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Determinants of Emotional Experiences in Traffic Situations and Their Impact on Driving Behaviour
(2013)
Emotions play a prominent role in explaining maladaptive driving and resulting motor vehicle accidents (MVAs). Above all, traffic psychologists have focussed their attention on anger and anxiety, including the origins and influence of these emotions on driving behaviours. This dissertation contributes to the field with three manuscripts that build upon each other. Those manuscripts have three separate objectives. The first identifies the broad range of emotions in traffic that should be analysed. Second, the impact of specific emotions on driving behaviour is focussed. Finally, the research investigates how situational and personal factors can influence emotional experiences and influence driving behaviour. The first article tackles the bandwidth of emotions in traffic. In two consecutive online studies (study one: = 100; study two: n = 187), different emotional experiences were assessed using the Geneva Emotion Wheel (and an advanced version). The stimulus material consisted of written traffic situations structured around specific factors (in these studies, predominantly goal congruence, goal relevance and blame). It could be shown that the properties of the situation can elicit emotions such as anger, anxiety and happiness, but also pride, guilt and shame. The second article saw a transfer of those situational factor structures from online-presented text to simulated driving. At this time, the focus of interest was the driving behaviour influenced by the elicited emotions. The simulator study (n = 79) revealed that anger, contempt and anxiety led to similar declines in driving performance profiles. Performance declines included driving at higher speeds, more frequent speeding and worse lateral control. The third article examined to what extent anger and personal characteristics could negatively influence driving behaviour. Two studies were conducted (study one: n = 74; study two; n = 80). The results indicated that specific characteristics of the person (male, little driving experience, high driving motivation, high trait-driving anger) could influence driving behaviour in negative ways, both directly and indirectly, via triggered anger emotions. It can be concluded from these results that the range of emotions in traffic encompasses much more than just anger and anxiety. Furthermore, the second and third articles show that within simulated environments, minimal but effective emotional intensities can be triggered, and those emotions (especially anger and anxiety) create similar performance patterns. Personal characteristics should be considered when explaining the elicitations of emotion and subsequent driving behaviour. The papers of this dissertation echo the call for new comprehensive models to explain the relationships among emotions and traffic behaviours.
The dissertation consists of three scientific papers and a synopsis. The synopsis addresses the relevance of the dissertation and lists the key factors for the sustainability transition in the electricity system as a common denominator of the three papers. The relevance of the dissertation results, on the one hand, from the urgency of the sustainability transition in the electricity system and an insufficient transition willingness of the eastern European Member States. On the other hand, the Multi-Level-Perspective as one of the most important scientific frameworks to grasp transitions does not provide a sufficient explanation of its mechanisms. Moreover, Demand Response aggregators as new enterprises on the European electricity market and potential reform initiators are still under researched. The following key factors for the sustainability transition of the electricity system have been identified: supply security concerns, Europeanisation, policy making and the dominance of short-term oriented economic evaluation. Paper#1 sheds light on the roots of this problem in the context of Poland. It suggests that unfavorable regulation is symptomatic of the real, underlying barriers. In Poland, these barriers are coal dependence and political influence on energy enterprises. As main drivers, supply security concerns, EU regulatory pressure, and a positive cost-benefit profile of DR in comparison to alternatives, are revealed. A conceptual model of DR uptake in electricity systems is proposed. Applying a social mechanisms approach to the Multi-Level Perspective, paper#2 conceptualizes mechanisms of socio-technical transitions and of gaining legitimacy for transitions as co-evolutionary drivers and outcomes. Situational, action-formational, and transformational mechanisms that operate as drivers of change in a socio-technical transition require corresponding framing and framing contests to achieve legitimacy for that transition. The study illustrates the conceptual insight with the case of the coal dependent Polish electricity system. Paper #3, a qualitative study reveals Demand Response (DR) aggregators as institutional entrepreneurs that struggle to reform the still largely supply-oriented European electricity market. Unfavourable regulation, low value of flexibility, resource constraints, complexity, and customer acquisition are the key challenges DR aggregators face. To overcome them they apply a combination of strategies: lobbying, market education, technological proficiency, and upscaling the business. The study highlights DR aggregation as an architectural innovation that alters the interplay between key actors of the electricity system and provides policy recommendations including the necessity to assess the real value of DR in comparison to other flexibility sources by taking all externalities into account, a technology-neutral approach to market design and the need for simplification of DR programmes, and common standards to reduce complexity and uncertainty for DR providers.
The Macro Polity Revisited
(2021)
This dissertation includes six articles tied together by the overarching question of how changes in public opinion, economics and public policy co-evolve in mature democracies, with a focus on redistributive (in seven European democracies) and secessionist preferences (in Catalonia and Scotland). The theoretical inspiration derives from three sources: 1. the Macro Polity model by Erikson, MacKuen/Stimson, 2. the Thermostatic Responsiveness model by Soroka and Wlezien, and 3. the literature on representation gap models by Gilens, Elsaesser and others. The Macro Polity and Thermostatic Responsiveness models come with an optimistic undertone, emphasizing that public policies adapt to public opinion, producing the policy-opinion congruence that defines responsive government. The Representation Gap model, by contrast, is more pessimistic in highlighting that the preferences of low-income groups are generally worse represented in public policies than the preferences of middle-income and especially high-income groups. While there is evidence in favor of these models for the majoritarian political systems in the US, Canada and the UK, less is known about the validity of these models in proportional democracies of continental Europe. The contributions in this dissertation address this research gap by integrating the three models and combining nearly 500 surveys to study the evolution of European public opinion at the national and subnational level.
