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World Affairs Online
Alumniseminar am 23. und 24. Januar 2014 an der juristischen Fakultät der Universität Freiburg zur Feier der Kooperation der Chinese University of Politics and Law, Peking, mit fünf deutschen Partneruniversitäten
Am 23. und 24. Januar 2014 fand an der Universität Freiburg ein Alumniseminar aus Anlass der Zusammenarbeit zwischen der Chinese University for Politics and Law, Peking, (CUPL) mit fünf deutschen Kooperationsuniversitäten statt. Ziel der Veranstaltung war es, den Teilnehmern neben der Bereicherung durch Fachvorträge auch konkrete Einblicke in mögliche berufliche Perspektiven junger chinesischer und deutscher Juristen zu bieten. Den feierlichen Auftakt zur Veranstaltung machte ein Empfang im historischen Gewölbekeller des Peterhofs der Universität Freiburg am 23. Januar 2014. Herr Prof. Dr. Alexander Bruns, Dekan der juristischen Fakultät der Universität Freiburg, rief den Teilnehmern in seiner Begrüßungsansprache die historischen Verbindungslinien Deutschlands und Chinas nicht zuletzt im Bereich der Rechtswissenschaft in Erinnerung. Als Gastgeberin der Veranstaltung lobte Frau Prof. Dr. BU Yuanshi in einem Rückblick die erfolgreiche Geschichte der Kooperation mit der CUPL. Prof. Dr. XIE Libin von der CUPL stellte in seiner Begrüßungsansprache die Bedeutung der Zusammenarbeit von chinesischer Seite heraus. Lobende Worte für die Zusammenarbeit fand auch Frau Susanne Otte, die als Vertreterin des die Tagung fördernden DAAD zu den Teilnehmern sprach.[.]
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Attribution Science in Takings Litigation
Climate science plays a central role in climate litigation, and cases under the Takings Clause of the United States' and many state constitutions are no exception. In the climate context, takings cases to date have involved claims that challenge the constitutionality of both adaptation and mitigation measures. For instance, real estate developers have claimed that land use and zoning regulations that seek to reduce exposure to climate change impacts constitute regulatory takings. Property owners have claimed that restrictions on the development of fossil fuel infrastructure upset their investment-backed expectations. And property owners adversely impacted by climate-related flood control measures have sought compensation for their harms. In these and other cases, the foreseeability of climate change impacts and the causal connections between local action and global climate change may or may not be explicit elements of a claim, but they remain critical issues for litigants and courts to address. This paper explicates the role of attribution science in climate-related takings cases. That science factors into plaintiffs' claims, government defenses, and judicial decisions. For the purposes of this analysis, this paper examines how marshalling the best available climate change attribution science could bolster governments' defenses of climate regulations. The next section reviews the legal framework for takings cases and provides a brief primer on attribution science. The paper then turns to three legal themes: (1) linking local mitigation to global impacts, (2) resetting expectations about how land can be used and, (3) relevant to flood control cases, the relative benefits conferred by imperfect flood control measures. As we shall see, attribution science has a clear and important role to play in how courts resolve climate change-related takings claims.
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Journaling on the Transition to College: Foucauldian Approaches in the First-Year Writing Classroom
Utilizing the Foucauldian concepts of governmentality and technologies of the self, this qualitative action research study explored how power dynamics inherent in higher education can be recognized and resisted as first-year writing students journal on the transition to college (JTC). Conducted in a suburban community college in the Mid-Atlantic United States during the Spring 2020 semester, the study investigated how college is a feature of governmentality, how writing instructors' actions interrupt or reinforce college as governmentality, and if journaling on the transition to college acts as a technology of the self, in light of the ways college governs. Journal prompts provided students opportunities to critically reflect on the institution of college and their experience entering this new space. Foucauldian concepts were not taught, but they informed the journal design. Black feminist theory supplemented the Foucauldian theoretical framework to address factors of students' intersectional social identities emergent in JTC and relative to their experiences with power in college. Findings indicated students confront institutional power structures including economic power, grades, policies, and institutional White supremacy, all of which affect professors' role as authority figures. Underrepresented students experience power much differently than those belonging to dominant groups and JTC provides instructors with insight to interrupt oppressive power through feedback. Writing instructors' implementation of JTC allows them to disrupt governmentality and provides students a technology of the self through which they develop agency. Though disruptive, COVID-19 provided unexpected opportunities to apply Foucauldian concepts to teaching and learning during emergency remote instruction.
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Private Governance Can Increase Shipping's Efficiency and Reduce Its Impacts
The shipping industry is a huge component of the world economy, and although it is often described as an efficient mode of transport, it still contributes as much carbon dioxide to the atmosphere as a major industrialized nation. Efficiency technologies and practices are available that would significantly lessen shipping's environmental impact, but "amazing loophole[s]" in international environmental law and a set of market failures have prevented them from being widely adopted. These problems have been studied before, but the public regulatory proposals being discussed run into steep, if not insurmountable obstacles. This Note argues that shipping inefficiency can be better addressed through private environmental governance. By operating privately, these forms of governance bypass the problems that traditional public regulation faces, allowing higher efficiency standards to be widely adopted without depending on political will. In so doing, private governance can better align the incentives of consumers, firms, and those firms' suppliers.
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Cyber-seaworthiness: A critical review of the literature
In: Marine policy, Band 151, S. 105592
ISSN: 0308-597X
The Dark Side of Shareholder Activism: Evidence from CEO Turnovers
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The Impact of Financial Education of Executives on Financial Practices of Medium and Large Enterprises
In: Swedish House of Finance Research Paper No. 20-29
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The Sustainability Wage Gap
In: Swedish House of Finance Research Paper No. 20-14
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The Impact of Financial Education of Managers on Medium and Large Enterprises - a Randomized Controlled Trial in Mozambique
In: CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP15294
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Private Governance Responses to Climate Change: The Case of Global Civil Aviation
In: Fordham Environmental Law Journal, Forthcoming
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Private Governance Responses to Climate Change: The Case of Global Civil Aviation
This Article explores how private governance can reduce the climate effects of global civil aviation. The civil aviation sector is a major contributor to climate change, accounting for emissions comparable to a top ten emitting country. National and international governmental bodies have taken important steps to address civil aviation, but the measures adopted to date are widely acknowledged to be inadequate. Civil aviation poses particularly difficult challenges for government climate mitigation efforts. Many civil aviation firms operate globally, emissions often occur outside of national boundaries, nations differ on their respective responsibilities, and demand is growing rapidly. Although promising new technologies are emerging, they will take time to develop and adopt. This Article argues that private initiatives can overcome many of these barriers. Private initiatives can motivate civil aviation firms to act absent government pressure at the national level and can create pressure for mitigation that transcends national boundaries. The Article argues that it is time to develop a private climate governance agenda for civil aviation and identifies examples of the types of existing and new initiatives that could be included in the effort. If public and private policymakers can overcome the tendency to focus almost exclusively on public governance, private initiatives can yield large and prompt emissions reductions from global civil aviation, buy time for more comprehensive government measures, and complement the government measures when they occur.
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"Since You're so Rich, You Must Be Really Smart": Talent, Rent Sharing, and the Finance Wage Premium
In: IZA Discussion Paper No. 15337
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