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Der Beitrag beschreibt beispielhaft die administrativen, organisatorischen und sozialen Voraussetzungen gelungener Austauschprogramme mit chinesischen Partnerhochschulen. Hierzu gehört neben einer intensiven Beziehungspflege mit diesen Partnerinstitutionen eine gelebte Willkommenskultur für chinesische Studierende an der deutschen Hochschule. Letztere beinhaltet eine über die notwendigen administrativen Prozesse hinausgehende Betreuung, besondere Kursangebote sowie eine kontinuierliche Vernetzung und Einbindung der chinesischen Studierenden durch verschiedene extracurriculare Aktivitäten zur Integration in den Studienalltag und in das Alltagsleben über verschiedene Phasen hinweg (vor der Ausreise, bei der Ankunft, im Verlauf des Studiums, bei der Gestaltung von Praxisphasen sowie beim Übergang ins Berufsleben). Als Teil
dieses Maßnahmenplans fördern interkulturelle Kursangebote in kulturell gemischten Gruppen nicht nur die Integration der chinesischen Studierenden. Sie leisten auch einen wichtigen Beitrag zur Stärkung der internationalen Ausbildung deutscher Studierender im Sinne einer internationalization@home. Entsprechende Angebote erhöhen damit die Wertschätzung von Internationalisierung als Mehrwert für die gesamte Hochschule. Gleichzeitig unterstützen sie den Ausbau interkultureller Sensibilität als wichtiger Qualifikation für das zukünftige Berufsleben für die Studierenden beider Seiten. Um all diese Maßnahmen zu verwalten und umzusetzen, sind personelle Ressourcen zur Betreuung und Evaluation der Programme erforderlich. Darüber hinaus bedarf es einer konstruktiven Kommunikationskultur zwischen verschiedenen Abteilungen der Hochschule sowie hinreichend mit China-Kompetenz ausgestatteter Akteur*innen (Mitarbeiter*innen im Akademischen Auslandsamt, Professor*innen, Auslands- und Regionalbeauftragte etc.).
Im Investitionsgüterservice ist Wissen längst zu einem zentralen Erfolgshebel geworden, sowohl zur Steigerung der Prozesseffektivität und -effizienz als auch als Fundament für werthaltige Geschäftsmodelle. Das Management Service-relevanten Wissens ist für kleine und mittelständische Unternehmen der Investitionsgüterindustrie jedoch oftmals eine nicht zu unterschätzende Herausforderung, welche weit über IT-technische Aspekte hinausreicht. In dem vom BMBF sowie vom ESF (ko)finanzierten Projekt „SerWiss“ wurde vor diesem Hintergrund ein umfassender Lösungsansatz entwickelt und bei zwei Projektpartnern aus der Investitionsgüterindustrie prototypisch umgesetzt.
Der Anstoß zu diesem Projekt kam beim Lesen eines Artikels in einem Wirtschaftsmagazin zum Einsatz des Brettspiels "Go" (abgewandelt 'Gobang') im Training des Managementnachwuchses in Japan und Südkorea. Dieses jahrtausendealte Spiel (siehe unten) wird in diesen Ländern zum Erlernen strategischen Denkens eingesetzt. Der Gedanke lag daher nahe, zu testen, ob dieses Lernziel auch in der qualifizierten Ausbildung in unserem Kulturkreis erreichbar ist. Leider ist aber die Zahl möglicher Spielkonstellationen ist bei Go zum Durchspielen aller Varianten immens groß – wesentlich grösser als beim Schachspiel (!) –, so daß nur einfache Spielvarianten über einen Rechner abbildbar sind. Bei der Suche nach weiteren Spielen kam ich auf den Begriff "Brettplanspiel". Es folgten (teils zufällig) diverse Gespräche, in denen immer wieder neue Informationen zum Thema gewonnen wurden, und es reifte die Idee, eine studentische Arbeitsgruppe zusammenzustellen, die angeleitet testen sollte, ob der Einsatz von Unternehmensspielen in Form haptischer Spiele (= Brettspiele) im Rahmen der Hochschulausbildung einen Nutzen bringen kann. Nach mehreren Gesprächen wurde das Projekt mit zwölf Probanden integriert in das Pflichtfach 'Case Studies' (8. Semester). Berücksichtigt wurden die Spiele 'Factory Global' , 'Coludo', 'Apples&Oranges' und 'Go' Im WS 2004/2005 wurden dann unter dem Titel "BPS" (für: Brettplanspiele) die Testrunden zu den ausgewählten Spielen an insgesamt fünf Tagen durchgeführt; die Detailorganisation wurde von den studentischen Teammitgliedern selbständig