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Auflistung Publikationen im Open Access gefördert durch die UB nach Auflistung nach Organisationseinheit "FB 03 - Sozial- und Kulturwissenschaften"
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Item 10 Jahre nach dem NSU. Vom Reden über Frauenhass und rechten Terror(2021) Lang, JulianeItem Aligned Sustainability Understandings? Global Inter-Institutional Arrangements and the Implementation of SDG 2(2021) Breitmeier, Helmut; Schwindenhammer, Sandra; Checa, Andrés; Manderbach, Jacob; Tanzer, MagdalenaItem Alternative Fakten(2023) Maeße, JensItem Antisemitismus seit 9/11: Erscheinungsformen, Hintergründe, Dynamiken(2022) Salzborn, SamuelItem At the Junction: Two Models of Business Responsibility for Modern Slavery(2020) Mende, Janne; Drubel, JuliaItem Comparing learning opportunities of generic skills in higher education to the requirements of the labour market(2022) Lohberger, Katharina; Braun, EditzItem Corporeal Interactions in VRChat : Situational Intensity and Body Synchronization(2023) Krell, Felix; Wettmann, NicoErving Goffman's work on interaction in everyday life focuses on joint spatio-temporal and face-to-face situations and denies the constitution of social situations via mediatized interaction. In contrast, we argue that shared immersive media such as Social Virtual Reality enable intense, delocalized forms of co-present interactions that constitute closeness and intimacy. By discussing Goffman in the context of current works that open up his perspective for mediatization, we present an understanding of social situations that focuses on intensity and synchronized embodiment - physical, digital, and corporeal. On the Social VR platform VRChat, synchronized bodies allow for intimate corporeal practices, such as cuddling, dancing, or cybersex. Virtual Reality technology facilitates delocalized forms of affective-bodily interaction, thereby contributing to the social negotiation of mediatized closeness and intimacy - despite physical distance. Our findings are based on a digital ethnographic analysis of lifeworlds and practices of enthusiast VRChat-users, combined with qualitative semi-structured interviews.Item COVID-19 und Weiterbildung - Überblick zu Forschungsbefunden und Desideraten(2021) Denninger, Anika; Käpplinger, BerndItem Einfach komplex? Die Übersetzung politikwissenschaftlicher Komplexität in die Gesellschaft(2020) Mende, Janne; Müller, StefanItem Einmal begeistert, immer begeistert? Eine Experience-Sampling Studie zur wahrgenommen Unterrichtsqualität und Motivation von Schülerinnen und Schülern im Kunstunterricht(2022) Rakoczy, Katrin; Frick, Ulrich; Weiß-Wittstadt, Susanne; Tallon, Miles; Wagner, ErnstItem Essential readings in international and comparative adult education(2022) Käpplinger, BerndItem Explaining Immigrants' Worries About Ethnic Harassment: Germany, 1986–2004(2020) Spörlein, Christoph; Schlüter, ElmarItem From flows towards updates: Security regimes and changing technologies for financial surveillance(2023) Westermeier, Carola‘Follow the money’ is currently the central principle of international financial security, although money itself is probably one of the most unlikely objects to make traceable. Two recent scandals around a security unit and the payment processor Wirecard show how existing systems of financial surveillance that seek to capture ‘flows’ of money for security purposes are either enabled or frustrated. While this current regime of financial surveillance adheres to demanding the free flow of money through financial infrastructures and various actors and intermediaries, new digital currencies build on a set type of ledger(s) in which money is stored as data. Hence, what we understand as money does not ‘flow’, but is rather updated. This change in the underlying infrastructure means that traceability does not need to be enacted; it is an intrinsic feature of digital currencies. With new central bank digital currencies (CBDC), the regime of financial security thus changes from the monitoring of financial flows and flagging of (potentially) illicit transactions towards the storage of financial data in (de)centralised ledgers. This form of transactional governance is engendered by shifting geopolitical agendas that increasingly rely on fractured instead of globalised financial infrastructures, thus making CBDCs themselves subject to security efforts.Item Kinder, Küche, Politik? : Vereinbarkeitsfragen in der autoritären und extremen Rechten(2022) Lang, Juliane; Reusch, MarieItem Low-carbon cows: From microbial metabolism to the symbiotic planet(2022) Folkers, Andreas; Opitz, SvenThis article focuses on two projects – one at a large chemical company and the other at a small start-up – to intervene in the relations between cows and ruminal microbes to reduce bovine methane emissions. It describes these interventions as ‘symbiotic engineering’: a biopolitical technique targeting holobionts and becoming effective by working on interlaced sets of living things. Based on the analysis of these cases, the article elucidates a planetary symbiopolitics (Helmreich) that connects ‘molecular biopolitics’ (Rose) and ‘microbiopolitics’ (Paxson) to ‘bovine biopolitics’ (Lorimer, Driessen) and the politics of climate change. We critically investigate the spatial imaginaries of symbiotic engineering practices that single out the microbial realm as an Archimedean point to address planetary problems. This technoscientific vision resonates with the notion of the ‘symbiotic planet’ advanced by Lynn Margulis that depicts the Earth System, or Gaia, as a vast set of relations among living things down to the tiniest microbes. Margulis’ concept, as well as the ‘symbiotic view of life’ (Gilbert, Scott, Sapp) has been embraced in recent debates in STS as a way to think of multispecies worldings. The article contributes critically to these debates by showing what happens when the topology of the symbiotic Earth becomes the operating space for symbiotic engineering practices.Item