Both practitioners and researchers alike assign considerable importance to innovation. However, the process of how innovation unfolds over time is still not well understood. It is the aim of this dissertation to introduce an elaborated picture of innovation processes over time and to discuss the implications of the dynamics of the innovation process for individuals working in innovative contexts, that is, leaders and team members of innovative teams. The first paper of lays the theoretical and empirical groundwork of my dissertation in demonstrating that within the boundaries of the gradual development of innovation activities over time innovation processes are recursive and highly dynamic. These dynamics make the innovation process a challenge for everyone involved in it. In the second and third paper of my dissertation, I discuss this challenge in greater detail for leaders and team members of innovative work teams. Thus, with this dissertation I do not only to give a more elaborate picture of how innovation projects unfold over time, but also describe the challenges attached to the innovation process and give first answers to the question of how individuals involved in this process may be able to master these challenges.
Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es, empirisch gesicherte Aussagen über die schriftliche Textplanung von Mittelstufenschülern beim schriftlichen Argumentieren treffen zu können. Somit wird hier das argumentative Schreiben und Planen von schriftlichen Texten von Siebtklässlern betrachtet und untersucht. Die Daten resultieren aus dem Forschungsprojekt "!!Fach-an-Sprache-an-Fach!!". Im Rahmen dieses Projektes nahmen Schüler der 7. Klassen von insgesamt sieben Schulen in Niedersachsen und Hamburg an einer 15-wöchigen Intervention teil, um u.a. ihre schriftlichen persuasiven Argumentationsfähigkeiten zu verbessern. In diesem Zusammenhang arbeiteten die Schüler mit einem selbst entwickelten Planungstool, um argumentative Texte zu verschiedenen Aufgabenstellungen zu verfassen. In der Arbeit werden von 33 Fokusfällen die bearbeiteten Planungstools sowie die dazugehörigen argumentativen Texte in einem mehrstufigen qualitativen und quantitativen Analyseverfahren betrachtet. In dem Analyseverfahren wird u.a. mit der formal, strukturierenden qualitativen Inhaltsanalyse und mit einem gattungsspezifischen Textanalyseverfahren gearbeitet.
Vor dem Hintergrund der 2004 durchgeführten Reform auf dem Handwerksmarkt sollte anhand einer theoretisch-empirischen Analyse überprüft werden, ob Informationsasymmetrien bezüglich der Qualität auf dem Handwerksmarkt in unterschiedlicher Stärke auftreten und dementsprechend auch eine differenzierte Regulierung erfordern sowie inwieweit marktendogene und wirtschaftspolitische Lösungsmöglichkeiten zum Abbau von Informationsasymmetrien auf dem deutschen Handwerksmarkt wirken. Als empirische Datengrundlage wurde dazu eine Haushaltsumfrage durchgeführt, die neben der Ermittlung des Informationsnachfrageverhaltens auch die Beurteilung handwerklicher Qualität durch private Bauherren zum Ziel hatte. Die Befragung zeigt, dass trotz des Meisterbriefes Informationsasymmetrien auf den einzelnen Märkten bestehen, so dass eine über alle Gewerke geltende und den Wettbewerb stark einschränkende Regulierung in Frage gestellt werden muss. Die aus den Ergebnissen der Befragung deutlich gewordene Anwendung marktendogener Reputationsmechanismen zur Lösung von Informationsasymmetrien macht gleichzeitig den Schutz der Konsumenten als Regulierungsbegründung fraglich. Dies wird verstärkt durch die in der Befragung deutlich gewordene hohe Nutzung spezialisierter Dritter, die aufgrund ihrer Fachkenntnis keinen expliziten Verbraucherschutz benötigen sollten. Die Handwerksnovelle 2004 stellt somit insbesondere durch die Auflockerung der Marktzutrittsbeschränkungen aus informationsökonomischer Sicht einen Schritt in die richtige Richtung dar.
