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Institut
Diese theoriegeleitete empirische Masterarbeit beleuchtet die Forschungslücke der emotionalen Führungskompetenzen als Erfolgsfaktor weiblicher Führungskräfte. Dabei wird von einer Veränderung des Führungsverständnisses in Richtung eines verstärkten Fokus der Mitarbeiterorientierung ausgegangen. Ziel der Arbeit ist die Formulierung von Implikationen für den praktischen Einsatz emotionaler Intelligenz und der darunter subsumierten Kompetenzen bei weiblichen Führungskräften. Datengrundlage bilden 14 leitfadengestützte Experteninterviews mit weiblichen und männlichen Führungskräften, Beratern und Coaches. Die Auswertung des Datenmaterials erfolgt anhand der qualitativen Inhaltsanalyse nach Mayring (2010), indem die Ergebnisse durch eine Einteilung in Geschlecht, Alter und Position analysiert werden. Die Untersuchung ergibt, dass sich weibliche Führungskräfte in einem Spannungsfeld aktueller Herausforderungen befinden. Sie werden mit der Erwartungshaltung an ein vielfältiges Anforderungsprofil der modernen Führungskraft, dem Aufbruch der traditionellen Führungsphilosophie mit wachsendem Fokus der Mitarbeiterperspektive sowie der Verkörperung des weiblichen Führungsstils konfrontiert. Immer häufiger sehen sie sich dabei einem widersprüchlichen Selbstbild ausgesetzt. Damit emotionale Intelligenz als erfolgreiche Kompetenz weiblicher Führungskräfte genutzt werden kann, gilt es, bestehende Stereotype aufzubrechen und die Anwendung individueller Führungsstile zu ermöglichen.
Nachhaltige Energieversorgung spielt eine wichtige Rolle für den Klimaschutz. Dabei gehört die Steigerung der Energieeffizienz zu den zentralen Elementen einer Energiewende. Die vorliegende Fallstudie beschäftigt sich intensiv mit einem in der Policy Analyse bisher vernachlässigten Politikfeld: der Energieeffizienzpolitik. In Deutschland wird viel Energie dazu gebraucht, um Gebäude zu heizen. Hier existieren große wirtschaftliche Effizienzpotentiale. Die EU sieht darin eine „Schlüsselrolle“ und fordert von ihren Mitgliedstaaten mit der Richtlinie 2002/91/EG Rahmenbedingungen für energieeffizientere Gebäude. Mit Ansätzen der EU-Implementationsforschung und der Politikfeldanalyse untersucht die Arbeit den Implementationsprozess dieser Richtlinie zwischen 2003 und 2010 in Deutschland und beschreibt die formale und praktische Effektivität des Ergebnisses mithilfe neu entwickelter kontextspezifischer Kriterien. Eine detaillierte Prozess-Analyse identifiziert relevante Faktoren, die das politische Ergebnis beeinflusst haben. Formal hat Deutschland die EU-Gebäude-Richtlinie größtenteils implementiert. Doch einige Anforderungen sind verspätet oder unbefriedigend praktisch implementiert worden. Eine wichtige Ursache der Verzögerung waren inhaltliche Differenzen zwischen den politischen Ressorts. An der öffentlichen Debatte beteiligten sich starke Befürworter beider Seiten, die den Prozess zusätzlich beeinflussten. Für den Vollzug der Energieeinsparverordnung (EnEV) sind die Bundesländer zuständig; ihre Kontrolle der energetischen Mindeststandards bei Bestandsgebäuden ist jedoch nicht befriedigend. Es gibt kaum Daten zu der Frage, ob neu gebaute oder sanierte Gebäude den gesetzlichen Anforderungen entsprechen. Ursachen für den mangelhaften Vollzug liegen im Zielkonflikt zwischen ambitionierter Klimaschutzpolitik auf der einen und Bürokratieabbau auf der anderen Seite. Hier war der Bundesrat, der behördliche Stichproben ablehnte, entscheidender Akteur. Die Verzögerungen und die ineffektive praktische Implementation der Richtlinie in Deutschland waren Resultat politischer Auseinandersetzungen. Es gab also keine institutionellen oder administrativen Probleme bei der Implementation im engeren Sinne, wie sie Implementationsdefizite in anderen Fällen erklären. Abschließend werden konkrete Handlungsempfehlungen entwickelt, wie die Bundesregierung eine effektive Implementation der EU-Gebäude-Richtlinie gewährleisten (u.a. bessere formale Implementation des Energieausweises und der Heizungsinspektion sowie effektivere Durchsetzung der EnEV durch Stichprobenkontrollen) und erfolgreich gegen Widerstände von Interessengruppen durchsetzen kann (z.B. indem sie Pro-Effizienz-Interessenkoalitionen stärkt und neben dem Ordnungsrecht auch begleitende Instrumente weiterentwickelt, beispielsweise finanzielle Anreize sowie Information und Beratung, auch um mit dem gängigen Missverständnis aufzuräumen, die EnEV sei freiwillig).
