Unsere letzte, beste Hoffnung

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Der Mann, der das Treppenhaus vor meiner Mietwohnung fegt, erklärte mir vor ein paar Jahren, warum er 2005 die FDP gewählt hat: Da gibt es mehr Netto vom Brutto. Einige meiner linken Freundinnen möchten gerne den Handel mit Derivaten auf Lebensmittel verbieten, weil man mit manchen Sachen einfach nicht handeln sollte und weil das für die Armen besser wäre. Achso, und auf einem meiner abonnierten Blogs, steht (glaube ich) manchmal, dass wir weniger Wachstum brauchen oder weniger arbeiten müssen oder sowas.

Mehr Netto vom Brutto
Juli 2009, Berlin

Naja. Ich weiß es auch nicht so genau, aber irgendwie scheinen mir diese Fragen komplizierter zu sein. Vielleicht deshalbdeshalb, und deshalb.

“Die Politik gleicht der Sphinx der Fabel: Sie verschlingt alle, die ihre Rätsel nicht lösen.” — Antoine de Rivarol

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Dynamics, causes and consequences of postindustrial value change: Germany in international perspective

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wvs-dfgValue research and, in particular the World Values Survey and Inglehart’s and Welzel’s Human Development Theory were one of my academic interests since early on in my undergraduate studies of Integrated Social Sciences at Jacobs University Bremen. I had worked on this topic with colleagues and would later write my BA thesis on the topic. 

This is why I gladly accepted when Franziska Deutsch, project manager for the german analysis of the latest, now 5th wave of the World Values Survey asked me during the summer break of 2006 whether I wanted to join the German Research Council-funded project as a junior project assistant, lead by principal investigator and co-director of the World Values Survey, my teacher and academic advisor Prof. Dr. Chris Welzel. I was excited about this opportunity to get involved in current research, learn from the other team members, and, together with them, get my hands on fresh-out-of-the-field data, that had never been analyzed before.

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Bachelor thesis completed

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Today, I have submitted my Bachelor Thesis, my final written work for my studies of Integrated Social Sciences at Jacobs University Bremen

This thesis provides a critical account of Inglehart’s and Welzel’s (2005) concept of the self-expression syndrome. In their variant of Modernization Theory, this increasing orientation to a broadening of human choice is the driving force for democratization. A massive body of cross-national evidence has been provided, linking high levels of these emancipative values with democratic performance. It is argued here that the explanatory power of self-expression values may be a catch-up effect and that an ever more emancipative culture may eventually become  detrimental to (representative) democratic performance. Congruency theory is invoked to investigate how the self-expression syndrome corresponds to the input and output aspects of representative polities. 

Some tentative empirical findings from the World Values Surveys indicate that highly self-expressive individuals are more likely to participate in unconventional activities as well as in voluntary associations than others and that they are not substantially less likely than others to endorse political trade-offs. They are furthermore found to be somewhat more likely to engage in some forms of civic defection. Methodological issues, suggestions for further research and policy implications are discussed. 

Not only for this thesis, but indeed for much of what I have learned about value research and quantitative methodology during my past three years of study at Jacobs University, I owe a great debt to my academic advisor Prof. Dr. Chris Welzel and my supervisor Franziska Deutsch. I was fortunate to work for them on the DFG-funded project “Dynamics, Causes and Consequences of Postindustrial Value Change – Germany in International Comparison” (DFG-Nr. WE 2266/6-1), an experience that has deepened my understanding of value research and has greatly inspired this thesis. In many respects, I have benefited from the open and controversial discussions on theory, methodology and quantitative analysis.  

I would like to thank Franziska Deutsch for her feedback on this thesis. 

Moreover, I am grateful to Laura Dannenberg and Max Palm for their valuable remarks on previous manuscripts. 

This thesis is in part based on a group project submitted for the seminar “Secondary Data Analysis”, held by Prof. Dr. Petra Lietz at Jacobs University Bremen in Spring 2006. For their openness to debate and their tremendous perseverance I am indebted to Lisa Heindl, Anja Jungermann and Henrik Mädler. 

Please find attached the complete thesis available for download.

Submitted first draft on “Journalisms in Europe”-Project

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Today, Prof. Hartmut Wessler has submitted a paper on “Journalisms in Europe” to the International Communication Association for review concerning its 2007 annual conference. The paper has been co-authored by me and three other student colleagues. The project is based on a quantitative content analysis of news items from online versions of 30 European newspapers, originally conducted in the undergraduate research seminar “Media Communication in the European Union”, held by Prof. Hartmut Wessler at International University Bremen in Fall 2005. The paper reviews and integrates initial research findings from the research seminar.

 

Retrieved from commons.wikipedia.org on November 12, 2006

Retrieved from commons.wikipedia.org on November 12, 2006

 

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Electoral engineering for Fiji

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Electoral Engineering refers to the careful design of the electoral system, its incentives and formulae for representation in an effort to bring about certain normatively inspired outcomes. For the University Study Course “Mathematics and Democracy”, held by mathematician Prof. Dr. Dierk Schleicher and political scientist Prof. Dr. Matthijs Bogaards, we were to devise an electoral system (change) for any country of our choice.

fiji

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