This dissertation contributes to research on generating actionable knowledge for coastal governance to enhance the resilience of coastal social-ecological systems (SES) to climate change. It does this by providing theoretical, methodological and empirical insights on three research questions (RQs). These are: (1) what is a more actionable concept for applying the concept of resilience in coastal governance?; (2) what methods and approaches are suitable to generate actionable knowledge for coastal governance?; (3) what obstacles to knowledge co-production exist for early-career researchers (ECRs) and how can they be overcome? The RQs are addressed in five publications. For answering RQ1, the dissertation applies a research synthesis to bring together common themes and challenges documented in resilience, climate change and environmental governance literature. For answering RQ2, different methods and approaches for generating actionable knowledge are proposed and tested using a case-study in the SES of Algoa Bay, South Africa. These include (i) the analysis of stakeholder agency; (ii) the application of a stakeholder analysis; and (iii) the combination of a capital approach framework, and fuzzy cognitive mapping. Finally, for answering RQ3, the thesis provides a perspective on the obstacles that especially ECRs face, and actions that are needed to create the conditions under which knowledge co-production processes can be successful. This is done by applying a multi-method approach combining an online survey and workshop targeted at ECRs in the marine sciences. Key findings suggest that system and transformative knowledge are particularly important when applying the concept of resilience in coastal governance to generate actionable knowledge. The different methods and approaches that are proposed and tested contribute to generating both system and transformative knowledge. Firstly, they provide an overview of the capacities of different stakeholders to act, shed light on current collaboration and knowledge exchange, and enable the identification of different governance processes for coastal governance and climate change adaptation (system knowledge). Secondly, results have implications for how to improve knowledge exchange and identify leverage points that can enhance overall governance performance, thus providing recommendations on actions and processes that can enhance climate resilience in the case-study area (transformative knowledge). It is also highlighted how knowledge co-production can contribute to generating system and transformative knowledge together with stakeholders, and what actions are needed to build the capacities to translate knowledge into action. Additionally, the findings of this dissertation put forward actions that are needed at different organisational levels of the academic system to facilitate knowledge co-production processes with stakeholders involved in coastal governance. The results of this dissertation have implications for stakeholders and decision-making in the case-study area, as well as for environmental governance, climate change adaptation and broader sustainability research. Implications for stakeholders include recommendations for implementing formal commitments to share climate information across levels and sectors, establishing the role of information providers in the municipality, and reinforcing human capital within the local municipality in Algoa Bay. Findings also suggest the need for a more integrated approach to climate change adaptation in coastal planning and management frameworks. It also suggests that the conservation of environmental assets presents an important bottleneck for resilience management and needs to be further prioritised within decision-making. Implications for research include the applicability of methods beyond the context of this dissertation; a more actionable concept for approaching resilience in (coastal) governance systems; and a more critical reflection on how transformative research is conducted, and what academic foundation is needed so that it can fulfil its societal goal.
'Bildung für das Leben in der Weltgesellschaft' – eine dokumenten- und fallanalytisch gestützte Untersuchung des Bildungskonzepts der UNESCO-Projektschulen Deutschlands. Die vorliegende Studie begibt sich auf die Suche, eine bildungstheoretische Antwort auf die Herausforderungen unserer Zeit zu finden. Schon 1953 hat die UNESCO vor diesem Hintergrund mit dem ASP-net ein Modellprojekt initiiert, das in dieser Dissertation nachgezeichnet und auf deutscher Ebene eruiert werden soll. Im Titel der Dissertation wird bewusst das Bildungsziel der UNESCO-Projektschulen aufgenommen, da die Untersuchung eine Generierung von Leitbildern gelungenen Lernens und Lebens in Schulen einer globalisierten Gesellschaft verfolgt. Es gilt zu untersuchen, inwiefern der anfängliche Auftrag, neue Methoden und Inhalte einer „Erziehung zu internationaler Verständigung“ zu entwickeln, realisiert wird. Hierfür werden die wichtigsten Referenzdokumente der UN und der UNESCO analysiert. Ihre Umsetzung wird anhand von vier Einzelfallstudien und der Auswertung der Jahresberichte von 177 Schulen des deutschen Netzwerks überprüft.
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) recognize the importance of the inextricable link between social and ecological systems and human quality of life (QoL) and biodiversity. Therefore, understanding the feedback and interactions between biodiversity, nature’s contributions to people (NCP), and QoL plays a central role in advancing toward sustainability. In this context, the social-ecological systems (SES) approach has advanced on the subject, particularly in recent decades; however, much remains to be done to comprehensively understand these relationships and interactions, especially at local decision-making scales. In this thesis, through the lenses of the SES approach, the researcher investigates connections between biodiversity, NCP, and QoL in a tropical dry forest (TDF) on the Western coast of Mexico. This place is one of the best-known Neotropical TDF and has been the focus of SES research in the past 20 years, making it an excellent case study for exploring these connections. First, to approach the need for dialogue among different global and local scales and between global and local frameworks, the thesis identifies five key components of the SES dynamics-(1) ecological supply, (2) co-production of NCP, (3) management, (4) demand, and (5) benefits - and three local decision-making scales of analysis: individual plot, smallholder, and land tenure or governance units. A literature review was performed on the social-ecological indicators for the last 11 years in the Chamela-Cuixmala region to operationalize this framework. Second, this thesis uses social-ecological information to identify social-ecological systems units (SESU) spatially explicitly. A methodology was provided to spatially identify the components of social-ecological systems that environmental conditions and management practices have shaped at three previously stated relevant decision-making scales: plots owned by individuals, plot owners, and governance units. To do so, the research group identified and characterized: (1) ecological clusters (EC), (2) social-management clusters (SC), and (3) SESU in a TDF in western Mexico. The findings suggested that decision-makers (ejidatarios, i.e., type of ownership (related to agrarian reform), that in most cases the land allocated is small-smallholders) are bounded by the topographical characteristics and the public policies that determine communal (or private) governance and the number of resources available to them. Finally, the thesis examines the self-perceived QoL across the different SESU, finding 48 QoL items, which were grouped into six categories: 1) social capital, 2) economic capital, 3) agency, 4) nature, 5) peasant non-work activities, and 6) government and services; and two additional dimensions referred to obstacles and enablers of QoL. The researchers found that the more land cover transformation, the more enablers, and obstacles of QoL are identified; emphasis was put on economic capital to achieve QoL. As management is intensified and governance fosters individualism across SES, the higher the Current Welfare Index, and the lower the self-perceived material and non-material satisfaction.