All of the papers contained in this thesis address the topic of population economics, especially in relation to labor markets. The first chapter, Introduction, gives an overview of the papers discussed in this thesis. In the second chapter, Age and Gender Differences in Job Opportunities, job opportunities for older workers are analyzed. Newly-employed women and men who are older than the age of 55 are more limited in their occupational choices than younger women and men. Different measures of segregation such as the Duncan Index and Hutchens Index show unequal distribution of jobs over age. Older women in particular face the highest segregation. Several years of the IAB Employment Sample are used in the analysis. In the third chapter, Explaining Age and Gender Differences in Employment Rates: A Labor Supply Side Perspective, the labor supply of older individuals is analyzed. The comparison of reservation wages and entry wages shows age- and gender-specific differences. Nonemployed individuals at the age of 55 and older have the highest reservation wages. Reservation wages for females are always higher than those for males. Entry wages increase with age for males, but not for females. Furthermore, the job satisfaction of women decreases with age while satisfaction with leisure tends to increase. This may explain why employment rates for females are lower than for males. The German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP) data is used in the paper. In the forth chapter, Somewhere over the Rainbow: Sexual Orientation Discrimination in Germany, sexual orientation-based differences in income are analyzed. Although Germany has an anti-discrimination law that has explicitly prohibited discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation since 2006, there are significant income differences for gay men and lesbian women. While gay men have an income discount of 5 to 6 percent relative to married heterosexual men, lesbian women have an income premium of 9 to 10 percent relative to heterosexual married women. These differences within the gender types can be explained partially by selection into specific occupations and sectors. One wave of the German Mikrozensus data is used in the analysis. The fifth chapter, A Note on Happiness in Eastern Europe, is no more related to Germany, but takes an international position. Estimations on life satisfaction show typical results, such as a u-shaped effect in relation to age. Marriage and a good state of health have positive effects on life satisfaction or utility, while individual unemployment has a negative effect. Several years of the European Values Study (EVS) and the World Value Survey (WSV) are used in the paper. The thesis is finished by a final chapter, Conclusion
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.
