramifications of communist repression. The collection demonstrates that these multiply moving memories not only reflect Eastern European memory culture but reach far beyond and have transnational and transgenerational significance. As such, this timely book will be essential reading for anyone with an interest in the former Soviet Union or memory studies more broadly
In: Schriften des Zentrums für Angewandte Rechtswissenschaft, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie
The digital identity is the essential human data interface when interacting on the Internet or with IT systems to enable the multitude of services. No platform can be used without creating a (at least temporary) data construct to the retrieving user, which reflects the identity of the user and enables an assignment of the application data. This thesis examines the construct of digital identity and puts it into the fundamental rights framework. In doing so, data protection and IT security law are also consulted as concrete manifestations of fundamental rights
In: Edition Politik
Klappentext: We are witnessing a worldwide resurgence of reactionary ideologies and movements, combined with an escalating assault on democratic institutions and structures. Nevertheless, most studies of these phenomena remain anchored in a methodological nationalism, while comparative research is almost entirely limited to the Global North. Yet, authoritarian transformations in the South - and the struggles against them - have not only been just as dramatic as those in the North but also preceded them, and consequently have been studied by Southern scholars for many years. This volume brings together the work of more than 15 scholar-activists from across the Global South, combining in-depth studies of regional processes of authoritarian transformation with a global perspective on authoritarian capitalism. With a foreword by Verónica Gago
This book addresses the consequences of legitimacy in global governance, in particular asking: when and how do legitimacy crises affect international organizations (IOs) and their capacity to rule. The book starts with a new conceptualization of legitimacy crisis that looks at public challenges from a variety of actors. Based on this conceptualization, it applies a mixed-methods approach to identify and examine legitimacy crises, starting with a quantitative analysis of mass media data on challenges of a sample of 32 IOs. It shows that some, but not all organizations have experienced legitimacy crises, spread over several decades from 1985 to 2020. Following this, the book presents a qualitative study to further examine legitimacy crises of two selected case studies: the WTO and the UNFCCC. Whereas earlier research assumed that legitimacy crises have negative consequences, the book introduces a theoretical framework that privileges the activation inherent in a legitimacy crisis. It holds that this activation may not only harm an IO, but could also strengthen it, in terms of its material, institutional, and decision-making capacity. The following statistical analysis shows that whether a crisis has predominantly negative or positive effects depends on a variety of factors. These include the specific audience whose challenges define a certain crisis, and several institutional properties of the targeted organization. The ensuing in-depth analysis of the WTO and the UNFCCC further reveals how legitimacy crises and both positive and negative consequences are interlinked, and that effects of crises are sometimes even visible beyond the organizational borders
Introduction -- Unit Outline. Week 1 Sensory Media: Eighteenth-Century Print Media Cultures ; Week 2 Sensory Media: "New" Media and Nineteenth-Century Urban Cultures ; Week 3 Sensory Media: Media and Experience in the Twentieth Century ; Week 4 Mass Communications and "Mass" Audiences in Interwar Britain ; Week 5 Domestic Consumption of Broadcasting in Interwar Britain ; Week 6 Media Representations of Everyday Life in Interwar Britain ; Week 7 Advertising, Consumer Culture, and National Identity in the Postwar Period ; Week 8 Media, Consumer Culture, and Generation: Childhood and Youth in the Postwar Period ; Week 9 Memory, "The Past," and Everyday Life on Screen -- Assessment Options -- Further Reading.
This report is a comparative study of the current legal situation in relation to the forthcoming implementation of the Floods Directive in selected EU Member States, focusing on the question of whether these states incorporate public participation into the process of flood risk mapping and, if so, in what form. The comparison also considers current administrative practices
In: Forced Migration 39
List of Figures -- Introduction: Places of Partial Protection: Refugee Shelter since 2015 -- Tom Scott-Smith -- Part I: Shelter, Containment and Mobility -- Chapter 1. Moving, Containing, Displacing: The Shipping Container as Refugee Shelter -- Hanna Baumann -- Chapter 2. At the Edge: Containment and the Construction of Europe -- Cetta Mainwaring -- Chapter 3. Shifting Shelters: Migrants, Mobility and the Making of Open Centres in Malta -- Marthe Achtnich -- Chapter 4. Moria: Anti-shelter and the Spectacle of Deterrence -- Daniel Howden -- Chapter 5. Moria Hotspot: Shelter as a Politically Crafted Materiality of Neglect -- Polly Pallister-Wilkins -- Chapter 6. Architectures of Trauma: Forced Shelter and the Impact of Immigration Detention -- Petra Molnar -- Chapter 7. Settling the Unsettled: Forced Shelter in the Negev Desert -- Renana Ne'eman -- Part II: Shelter, Resistance and Solidarity -- Chapter 8. The Contingent Camp: Struggling for Shelter in Calais, France -- Maria Hagan -- Chapter 9. Sounding the Shelter, Voicing the Squat: The Sonic Politics of Refugee Shelter in Athens -- Tom Western -- Chapter 10. Redignifying Refugees: A Critical Study of Citizen-Run Shelters in Athens -- Ashley Mehra -- Chapter 11. A More Personal Shelter: How Citizens Are Hosting Forced Migrants in and Around Brussels -- Robin Vandevoordt -- Chapter 12. Life in the Aluminium Whale: A Study of Berlin's ICC shelter -- Holly Young -- Chapter 13. Structures to Shelter the Mind: Refugee Housing and Mental Wellbeing in Berlin -- Esther Schroeder Goh -- Part III: Architecture, Design and Displacement -- Chapter 14. Protection or isolation? Humanitarian Evacuees in Australian Quarantine Stations -- Benjamin Thomas White -- Chapter 15. Silos in Trieste: A Historical Shelter for Displaced People -- Roberta Altin -- Chapter 16. Flexible Shelters, Modular Meanings: The Lives and Afterlives of Danish 'Refugee Villages' -- Zachary Whyte and Michael Ulfstjerne -- Chapter 17. Shelter as Cladding: Resourcefulness, Improvisation and Refugee-Led Innovation in Goudoubo Camp -- Craig Martin, Jamie Cross, and Arno Verhoeven -- Chapter 18. Adhocism, Agency and Emergency Shelters: On Architectural Nuclei of Life in Displacement -- Irit Katz -- Chapter 19. Social Media, Shelter and Resilience: Design in Za'atari Refugee Camp -- Diane Fellows -- Chapter 20. Confinement, Power and Permanence in Informal Refugee Spaces: Syrian Refugees in Lebanon -- Faten Kikano -- Chapter 21. From Emergency Shelter to Community Shelter: Berlin's Tempelhof Refugee Camp -- Toby Parsloe -- Conclusion: Towards Better Shelter: Rethinking Humanitarian Sheltering -- Mark E. Breeze -- Index --