Zweitveröffentlichungen (grüner Weg)
Dauerhafte URI für die Sammlung
Suchen
Auflistung Zweitveröffentlichungen (grüner Weg) nach Auflistung nach DDC "ddc:320"
Gerade angezeigt 1 - 20 von 30
Treffer pro Seite
Sortieroptionen
Item Ableitung von Technologien(1973) Schmidt, PeterItem Das Allgemeine der Allgemeinbildung(1994) Sander, WolfgangItem Alternativschulbewegung und politische Bildung(1984) Sander, WolfgangItem Der Beitrag der politischen Bildung zur Subjektkonstitution(1990) Sander, WolfgangItem Bürger, Parteien und Staat(1985) Sander, WolfgangItem Die Dritte Welt - kein Paradies(1989) Sander, WolfgangItem Erwachsenenbildung - k(ein) Thema für die Fachdidaktiken?(1990) Sander, WolfgangItem Explikation und kritische Rekonstruktion der Arbeit von H. Y. Kim(1973) Schmidt, PeterItem Heimat Europa : Eine didaktische Skizze(1990) Sander, WolfgangItem The hidden (r)evolution: Commentary on Hauke Brunkhorst's book Critical Theory of Legal Revolutions(2015) Kreide, ReginaThe article is a review of Hauke Brunkhorst's book on a Critical Theory of Legal Revolutions. The author addresses three points: (1) Hauke Brunkhorst s notion of history, and of what remains unseen; (2) the dialectics of evolution and revolution, and whether the approach is sufficiently dialectic, according to its own promise; and (3) the (too) implicit notion of critique.Item La Lucha Continua: A Presentist Lens on Social Protest in Ecuador(2023) Schwab, JuliaEcuador has one of the most progressive constitutions in Latin America. It defines the state as plurinational and guarantees collective rights to Indigenous people and even to Nature itself. At the same time, the oil sector has been of strategic importance and “national interest” to both right- and left-wing governments for the last decades, contributing with its rents and revenues to around one-third of the state coffers. Therefore, the extractivist model remains unchallenged and still promises development - while reproducing systemic inequalities and a “continuum of violence.” In June 2022, the Indigenous movement called for a nationwide strike to draw attention to the socio-economic crisis following the pandemic. The authorities harshly repressed the mobilization and a racializing media discourse demarcated the “Indigenous” agenda from the needs of “all Ecuadorians,” classifying the protesters as “terrorists” and thus, a threat to the nation. Drawing on ethnographic research, this article discusses the role of extractivism in social mobilization. Exploring the future of social protest in Ecuador in the face of new pressures like climate change and the energy transition, it argues that extractivist patterns will change globally and amplify social discontent and mobilization.Item Massenmedien : zum Beispiel die Zeitung(1990) Sander, WolfgangItem Medien - beherrschen sie unseren Alltag?(1989) Sander, WolfgangItem Die politische Bildungsaufgabe des Religionsunterrichts(1983) Sander, WolfgangItem Rauchen, psychosoziale Merkmale und Lungenkrebs(1992) Schmidt, Peter