Eurolektionen-Ergebnisse: Jetzt Online und als Buch

“Die Schule der Nation ist die Schule.”
(Willy Brandt, 1913-1922)

Eurolektionen fragt: Sind die Schulen Europas eine gute Schule für den in Vielfalt geeinten Kontinent?

Eurolektionen präsentiert

Wir berichten aus Rumänien, Schweden und Berlin, von Lehrerinnen und Schülerinnen. Wir erzählen von einem sauberen Europa und einem friedliebenden Europa, von einem Europa der Identitäten und einem Europa ohne Visa, von einem Europa des Erinnerns und einem Europa ohne Eltern und einem in den Binnenmarkt verliebten Kontinent.

Wir fragen uns und wir fragen Sie: Lernen wir gut und lernen wir fair, nicht für die Schule, sondern für Europa?

Antworten auf diese Fragen finden Sie hier auf http://eurolektionen.de und im gleichnamigen Beitrag im 6. Sammelband des Studienkollegs zu Berlin Projekt Junges Europa, das heute im Wehrhahn-Verlag erscheint. Es ist ab sofort bei Wehrhahn und über Amazon zu beziehen.

Mehr über den Inhalt und die folgenden Posts hier.

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Foundations: benevolent, but undemocratic

Foundations are booming in Germany and they are frequently cherished as the ideal way to harness private wealth for the common good.

I’m critical about the efficiency, equity and legitimacy of civil society, and I think foundations are a case in point. This tax-exempt, free-roaming and supposedly benevolent capital is subjected to only minimal public accountability and may sometimes reflect a troublingly elitist vision of the common good.

Bertelsmann Stiftung / AG Berlin, via Flickr, originally uploaded by Gertrud K.

Kommandantenhaus, Unter den Linden 1, 10117 Berlin: charity?

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Civil society: feeling good is not enough

Civil society is everybody’s darling in politics and policy today. It’s hard to find a policy student who hasn’t interned at some NGO, founded her own grassroots initiative and isn’t excited about non-profits in any given policy field.

Animal vs. disability charities, via Flickr, originally uploaded my Mot

So is the third sector panacea? Uh, maybe not. A third sector? Non-governmental, non-profit? What kind of definitions are these, anyway? And what would be an uncivil society?

Whenever social sciences come up with such terms that convey little more but a vague sense of something being different, or gone (think postmodern) there is always the danger that really, we don’t know (exactly) what we’re talking about.

For all their shortcomings, we roughly know how markets and states function, and how they fail. By contrast, we appear to know relatively little about how whatever it is we call “civil society” works.

Is it then reasonable to assume that civil society is categorically devoid of dysfunctions? Hardly so, I think.

As long as we don’t know what we’re cobbling together in civil society, we’d better stick to our lasts: the market and the state.

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Uncertainty and Responsibility in Climate Change: A Case for Alarmism and New Risk Management

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I was recently tasked to prepare a presentation on the political economy questions of climate change: How expensive is saving the climate? And who should shoulder the costs?

As I prepared the presentation for Dr. Mildner’s “States & Markets” seminar, it occurred to me that to answer these questions, we first have to understand the risks and uncertainties of climate change. The real questions, I thought were then different ones:

  • How do we manage risk, and respond to uncertainty?
  • How do we treat extreme low probability and high consequence events?
  • How do we respond to asymmetric risks?

The more I learned about current risk modeling of the climatic and economic impacts of global warming, the more worried I became. I realized, that climate change (as, incidentally, lessons learned from the financial crisis), requires us to rethink how we manage systemic, interdependent, asymmetric and extreme risks as well as uncertainty.

“Act Now!”

(Friends of the Earth InternationalThe Big Ask)

I agree, we need to act now, and we need to ask strongly.

Yes, this video simplifies. Yes, it dramatizes. And Yes, it scares us.

And it should. For when everything is at stake, alarmism is not irrational, it becomes a moral imperative and different risk management is necessary.
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