Though the loss of biological diversity is an ecological phenomenon, it also has a social dimension. This makes the study of the social landscape, encompassing the multitude of perspectives and aspirations by different stakeholders, highly relevant for better navigating trade-offs between biodiversity conservation and other land use objectives. Engaging with and addressing contextual understandings of biodiversity is vital to develop socially palatable solutions for biodiversity loss. This dissertation, therefore, takes a place-based approach to studying biodiversity conservation trade-offs and seeks to understand how the perspectives and aspirations of different stakeholders shape them. First, it aims to identify shared viewpoints as ensembles of perceptions and meanings about human-nature relations and biodiversity. Second, it aims to understand how biodiversity is valued and constructed in stakeholders’ aspirations towards their landscape. To this end, a convergent mixed methods approach and case study design are used. Two cases were selected that face different underlying drivers of land-use change, resulting in loss of biodiversity. The Muttama Creek Catchment area is a farming landscape in south-eastern Australia where the ongoing intensification of agricultural production threatens native biodiversity. In the Spreewald Biosphere Reserve in north-eastern Germany, land abandonment and the resulting loss of the biodiversity-rich wet meadows presents a key challenge for biodiversity conservation. Narratives and discourses provide conceptual lenses through which the author studies biodiversity conservation trade-offs. Drawing on Q-methodology, this dissertation identifies biodiversity-production discourses for the first case study and cultural landscape narratives for the second case study. Moreover, based on a participatory futures approach, the Three Horizons Framework, it elicits narratives of change that highlight opportunities for biodiversity conservation in farming landscapes. The findings highlight that despite some overlap in how stakeholders perceive biodiversity, contrasting problem framings and different biodiversity priorities present hindrances to concerted action to protect biodiversity and for collaboration. The findings also identify shared values among stakeholders. However, there is polarity and contestation around the role and importance of biodiversity in rural development.
The world wide population growth and the increasing water scarcity endanger more and more the human society. Water saving measures alone will not be sufficient to solve all associated problems. Therefore, people in arid countries might come back to any kind of water available. In this context the way people regard wastewater must change in terms that it has to be recognized as a water resource. The reuse of wastewater, treated and untreated, for irrigation purposes in agriculture is already established in some semi-arid and arid countries. Countries with absolute water scarcity like Israel might not only be forced to reduce their water consumption, but even to transfer reused water to other sectors. Concerns of authorities and the general public about potential health risks are completely understandable. The health risks of wastewater are mainly originating from pathogens which are negatively correlated with its treatment. Therefore, the quality of a wastewater effluent derived from mechanical-biological treatment can be further improved by additional treatment steps like soil aquifer treatment (SAT). This process is adopted at the Israeli Shafdan facility in the south of Tel Aviv. Conventionally treated wastewater is applied on surface basins from where it percolates into the coastal plain aquifer which supplies approximately one quarter of Israel ́s drinking water. After a certain residence time in the subsurface the water is recovered by wells surrounding the recharge area. Although the pumping regime creates a hydraulic barrier to the pristine groundwater, concerns exist that a contamination of the surrounding drinking water wells could occur. So far, little is known about the removal of organic trace pollutants during the SAT process in general and for the Shafdan site in particular. Consequently, the need arose to study the purification power of the SAT process in terms of the removal of organic trace pollutants. For this purpose reliable wastewater tracers are essential to be able to differentiate between degradation and sorption processes on the one hand and dilution with pristine groundwater on the other hand. Based on their chemical properties, their worldwide usage in a variety of foodstuffs and beverages, and first data about the fate and occurrence of sucralose, artificial sweeteners came into the focus as promising tracer candidates.