abgewickelt. Abschließend wurde von den Studierenden eine Präsentation der Ergebnisse vorgelegt (s. u.). Grundlage für diese Ergebnispräsentation war u. a. die Auswertung der von den Teilnehmern erarbeiteten Fragebögen, die von allen Spielern nach jeder Spielrunde ausgefüllt wurden. Die Spiele aus dieser ersten Testrunde (BPS 1) sind – sieht man von dem Exoten 'Go' (kein Unternehmensspiel) einmal ab – eher dem klassischen Genre zuzuordnen, in denen der unternehmerische Prozess eines Produktionsunternehmens als Ganzes abgebildet / simuliert und durchgespielt wird und in dem die Spieler das Zusammenwirken des güterwirtschaftlichen und des finanzwirtschaftlichen Teilprozesses bis schlußendlich zu dessen Abbildung im Periodenabschluss und dessen Interpretation 'begreifbar' erfahren. Neben branchenorientierten Varianten und firmenspezifischen Anpassungen (Siemens z.B. hat 'Apples&Oranges' der Firma Celemi auf das Wertesystem des Economic Value Added (EVA) angepaßt) entstanden in den letzten Jahren themenspezifische Unternehmens-Brettplanspiele, z.B. zu Themen wie Projektmanagement, Unternehmenslogistik etc.. Im SS 2005 wurde eine weitere Spiel- und Testrunde durchgeführt mit den Spielen 'Silke' (Untenehmenslogistik / SCM), 'PM erleben' (Projektmanagement) und 'Process Factory' (Prozess-Management). Auch die Erkenntnisse aus dieser BPS 2 – Runde (Fragebogen) wurden in einer Präsentation zusammengefaßt.
Due to its economic size, economic policy measures, in particular trade policies, have a far‐reaching impact on global economic developments. This chapter quantifies the economic consequences of US protectionist trade aspirations. It focuses on trade policy scenarios, which have been communicated by the current US administration as potential new trade policies. The chapter draws on the results of a study of the ifo Institute conducted on behalf of the Bertelsmann Foundation. In the first simulation, a retraction from the North American Free Trade Agreement is considered. The chapter then illustrates the potential consequences of a “border tax adjustment” policy. It also simulates further measures to protect the US market by presuming an increase in American duties. The chapter presents robust quantitative results that can be expected if an increasingly protectionist US trade policy were to be implemented.
This paper examines the interdependencies of tourism, Buddhism and sustainability combining in-depth-interviews with Buddhism experts and non-participant observation in a mixed-method approach. The area under investigation is the Alpine region of Austria, Germany and Switzerland, since it is home to Asian and Western forms of Buddhism tourism alike. Results show that Buddhism tourism as a value-based activity on the one hand is not commercial, but since demand is rising, on the other hand tendencies towards more commercial forms can be observed. As a modest form of activity Buddhism tourism does not shape the landscape of the Alpine area and by its nature it incorporates sustainability.
A growing share of modern trade policy instruments is shaped by non-tariff barriers (NTBs). Based on a structural gravity equation and the recently updated Global Trade Alert database, we empirically investigate the effect of NTBs on imports. Our analysis reveals that the implementation of NTBs reduces imports of affected products by up to 12%. Their trade dampening effect is thus comparable to that of trade defence instruments such as anti-dumping duties. It is smaller for exporters that have a free trade agreement with the importing country. Different types of NTBs affect trade to a different extent. Finally, we investigate the effect of behind-the-border measures, showing that they significantly lower the importer’s market access.
The State of Custom
(2021)
In our article, we engage with the anthropologist Gerd Spittler’s pathbreaking
article “Dispute settlement in the shadow of Leviathan” (1980) in which
he strives to integrate the existence of state courts (the eponymous Leviathan’s
shadow) in (post-)colonial Africa into the analysis on non-state court legal practices.
