Publikationen der Fakultät ab 2015

Alle Daten sind über die Browsersuche suchbar. Dazu am Ende der Seite links auf "Show All" klicken und mir STRG F die Suchfunktion des Browsers nutzen.

Results: 1487
Created on: Wed, 15 May 2024 23:11:29 +0200 in 0.0805 sec


Andrich, Aliya; Domahidi, Emese
Still facing the ‘paper ceiling’? : exploring gender differences in political news coverage of the last decade. - In: Journalism, ISSN 1741-3001, Bd. 0 (2023), 0, S. 14648849231215194

In the present study, we investigate gender bias against politicians in a large set of news articles (n = 1,139,571) published in major media outlets in the United States between 2010 and 2020 by tracing changes in reporting about 1,095 US politicians. Using topic modeling with latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA), we identify main policy-related topics in media reports. We find gender differences in the coverage of certain policy issues, with major imbalances explained by societal factors. Specifically, we show that women in high-level political positions receive less media coverage than their male counterparts and women in less powerful positions on economic and national security issues. However, women and men in less influential positions do not differ in the amount and type of reporting they garner. Since women are still underrepresented in leadership positions, the US media may inadvertently reflect and reinforce existing gender biases in society by devoting more attention to high-profile politicians, who are overwhelmingly male. Although our longitudinal analysis shows positive changes, the gender gap in reporting continues to exist.



https://doi.org/10.1177/14648849231215194
Fechner, Frank;
[Rezension von: Matzke, Johannes, Thüringer Datenschutzgesetz]. - In: Thüringer Verwaltungsblätter. - Weimar : Boorberg, 1992- , ISSN: 0941-7648 , ZDB-ID: 1121941-5Thüringer Verwaltungsblätter, ISSN 0941-7648, Bd. 31 (2023), 10, S. 243

Fechner, Frank;
Simsalabim: eine Kompetenzbeschränkung wird zur Ermächtigungsgrundlage. - In: Juris, ISSN 2197-5345, (2023), 6, S. 251-253

Anmerkung zu: BVerwG v. 30.11.2022 - 6 C 12/20



Cantner, Uwe; Grebel, Thomas; Zhang, Xijie
The architecture of global knowledge production - do low-income countries get more involved?. - In: Industrial and corporate change, ISSN 1464-3650, Bd. 0 (2023), 0, dtad042

In this paper, we analyze the extent to which low-income countries integrate into the global knowledge production network. We develop an (undirected) research collaboration model based on which we identify the drivers of global research collaboration using publication data of the field Business and Economics from the Web of Science and macroeconomic data from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization Institute for Statistics. Network and dynamic panel regression techniques are employed. Our results show that (i) reciprocal preferential attachment and the homophily between countries reinforce scientific collaboration, (ii) there is no evidence that low-income countries are becoming better integrated into the global knowledge production over the years, despite their active participation in international reserach collaboration, while (iii) high-income countries show a basic willingness to cooperate with them, which, in turn, promotes the integration of low-income countries, although this willingness seems to decline; and (iv) as to low-income countries, they have little choice but to invest more in education and R&D in order to advance in the global knowledge production network.



https://doi.org/10.1093/icc/dtad042
Budzinski, Oliver;
Lobbyismus und Medienwirtschaft - strategische Beeinflussung von Informationsflüssen. - In: Handbuch Lobbyismus, (2023), S. 971-986

Der Zusammenhang von Lobbyismus und Medienwirtschaft wird auf zwei Ebenen analysiert. Erstens werden Medienunternehmen als Lobbyisten ihrer Partikularinteressen betrachtet und dabei sowohl auf „klassische“ Medien als auch auf datenbasierte Geschäftsmodelle moderner Onlinemedienkonzerne eingegangen. Zweitens werden Medienunternehmen als Adressat lobbyistischer Einflüsse betrachtet, welche über den Transmissionskanal Medien die öffentliche Meinung und die Politik zu beeinflussen suchen. Dies spricht spezielle Aspekte der ökonomischen Theorie des Media Bias an.