Thus, in the present work an analytical method for the simultaneous determination of seven commonly used artificial sweeteners in different water matrices, like surface water and wastewater, was developed (see chapter 2). The method is based on the solid phase extraction (SPE) of the analytes by a styrene-divinylbenzene (SDB) copolymer material, and the analysis by liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization tandem mass-spectrometry (LC-ESI- MS/MS). The sensitivity in negative ionization mode was considerably enhanced by postcolumn addition of the alkaline modifier tris(hydroxymethyl) aminomethane. In potable water, except for aspartame and neohesperidine dihydrochalchone, absolute recoveries >75 % were obtained for all analytes under investigation, but were considerably reduced due to matrix effects in treated wastewater. The widespread distribution of the artificial sweeteners acesulfame, saccharin, cyclamate, and sucralose in the aquatic environment was proven. Concentrations in two German wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) influents ranged up to 190 μg/L for cyclamate, several tens of μg/L for acesulfame and saccharin, and about 1 μg/L for sucralose. For saccharin and cyclamate removal rates >90 % during wastewater treatment were observed, whereas acesulfame and sucralose turned out to be very persistent. As a result of high influent concentrations and low removal rates in WWTPs, acesulfame was the dominant sweetener in German surface waters with concentrations up to 2.7 μg/L. The detection of acesulfame and sucralose in recovery wells in the Shafdan SAT site in Israel in the μg/L range was a promising sign for their possible use as anthropogenic markers. As acesulfame and sucralose showed a pronounced stability in WWTPs and were detected in recovery wells of the SAT site in Israel it became worthwhile to assess their tracer suitability compared to other organic trace pollutants suggested as anthropogenic markers in the past (see chapter 3). Therefore, the prediction power of the two sweeteners was evaluated in comparison with the antiepileptic drug carbamazepine (CBZ), the X-ray contrast medium diatrizoic acid (DTA) and two benzotriazoles (1H-benzotriazole (BTZ) and its 4-methyl analogue (4TTri)). The concentrations of these compounds and their ratios were tracked from WWTPs with different treatment technologies, to recipient waters and further to river bank filtration (RBF) wells. Additionally, acesulfame and sucralose were compared with CBZ during advanced wastewater treatment by SAT in Israel. Only the persistent compounds acesulfame, sucralose, and CBZ showed stable ratios when comparing influent and effluent
concentrations of four German WWTPs with conventional wastewater treatment. However, by the additional application of powdered activated carbon in a fifth WWTP CBZ, BTZ, and 4-TTri were selectively removed resulting in a pronounced shift of the concentration ratios towards the nearly unaffected sweeteners. Results of a seven months monitoring program along the rivers Rhine and Main showed an excellent correlation between CBZ and acesulfame concentrations (r2 = 0.94), and still good values when correlating the concentrations with both benzotriazoles (r2 = 0.66 - 0.82). In RBF wells acesulfame and CBZ were again the compounds with the best concentration correlation (r2 = 0.85).
As human rights evolved to become part of a dominant moral discourse in world politics, regional organisations (ROs) often portray themselves in the language of human rights. Facing growing contestation and politicisation, they have also gradually begun to legitimate their authority drawing on human rights. Yet not all ROs do so to the same extent, in the same manner, or consistently over time. This begs the question: why and how do ROs use human rights for self-legitimation? To answers this research question, I combine a macro analysis using qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) on 23 ROs from 1980 to 2019 with a micro analysis via process-tracing in two cases - Arab League (LoAS) and the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). Ultimately, ROs use human rights in their legitimation because they strive for congruence. When norms, values, and moral principles purported and embodied by the RO are congruent with those of its core constituency and all relevant audiences, The researcher observes human rights legitimation. She argues that the degree of congruence combines with different degrees of delegitimation stemming from the distinct constellation of agents and audiences of legitimation. Shee circumscribes this via four types of human rights legitimisers. Testing existing theories on legitimacy, legitimation, and human rights, the QCA suggests that "Self-containing Legitimisers" are ROs with a status quo of congruence between the RO and its core constituency. "Signalling Legitimisers" irregularly use human rights legitimation as a signal to respond to additional audiences. Thanks to the case studies, the author further refines existing theory. CARICOM constitutes a case of a "Reviving Legitimisers" where delegitimation towards their core constituency occurs to which it reacts by reviving what it embodies which entails including human rights in its legitimation. With LoAS, the author observes a "Brokering Legitimisers" in which case delegitimation is on the verge of a legitimacy crisis, but its Secretary General manages to broker human rights to two diverging audiences thanks to localisation. Thus, this book provides an explanation of how a distinct norm is used in self-legitimation, nuances our understanding of agents and audiences of legitimation, and introduces the concept of localisation to the study of legitimation.
Polyzyklische Aromatische Verbindungen (PAV) im Grundwasser teerölkontaminierter Altlastenstandorte
(2010)
Es wurde das Grundwasser von sieben verschiedenen mit teerölkontaminierten Altlastenstandorten in Deutschland (Stuttgart, Düsseldorf, Wülknitz, Lünen, Offenbach, Karlsruhe) und Österreich (Brunn am Gebirge) untersucht. 45 Einzelverbindungen, darunter PAK, NSO(hetero)-PAV sowie Derivate und Metabolite der PAK und PAV, konnten dabei in signifikanten Konzentrationen nachgewiesen werden. Für alle betrachteten Standorte ergab sich ein vergleichbares Schadstoffmuster. Allein 22 Verbindungen konnten für alle Standorte nachgewiesen werden. Die Identifizierung und Quantifizierung der PAK und PAV erfolgte mittels flüssig-flüssig-Extraktion und an-schließender GC-(EI)-MS Messung der Proben. Besonders zwei Standorte (Karlsruhe, Brunn a.G.) mit einer reaktiven Wand als Sanierungsverfahren wurden genauer betrachtet. Die Untersuchungen ergaben, dass es ab Inbetriebnahme der Anlagen mit Hilfe des reaktiven Reaktormaterials Aktivkohle über 10 Jahre möglich war, neben den hinlänglich bekannten EPA-PAK, auch die polareren, gut wasserlöslichen und in erhöhten Konzentrationen auftretenden NSO(hetero)-PAV sowie deren Derivate und Metabolite erfolgreich aus dem kontaminierten Grundwasserstrom zu entfernen.