According to Spittler, it is because of undesirable characteristics inherent
in state courts that the disputing parties tended to rather involve mediators than
pursue a state court judgment. The less people liked state courts, the more likely
they were to (re-)turn to dispute settlement procedures. Now how has this situation
changed in the last four decades since its publication date? We relate his findings
to contemporary debates in legal anthropology that investigate the relationship
between disputing, law and the state. We also show through our own work in
Africa and Asia, particularly in Southern Ethiopia and Kyrgyzstan, in what ways
Spittler’s by now classical contribution to the field of legal anthropology in 1980
can be made fruitful for a contemporary anthropology of the state at a time when
not only (legal) anthropology has changed, but especially the way states deal with
putatively “customary” forms of dispute settlement.
This chapter takes a detailed look at the developmental state model and its manifestations in regional development policies. Developmentalist ideas have been waxing and waning across periods of economic boom and bust. Recent years, however, have seen a renaissance of East Asian developmentalism – reminiscent of its heyday in the 1980s and 1990s and most notably driven by the region’s continued economic strength.
The endorsement of state-led modernization, preferential policies, and close state-business relations – which underpinned Japan/Korea/China’s transformations – has also left its mark on current ODA practices in the region and beyond. East Asia’s state agencies are pushing ahead with colossal infrastructure programs – in close cooperation with commercial actors – that advance broad development goals and, at the same time, promotes national interests. Compared to Western OECD peers, Asian development cooperation tends to focus less on neoliberal and democratic principles and, instead, places greater emphasis on state-corporatist and meritocratic ideas.
To what extent East Asia’s infrastructural megaprojects and connectivity corridors across Eurasia and Africa (BRI, EAI, and Partnership for Quality Infrastructure) will generate political momentum for an emergent developmental consensus remains uncertain. The jury is still out when it comes to whether and how Asian developmentalism will take center stage in global development debates. What is clear, however, is that the changing zeitgeist of a less Anglo/Euro-centric world bodes well for more heterodox and diverse ideas on development cooperation.
This article introduces the Global Sanctions Data Base (GSDB), a new dataset of economic sanctions that covers all bilateral, multilateral, and plurilateral sanctions in the world during the 1950–2016 period across three dimensions: type, political objective, and extent of success. The GSDB features by far the most cases amongst data bases that focus on effective sanctions (i.e., excluding threats) and is particularly useful for analysis of bilateral international transactional data (such as trade flows). We highlight five important stylized facts: (i) sanctions are increasingly used over time; (ii) European countries are the most frequent users and African countries the most frequent targets; (iii) sanctions are becoming more diverse, with the share of trade sanctions falling and that of financial or travel sanctions rising; (iv) the main objectives of sanctions are increasingly related to democracy or human rights; (v) the success rate of sanctions has gone up until 1995 and fallen since then. Using state-of-the-art gravity modeling, we highlight the usefulness of the GSDB in the realm of international trade. Trade sanctions have a negative but heterogeneous effect on trade, which is most pronounced for complete bilateral sanctions, followed by complete export sanctions.
The main objective of this paper is to revisit the Euro method in a critical and constructive way.Wehave analysed some arguments against the Euro method published recently in the literature as well as some other relevant aspects of the SUT-Euro and SUT-RAS methods not covered before. Although not being the Euro method perfect, we believe that there is still space for the use of the Euro method in updating/regionalizing Supply and Use tables.
The main objective of this paper is to revisit Temursho’s (2020) article “On the Euro method” in a critical and constructive way. We have praised part of his work and at the same time, we have analysed some of his arguments against the Euro method and against the work published by Valderas-Jaramillo et al. (2019). Moreover, we have analysed some other relevant aspects of the SUT-Euro and SUT-RAS methods not covered in Temursho (2020). Temursho (2020) seems to conclude that no one should use the Euro method again because of its limitations and drawbacks. However, although not being the Euro method perfect, we are afraid that there is still space for the use of the Euro method in updating/regionalizing supply and use tables.