https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-32320-2_26
Budzinski, Oliver; Eckert, Sandra
Wettbewerb und Regulierung
Update 2023. - Ilmenau : Technische Universität Ilmenau, Institut für Volkswirtschaftslehre, 2023. - 1 Online-Ressource (31 Seiten). - (Ilmenau economics discussion papers ; vol. 28, no. 183)

Wettbewerb und Regulierung werfen sowohl aus einer wirtschafts- als auch aus einer politikwissenschaftlichen Perspektive interessante Fragestellungen auf und haben daher in beiden Disziplinen umfangreiche Beachtung gefunden. Während die Wirtschaftswissenschaften zwischen den Subdisziplinen Wettbewerbs- und Regulierungsökonomik trennt, begreift die Politikwissenschaft die marktschaffende als auch marktkorrigierende ‚regulative Politik‘ weitgehend als Einheit (Abschnitt 2). Der Hauptbeitrag der Wirtschaftswissenschaften liegt im Bereich einer wettbewerbsökonomischen Wirkungsanalyse (Abschnitt 3), während die politikwissenschaftliche Domäne in der Analyse von Institutionen und Prozessen der regulativen Politik zu verorten ist (Abschnitt 4). Aus einer interdisziplinären Perspektive kommen wir zu dem Ergebnis, dass beide Sichtweisen in erster Linie komplementär sind und sich gegenseitig befruchten können. Insbesondere das Verständnis jüngster Entwicklungen in den Bereichen Wettbewerb und Regulierung, die eine stärker industriepolitische und geostrategische Ausrichtung beinhalten, kann von einer politökonomischen Perspektive profitieren.



https://www.db-thueringen.de/receive/dbt_mods_00059134
Döring, Nicola;
Pornolügen!? : warum Pornosex anders ist als Alltagssex. - In: Pro Jugend, ISSN 2198-2767, (2023), 3, S. 8-10

Mit „Pornolügen“ sind Abweichungen zwischen den in der Pornografie gezeigten sexuellen Aktivitäten und dem alltäglichen Sexualleben gemeint. Der Begriff wird unter anderem in sexualpädagogischen Schriften (z. B. Henning & Bremer-Olzewski 2017), in der Presse (z. B. Men’s Health 2018) und im Rundfunk (z. B. ARD/ZDF funk 2017) verwendet. Dahinter steht die Vorstellung, die Pornografie lüge darüber, wie Sex in Wirklichkeit abläuft und man müsse vor allem Jugendliche über diese Lügen aufklären, damit sie kein falsches Bild von Sexualität entwickeln oder sich gar unter Druck gesetzt fühlen, dem Pornosex nachzueifern. Der vorliegende Beitrag erläutert, inwiefern Pornosex und Alltagssex sich unterscheiden und wie diese Unterschiede sachgerecht in der Medien- und Sexualpädagogik aufgegriffen werden können.



Freisinger, Elena; Unfried, Matthias; Schneider, Sabrina
The AI-augmented crowd: how human crowdvoters adopt AI (or not). - In: The journal of product innovation management, ISSN 1540-5885, Bd. n/a (2023), n/a, S. 1-25

To date, innovation management research on idea evaluation has focused on human experts and crowd evaluators. With recent advances in artificial intelligence (AI), idea evaluation and selection processes need to keep up. As a result, the potential role of AI-enabled systems in idea evaluation has become an important topic in innovation management research and practice. While AI can help overcome human capacity constraints and biases, prior research has identified also aversive behaviors of humans toward AI. However, research has also shown lay people's appreciation of AI. This study focuses on human crowdvoters’ AI adoption behavior. More precisely, we focus on gig workers, who despite often lacking expert knowledge are frequently engaged in crowdvoting. To investigate crowdvoters' AI adoption behavior, we conducted a behavioral experimental study (n = 629) with incentive-compatible rewards in a human-AI augmentation scenario. The participants had to predict the success or failure of crowd-generated ideas. In multiple rounds, participants could opt to delegate their decisions to an AI-enabled system or to make their own evaluations. Our findings contribute to the innovation management literature on open innovation, more specifically crowdvoting, by observing how human crowdvoters engage with AI. In addition to showing that the lay status of gig workers does not lead to an appreciation of AI, we identify factors that foster AI adoption in this specific innovation context. We hereby find mixed support for influencing factors previously identified in other contexts, including financial incentives, social incentives, and the provision of information about AI-enabled system's functionality. A second novel contribution of our empirical study is, however, the fading of crowdvoters’ aversive behavior over time.