This work investigates how managers/consultants (practitioners) of different ranks are engaged in patterns of behavior (practices) in socially situated contexts (practice) attempting to shape preferred shared interpretations of reality to achieve their goals. Following this line of inquiry, the work aims at (1) advancing our understanding of the role of practitioners in shaping managerial realities and (2) investigating how practitioners actually shape managerial realities, particularly focusing on "reality-shaping" practices and their content. The dissertation comprises a set of four complementary articles investigating these research questions empirically based on in-depth, empirical case studies and theoretically within various managerial contexts (client-consultant relationship, CEO post-succession strategic change process, evolutionary initiative development) and considering different actor perspectives (top managers, middle managers, consultants and clients). Resulting from this variety, the articles rely on and contribute to different, at times distant, research fields and therewith scholarly discussions. However, the literature on sensemaking and sensegiving offers a suitable overarching theoretical frame which is used in this work to synthesize the key contributions of the four articles.
In Deutschland weitet sich die ganztägige Beschulung aus. Damit geht für Kinder und Jugendliche ein Rückgang der freien Zeit einer. Diese ist für die Ausbildung und Intensivierung von Freundschaften und Peerbeziehungen gerade in der Adoleszenz bedeutend. Im Fokus dieser Dissertation steht die Frage nach der Gestaltung einer peer-gerechten Schule, in der die Entwicklungsbedürfnisse Jugendlicher berücksichtigt werden. Anhand der Triangulation von Ergebnissen aus Befragungen von ca. 400 Jugendlichen aus Halbtags- und Ganztagsschulen zu Beginn und zum Ende der siebten Klasse mittels einer offenen Frage im Fragebogen zu Aspekten einer peer-gerechten Schule und der mit einem teilstrukturierten Interview zur Qualität ihrer Freundschaften erhobenen Antworten von 14 Jugendlichen aus einer Ganztagsschule aus der siebten Jahrgangsstufe wird in dieser qualitativ-empirischen, explorativen und deskriptiven Untersuchung dargestellt, wie in der Schule die Entstehung und Aufrechterhaltung von intimen, im psychologischen Sinne vertrauensvollen, Freundschaften unterstützt werden kann, welchen aus entwicklungspsychologischer Sicht eine besondere Bedeutung zugeschrieben wird.
Due to the financial markets disturbances of 2007/2008, a considerable number of financial intermediaries such as banks, credit institutions and asset management companies noticed substantial liquidity shortages, difficulties to refinance their operations as a result of a drying out of appropriate refinancing sources, and withdrawals of deposits by consumers. These turbulences in the financial markets forced governments and central banks to increase liquidity provisions to ensure a sufficient aggregate liquidity of the financial industry. Furthermore, policy-makers decided on bailouts of banks or on supporting financial intermediaries by governmental warranties or liquidity provisions to avoid a substantial number of insolvencies of banks and other financial institutions that may have rapidly deteriorated the global financial industry. In the aftermath of the crisis, politicians and economists discussed these decisions controversially because interventions by governments and central banks appear to have a deep impact on the global economy particularly in the financial industry. Moreover, legislative and regulatory authorities decided on increasing their vigilance, particularly with focus on principal-agent problems within certain sectors of the financial industry. A considerable amount of recent research papers has focused on the dynamics of liquidity shortages that suggest the recent crisis being related to both an increasing funding liquidity risk and an emerging market liquidity risk. Self-amplifying interdependencies appear to connect these two dimensions of liquidity risk that during the period 2007 to 2008 have led to the contagion effects in the global financial industry. Only little research work so far has provided evidence from the financial crisis in 2007/2008 while focusing on the German financial industry. Thus, my doctoral dissertation covers three research papers that address the occurrence of substantial liquidity risk and default probability within the German financial industry over the course of the financial crisis of 2007/2008. My first publication co-authored with Daniel Schmidt, Leuphana University of Lüneburg, entitled ‘Consumer reaction to tumbling funds - Evidence from retail fund outflows during the financial crisis 2007/2008’ focuses on funding liquidity risk of German retail funds. Contrary to the findings reported in some of the extant literature, our study indicates that over the past few years a change in investors’ behavior patterns means that investment decisions are made at short notice, and that shares are redeemed in a discriminatory manner when funds perform poorly. By using data assembled from 1672 retail funds in Germany over the period March 2008 to April 2010, we are able to show that in general, both the prior fund performance and prior net redemptions have a statistically significant influence on fund outflows. Moreover, there are indications that in recent crises situations that have resulted in the withdrawal of shares investors react fast to market signals. My second research paper entitled ‘Leveraging and risk-taking within the German banking system: Evidence from the financial crisis in 2007 and 2008’ examines the risk-taking attitudes of distinguishable German banking sectors. This study intends to examine whether the German banking system displays pro-cyclical behavior during 2000 to 2011, and to what extent specific sectors of the German banking system show significant balance sheet operations to increase their leverage during years of booming asset prices. The results of this study demonstrate that different sectors of the German banking system did operate their business more or less pro-cyclical. It also provides empirical evidence that certain