The dissertation deals with the impact of nitrogen deposition on the functioning of heathland ecosystems. Special interests were the displacement of heather (Calluna vulgaris) by the purple moor-grass (Molinia caerulea) as well as the fate of nitrogen loads in dry heathland ecosystems. The results of the studies undertaken in the field and in the greenhouse are presented as five individual journal articles. The nature of nutrient limitation was studied by means of fertilisation experiments with nitrogen (N) and phosphorus for heather and purple moor-grass (Articles I and II). The impact of nitrogen deposition on the outcome of competition between these two species was analysed during a competition experiment in the greenhouse (Article III). The aim of a 15N tracer experiment was to determine the fate of nitrogen deposition as well as allocation patterns (Article IV). In addition, the response of purple moor-grass to the combined effects of nitrogen deposition and summer droughts was investigated in a second greenhouse experiment (Article V). The fertilisation experiments showed that the growth of heather as well as of purple moor-grass is predominantly limited by N (Articles I and II). However, the results of the competition experiment demonstrated that only purple moor-grass has the ability to benefit from additional N loads, which in turn gives the grass the opportunity to displace heather (Article III). Drought treatment resulted in strikingly reduced biomass production of purple moor-grass in N-fertilised pots, mainly as a result of dying aboveground biomass during dry periods (Article V). This striking susceptibility of purple moor-grass to the combination of nitrogen deposition and drought must be taken into account, when predicting future developments of dry heathlands. The results of the 15N tracer experiment showed that the investigated heath is still in an early stage of N saturation, as indicated by a high immobilisation capacity and negligible leaching losses of 15N (Article IV). The findings of the dissertation contribute to a better understanding of the processes underlying the encroachment of purple moor-grass in dry heathlands and can enhance heathland management. The results can also be used to to evaluate the current and future status of this ecosystem particularly with regard to the various stages of N saturation as well as in the determination of “Critical Loads”.
Responsibility for sustainability is an action guiding concept which relates the abstract norm of sustainability with concrete action contexts. It thereby specifies what bearers of responsibility ought to do. In this thesis, I introduce the concept of responsibility to economic theory, focusing specifically on individual and governmental responsibility for sustainability. Some of the questions I examine are: how should responsibility be distributed among agents? How can agents, who are responsible for several normative aims, solve trade-offs? Do governmental policies affect individuals’ ability to assume responsibility? How can individuals efficiently induce governments to act responsibly? In Paper 1, A utilitarian notion of responsibility for sustainability, I conceptualize and formalize a utilitarian notion of responsibility for sustainability which I then relate to established normative criteria for assessing intertemporal societal choice. I show that responsibility for sustainability can be unambiguously conceptualized in economic models. Furthermore, I affirm that responsibility may provide action guidance even if the aim of sustainability is not feasible. In Paper 2, Verantwortung von Konsumenten für Nachhaltigkeit, I study consumers’ responsibility for sustainability. Particularly, I specify crucial components of this responsibility in order to analyze the relation of consumers’ private and political responsibility. I show that the responsibility for sustainability of consumers comprises three indispensable obligations of which only one concerns consumers’ consumption choices. In Paper 3, Regulation of morally responsible agents with motivation crowding, I focus on the impact of governmental policies on the motivation of an individual to assume moral responsibility. In particular, I study the regulation of a morally responsible individual with motivation crowding in the context of a negative externality. I show that combining consumption taxes with the provision of perfect information is, in many cases, superior to consumption taxes alone. In Paper 4, Endogenous Environmental Policy when Pollution is Transboundary, I examine how individuals which form lobby groups affect the determination of environmental policy when governments seek not only to maximize welfare, but simultaneous maximize support by lobby groups. More specifically, I consider the case in which two countries are linked through transboundary pollution. Environmental policies adopted by self-interested governments may be more stringent than by social welfare maximizing governments. Furthermore, due to the interaction of distortions the space of optimal policies increases: politically optimal tax rates may be too high or too low to optimally internalize the environmental externality.