Structural interventions of the Commission comprise expenditures for objective 1, objective 2 and objective 3. The three priority objectives of the Structural Funds are: • promoting the development and structural adjustment of the regions whose development is lagging behind (objective 1); • supporting the economic and social conversion of areas facing structural difficulties (objective 2); • supporting the adaptation and modernisation of policies and systems of education, training and employment. (objective 3). The purpose of this study is to quantify the economic impacts of objective 1 interventions of the Structural Funds for the period 2000 – 2006. The expenditures of the Structural Funds for objective 2 and objective 3, the Cohesion Fund, the Instrument for Structural Policies for Pre-accession (ISPA) and loans which are granted by the European Investment Bank (EIB) are not included in the analysis. The study quantifies how much of expected development can be attributed to objective 1 expenditures for • Community interventions (Structural Funds), • public interventions (Structural Funds, national public interventions) and • total interventions (Structural Funds, national public interventions, private participation). The study uses the autumn 2001 forecast and medium-term projection of Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs of the European Commission in order to calculate a baseline for the impact assessment. Today, the forecast itself seems rather optimistic. However, this does not cause problems for the analysis in this report, because the objective is to estimate the impact of the structural funds. In other words the objective is to estimate, for example, the additional growth caused by the structural funds and not to forecast growth as such. Therefore, whether the forecast as such will materialise is of no consequence for the impact analysis in this study.
This paper aims to apply the basics of the Service-Dominant Logic, especially the concept of creating benefits through serving, to the stationary retail industry. In the industrial context, the shift from a product-driven point of view to a service-driven perspective has been discussed widely. However, there are only few connections to how this can be applied to the retail sector on a B2C-level and how retailers can use smart services in order to enable customer engagement, loyalty and retention. The expectations of customers towards future stationary retail develop significantly as consumers got used to the comfort of online shopping. Especially the younger generation—the Generation Z—seems to have changed their priorities from the bare purchase of products to an experience- and service-driven approach when shopping over-the-counter. To stay successful long-term, companies from this sector need to adapt to the expectations of their future main customer group. Therefore, this paper will analyse the specific needs of Generation Z, explain how smart services contribute to creating benefit for this customer group and how this affects the economic sustainability of these firms.
This study aims to adapt CEFR in developing an integrative approach-based teaching material model for a pre-basic BISOL class. The method used in this research is the development research design by Borg and Gall. This study was development research. The stages are identification of the problem, formulation of a hypothetical draft model; feasibility testing by experts; product revision; and test product effectiveness. The data were collected through survey techniques, interviews, and documentation. The needs identification results revealed data encompassing 10 themes, 5 tasks per theme, and diverse evaluations comprising theory, in-class practice, and real-world field assignments, both on an individual and group basis. These identified needs require alignment with CEFR A1 for the development of BISOL learning. These findings were subsequently incorporated into the design of the teaching material model, and the results indicated that tailoring CEFR to BISOL as an integrative language teaching material model was feasible for application in the classroom, as assessed by experts. The implications suggest that integrating CEFR into BISOL is highly feasible for the development of teaching materials, and teachers can leverage this instructional model to enhance students' proficiency in the Indonesian language.
Viele touristische Aktivitäten sind mit einem erhöhten Energiebedarf (Strom, Wärme, Kraftstoffe) verbunden, sodass Tourismus nicht losgelöst von der Energiewirtschaft bzw. deren Klimawirksamkeit zu betrachten ist. Das Projekt befasst sich daher mit der Triade Tourismus, Klimawandel und erneuerbare Energienutzung.
Die Veränderungen des Klimas stellen den Tourismus vor neue Herausforderungen. Um diesen Herausforderungen, im Sinne eines nachhaltigen Tourismus gerecht zu werden, kann der Tourismus dem Klimawandel mit Anpassungs- und/oder Vermeidungsstrategien begegnen (vgl. ELSASSER ET AL. 2000). Im Rahmen dieses Projektes werden sowohl mögliche Anpassungs- als auch Vermeidungsstrategien thematisiert. Ein besonderer Fokus wird dabei zum einen auf die Nutzung von erneuerbaren Energien (EE) gelegt. Zum anderen werden die Entwicklungen des Tourismus und die Anpassungen an die Änderungen des Klimas vornehmlich in Bezug auf den Wintertourismus betrachtet. Räumlich konzentriert sich das Projekt auf das Mittelgebirge Schwarzwald.
The Black Forest offers renewable energy as a specific tourist destination in the form of bioenergy villages (BEV). Particularly expert tourists tend to visit them. The results of two quantitative surveys on the supply and demand side show that there is, up to now, an untapped potential among experienceoriented
tourists for this type of niche tourism.