banking sectors did favor refinancing their assets by short-term borrowing in the interbank market to increase their leverage during periods of extraordinary high returns in financial markets. Moreover, this study shows that banks, which operate above average leverages, tend to report a high volatility of return on assets and low distances-to-default. Finally, my third paper entitled ‘Are private banks the better banks? An insight into the ownership structure and risk-taking attitudes of German banks.’, and co-authored with Thomas Wein, Leuphana University of Lüneburg, tries to enlighten the influence of the different principal-agent relationships on the risk-taking attitudes of German banks. In this study, we propose our hypothesis that the distinguishable principal-agent relationships of German banks are significantly influencing the risk-taking attitudes of bank managers. Particularly, we intend to substantiate the theory that banks owned by dispersed shareholders or federal state authorities face a higher relevance of principal-agent problems than other banking sectors due to a missing ability to monitor bank managers. Our results underline that these problems appear to mislead bank managers showing an unreasonable risk-taking behavior. In a first stage, we rely on a theoretical model explaining that from the bank owners’ viewpoint three factors of the principal-agent relationships are determining the probability of choosing the optimal portfolio of risky assets. These factors cover the ability to control bank managers, the risk pooling capabilities of bank owners and bank managers, and the incentives of seeking high returns. To support our hypothesis we apply an empirical study to the distances-to-default of different German banking sectors. This demonstrates that risk-taking attitudes of banks are closely related to banks’ ownership. Consequently, our findings offer evidence, that legislative and regulatory authorities should increase their vigilance in terms of principal-agent problems within certain sectors of the banking industry.
In recent years, both scientists and practitioners have become interested in the affectivemotivational concept of work engagement and research on work engagement has strongly accumulated. Engaged people invest physical, affective, and cognitive resources in their work tasks and activities (Sonnentag, Dormann, & Demerouti, 2010) and high levels of work engagement involve positive consequences both for the individual and the organization (Rich, Lepine, & Crawford, 2010). The objective of this dissertation is twofold. The first and second empirical studies help to advance knowledge on antecedents of work engagement and to extend theoretical models in which work engagement is embedded. The third study aims at expanding present knowledge of the role of specific work events as proximal antecedents of distinct affective states and as distal antecedents of job attitudes and affective consequences such as work engagement by developing a taxonomy of work events. This dissertation suggests ideas for future research and provides practical implications regarding work design and human resource practices that are based on the empirical findings reported. Study 1 investigates the cognitive-motivational concept of focus on opportunities (i.e. the number of goals, plans, and possibilities employees believe themselves to have in their future) as a predictor of work engagement and a personal resource that buffers for low levels in employee’s job control. By using a cross-sectional survey study based on a sample of bluecollar workers (N = 174), and a daily diary study based on a sample of administrative employees (N = 64), this study revealed that job control was less strongly related to work engagement when people’s focus on opportunities was reported to be high. Employees with a high focus on opportunities compensated for low job control. This finding refines theoretical models of antecedents of work engagement by supporting the role of focus on opportunities as a motivational resource. The goal of Study 2 was to examine self-efficacy regarding a person‘s work role as a personal resource that helps employees to effectively regulate affective states in a way to show high levels of work engagement. The study was conducted based on a sample of 111 full-time employees who completed daily online questionnaires on affective experiences and work engagement twice a day over ten working days. Results of multilevel linear regression analysis showed that self-efficacy acted as a moderator on the relationship between daily negative affect and daily work engagement. Self-efficacy enabled people to show high levels of work engagement on days when they experience negative affective states. Moreover, the relationship between self-efficacy and work engagement was mediated by an increase of positive affect during the day. Through the mechanism of up-regulating positive affect, people high in self-efficacy succeed in maintaining daily work engagement. These results extend existing theoretical frameworks of work engagement by indicating that self-efficacy is an important personal resource that enables people to effectively regulate affective states and show high levels of work engagement. Study 3 addresses the development of a comprehensive taxonomy of daily work events that provides a frame of reference for future studies to more systematically test propositions of Affective events theory (AET) (Weiss & Cropanzano, 1996). AET provides a theoretical framework that emphasizes the role of work events as proximal antecedents of affect but does not formulate specific propositions about which kind of work events elicit distinct affective states. Based on 559 positive and 383 negative work events mentioned in three daily diary studies by an overall of 218 employees, the qualitative concept mapping methodology was used to establish the taxonomy on work events. Explorative statistical analyses resulted in four positive and seven negative work events clusters. The study provides evidence for the validity of the taxonomy by testing the relationships of the events clusters with distinct positive and negative activating and deactivating affective states.