Nongovernmental organisations often criticize the working conditions at foreign suppliers – especially those in Asia and Latin America – of Western brands. In response, many brands have established codes of conduct in order to set binding social standards for their suppliers. Audits are conducted to monitor their implementation; however, substantial improvement of labour conditions has not been achieved. Therefore, brands are increasingly shifting their efforts towards building the capacity of their suppliers themselves to enhance the implementation of social standards. The creation of participative organisation structures that involve workers in decision-making processes regarding working conditions is often a focus of such novel training programmes. In light of these developments, this study will examine if a positive relationship exists between worker participation initiated by management and the improvement of working conditions in factories. In the theoretical part of the study, motivational and cognitive models as well as aspects of power-sharing and decision-making processes are used to examine the influence of participation on working conditions. Moreover, requirements for successful participation structures are developed. The Western discourse on influence mechanisms is complemented by political, economic, legal and cultural conditions in China related to participation and the implementation of social standards. The case study in this dissertation is based on research at seven garment factories in China which took part in the public-private-partnership project „Worldwide Enhancement of Social Quality“ initiated by the German retailer Tchibo GmbH and the Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit, a German federal enterprise for international cooperation in the field of sustainable development. The goal of the three-year project was to initiate participative dialogue structures and to provide technical knowledge regarding the implementation of social standards in 40 factories in China, Bangladesh and Thailand. In order to examine the influence of worker participation in the Chinese facilities, a quantitative survey of 390 workers and 70 worker representatives, as well as interviews with 15 managers, nine project members and one representative from the International Labour Organisation China were conducted. The research results indicate that worker involvement contributes to the improvement of the economic and social performance of factories. In particular, the rise in trust between management and the workforce, and the inclusion of workers’ valuable input contributed to the positive change. In order to make full use of the potential of participation, workers’ and managers’ motivation, key competences for participation, training activities as well as time resources are of importance. China is undergoing a period of transformation. Although until now no independent unions are allowed in China, employee involvement offers the opportunity for workers to become part of decision-making processes in the factories, thereby supporting democratisation tendencies in the country.
Nachhaltigkeitskommunikation ist eine inhaltliche und institutionelle Querschnittsaufgabe, die in formelle und informelle Bildungsprozesse eingebettet ist. Das Konzept einer Bildung für nachhaltige Entwicklung bildet den geeigneten theoretischen Rahmen für die Initiierung und Umsetzung entsprechender Kommunikationsmaßnahmen, die darauf ausgerichtet sind, nicht nur nachhaltigkeitsrelevante Informationen zu vermitteln, sondern auch eine aktive Gestaltung zukunftsfähiger, nachhaltiger Lebensformen und -stile zu ermöglichen und zu fördern. In diesem Kontext befasst sich die vorliegende Dissertation mit der Leitfrage, welche theoretische Rahmung sich für den Einsatz von Ausstellungen zur Vermittlung von Nachhaltigkeitsthemen ergibt. Sie untersucht dabei die Bedingungen und methodisch-instrumentellen Voraussetzungen, die die Wahl geeigneter Vermittlungsinstrumente beeinflussen und geht der Frage nach, welche konzeptionellen Voraussetzungen sich für die Entwicklung, Gestaltung und den Einsatz von Nachhaltigkeitsausstellungen in der Praxis ergeben. Anhand von verschiedenen Praxisbeispielen wird schließlich aufgezeigt, wie sich Nachhaltigkeitsausstellungen evaluieren lassen.
Intelligent Product Design
(2012)
The aim of this thesis is to generate reality-based hypotheses about the opportunities and obstacles that create the implementation of Cradle to Cradle for the companies Jules Clarysse NV and Steelcase Inc. It discusses further which marketing-mix is appropriate for Cradle to Cradle products. Therefore exploratory expert interviews have been conducted with both companies. The empirical part is introduced by a literature study. From marketing perspective, the Cradle to Cradle approach for product design is investigated while taking into account that academic literature categorizes the concept on the one hand as consistent sustainability strategy, on the other hand as sustainable design. Moreover, the broad use of the expression design, within the literature of the Cradle to Cradle founders, is analyzed. Here, Cradle to Cradle design is holding out the prospect of Triple Top Line growth, rather than meeting only the economic bottom line. In regard of aesthetics, Cradle to Cradle aspires diversity in contrast to prevailing principles of Functionalism and universal design solutions. The ‘hidden‘ design assignment of Cradle to Cradle, service design, is highlighted as sphere that should be progressed. All these considerations form the interview guideline. The interviews serve as reality check whether there result Triple Top Lines and new service models for the companies and explore how aesthetics and tools of the marketing-mix are handled in Cradle to Cradle practice.