https://doi.org/10.1111/jpim.12708
Döring, Nicola;
Abortion attitudes (media content, user comments). - In: Database of Variables for Content Analysis, ISSN 2673-8597, (2023), S. 1-4

The concept of "abortion attitudes" refers to an individual's or group's beliefs, opinions, and feelings regarding the practice of abortion (Jelen & Wilcox, 2003). Abortion here addresses abortion care in the form of medical (i.e., drug-induced) or surgical termination of an unwanted pregnancy, usually before the fetus is considered viable (i.e., able to survive outside the womb). People's attitudes towards abortion care can vary widely and are influenced by factors such as cultural, religious, moral, and personal beliefs, societal norms and values, as well as personal experiences and media representations (Adamczyk, Kim & Dillon, 2020; Ferree, Gamson, Gerhards & Rucht, 2002). Abortion and abortion attitudes are widely represented in the media, this includes news media, fictional media, and social media (Conti & Cahill, 2017). Attitudes towards abortion as they are held in the population and represented in the media are polarized and can be categorized broadly as pro-choice versus pro-life (Krolzik-Matthei, 2019): &hahog; The pro-choice or pro-abortion attitude focuses on the pregnant woman/person and acknowledges her human rights to life, health and self-determination. Hence, the pro-choice attitude demands access to legal and safe abortions as a reproductive right for all women/persons who seek abortion care as a reproductive health service. The pro-choice position morally accepts abortions and politically favors the legalization of abortions. &hahog; The pro-life or anti-abortion attitude focuses on the embryo (weeks 0 to 9 of the pregnancy) or the fetus (from week 10) and acknowledges its right to life. Hence, the pro-life attitude demands complete prohibition or at least heavy restriction of abortions, regardless of the life, health, and self-determination of the pregnant woman/person. The pro-life position morally condemns abortions and politically favors the criminalization of abortions in most or all cases. - These two attitudes often manifest as general principles (or absolutist positions). But they also manifest in various shades of grey (situational positions), with some individuals and media representations supporting abortion under specific circumstances (such as cases of rape, incest, or severe fetal abnormalities) while opposing it in others (Rye & Underhill, 2020). In the context of ongoing political debates surrounding the legalization or criminalization of abortion (e.g., the overturning of Roe v. Wade in the USA in 2022), measuring attitudes towards abortion in media content remains a relevant and timely research topic, especially when it comes to popular and growing social media platforms such as TikTok (Wu & Byler, 2022).



https://doi.org/10.34778/5y
Kunz-Kaltenhäuser, Philipp;
The NFL's Pro Bowl was broken? : considering players’ incentives. - In: Event management, ISSN 1943-4308, Bd. 27 (2023), 7, S. 1099-1114

This article examines the growing trend of NFL players to forego participation in the league's yearly All-Star exhibition game, the Pro Bowl. Viewership of the Pro Bowl has been substantially lower than the average game day in recent years, causing controversial discussions about the viability of the game and its future. As a consequence, the league revised the Pro Bowl's concept entirely in 2022. Since the major determinant of viewership demand is the participation of (superstar) players, this article analyses the individual athletes economic incentives in the decision to participate. To this end, it models the athlete's decision as a rational evaluation of cost-benefit under incentives of monetary reward and punishment. It uses unbalanced panel data on Pro Bowl players from the Super Bowl era (1971-2019), alongside viewership data and official league data. It applies a range of econometric methods (Pearson correlations, graphical examination) to evaluate hypotheses about the players’ decision-making process. It concludes that the incentives to participate in the Pro Bowl for the majority of players-especially viewership-driving superstar players-were weak. The monetaryincentives in their previous form were not an efficient way of positively manipulating the percent age of superstars in the game. If the goal was higher demand from players, the incentive structure had to be changed. Such changes are, inter alia, the reduction of costs for participation in the form of minimizing the risk of injuries. Furthermore, possible changes to the design of the incentive structure are proposed that contain general learnings for the design of such events.



https://doi.org/10.3727/152599523X16896548396761