Considering the recent success of right-wing populist candidates and parties in the United States and across Europe, there has for some years now been talk among scholars (and the wider public) about a worldwide democratic recession. The younger generations appear to be especially unsupportive of democracy’s liberal principles and more willing to express support for authoritarian alternatives. What these authors overlook, however, is that the publics of advanced industrial societies have experienced an intergenerational value shift. In fact, populations in industrial democracies have become more liberal overall, but not everyone’s mindset is changing at the same speed. It is mainly – but not exclusively – the members of the lower classes that do not keep up. While societies have generally become more liberal, there is increasing alienation between the social classes over these liberal values. Drawing on a more recent trend in social class research with a social cognitive approach, this dissertation contributes to the study of growing anti-democratic tendencies around the world by analyzing the interplay between inequality dynamics and value orientations. The focus lies on investigating the effect socio-cultural polarization (i.e., ideological polarization between social classes) has on civic culture in the mature democracies of the West. The findings suggest that it is not ideological polarization between the social classes that has the greatest negative effect on civic culture, or general civic attitudes and behavior, for that matter. It is the increasing dissent in society about whether the country’s elites are still to be trusted with making the right decisions to increase the average citizen’s quality of life. This difference in opinion manifests itself in a decline in some civic attitudes.
Im Rahmen der Arbeit wird ein neues Struktur-Prozess-Modell (OASIS-Modell) zur Abbildung von Informationsprozessen im Rahmen touristischer Entscheidungs-prozesse erarbeitet und begründet. Teilaspekte des Modells werden mit Hilfe eines Mehr-Methoden-Ansatzes empirisch überprüft. Ein wesentliches Ziel der Arbeit ist die Untersuchung der Methoden zur Erhebung der Informations-verarbeitung. Dazu liegen eigene Ergebnisse mit drei verschiedenen empirischen Methoden (Befragungen, IDM-Experimente, Eye-Tracking-Experimente) vor. Ein Schwerpunkt der Methodenentwicklung und des Methodeneinsatzes wurde auf die Information Display Matrix gelegt. Dazu wurde mit dem IDM Visual Processors ein komplett neues Experimentalsystem erarbeitet. Das Programm verknüpft flexible Experimentalsituationen mit einer integrierten Auswertungslogik, so dass die Datenanalyse erheblich vereinfacht oder überhaupt erst mit vertretbarem Aufwand ermöglicht wird. Vom System noch nicht geleistete Analyseaufgaben können aufgrund der verwendeten Standarddatenbank mit Hilfe einfacher Datenexports in anderen Systemen erledigt werden. Im Rahmen der Analyselogik werden erstmals auch dreischrittige Transitionen in Echtzeit berechnet. Damit ist es möglich, weitere abgeleitete Koeffizienten mit vertretbarem Analyseaufwand zu generieren.Zentrales inhaltliches Ergebnis der Arbeit ist die Erstellung eines Modells zur Strukturierung und empirischen Überprüfung des Informationsverhaltens von Urlaubsreisenden. Dieses nach seinen fünf zentralen Dimensionen benannte OASIS-Modell vereint 1. Ein fünfdimensionales Informationsfeld 2. Ein Strukturmodell der möglichen Einflussfaktoren nach vier Dimensionen 3. Die Integration der beiden Modellelemente in eine funktionale und zeitliche Dimension des Entscheidungs- und Informationsprozesses. Die Entwicklung des Modells beruhte auf der genauen Analyse von ca. 20 bereits bestehenden Prozess- und Strukturmodellen sowohl des allgemeinen als auch des touristischen Entscheidungs- und Informationsverhaltens. Im Vergleich zu bestehenden Modellansätzen sind damit vor allem die folgenden Fortschritte gelungen: 1. Das Informationsfeld wird durch die Teilung in fünf Dimensionen für die Analyse besser fassbar: Sowohl die Wirkung der persönlichen, situationalen, produktbezogenen und externen Einflussfaktoren auf jede der Dimensionen als auch die Wechselwirkungen zwischen den Dimensionen können empirisch überprüft werden. Zwar ergibt sich allein innerhalb der Dimensionen des Informationsfeldes eine Zahl von 10 bi-dimensionalen und 45 multidimensionalen Wirkungsfeldern, die durch entsprechende Analysen hinterlegt werden müssten. Damit wird aber lediglich die Komplexität des tatsächlichen Informations- und Entscheidungsverhaltens abgebildet. 2. Die vier Dimensionen der Einflussfaktoren erlauben wiederum die Analyse ihrer Wirkung auf das Informationsfeld, aber auch die Analyse ihrer Wechselbeziehungen. 3. Die Einbettung des Strukturmodells in einen längeren Prozess und die Definition einer vier-schrittigen Informationsepisode wird postuliert. Im Zuge der Untersuchung ist es gelungen, mit Hilfe verschiedener Erhebungs- und Analysemethoden Teilbereiche des Modells zu prüfen und zu erklären. Ein gesamtheitliche Überprüfung des Modells wird aber auch in Zukunft kaum gelingen. Insofern gibt es für die zukünftige Forschung nur zwei Wege: Entweder die Komplexität des Modells so weit zu reduzieren, dass es mit einem einheitlichen Analyseansatz greifbar wird (wogegen aber die große Zahl bereits vorhandener Teilmodelle spricht), oder das Modell als Arbeitsrahmen zu sehen, in dem Teilbereiche sukzessive untersucht und überprüft werden. Dieser Weg ist mit der vorliegenden Untersuchung begonnen worden.