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  • 1
    UID:
    almafu_(DE-604)BV046751668
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (371 Seiten) : , Diagramme.
    Edition: 1. Auflage
    ISBN: 978-3-8452-9739-2
    Series Statement: International Studies on Populism Band 7
    Content: This volume assembles a wide range of perspectives on populism and the media, bringing together various disciplinary and theoretical approaches, authors and examples from different continents and a wide range of topical issues. The chapters discuss the contexts of populist communication, communication by populist actors, different types of populist messages (populist communication in traditional and new media, populist criticism of the media, populist discourses related to different topics, etc.), the effects and consequences of populist communication, populist media policy and anti-populist discourses. The contributions synthesise existing research on this subject, propose new approaches to it or present new findings on the relationship between populism and the media. With contibutions by Caroline Avila, Eleonora Benecchi, Florin Büchel, Donatella Campus, María Esperanza Casullo, Nicoleta Corbu, Ann Crigler, Benjamin De Cleen, Sven Engesser, Nicole Ernst, Frank Esser, Nayla Fawzi, Jana Goyvaerts, André Haller, Kristoffer Holt, Christina Holtz-Bacha, Marion Just, Philip Kitzberger, Magdalena Klingler, Benjamin Krämer, Katharina Lobinger, Philipp Müller, Elena Negrea-Busuioc, Carsten Reinemann, Christian Schemer, Anne Schulz, Christian Schwarzenegger, Torgeir Uberg Nærland, Rebecca Venema, Anna Wagner, Martin Wettstein, Werner Wirth, Dominique Stefanie Wirz
    Content: Der Band vereint ein breites Spektrum von Perspektiven auf das Thema Populismus und Medien. Er bringt verschiedene fachliche und theoretische Ansätze, Beitragende und Beispiele von mehreren Kontinenten und ein breites Spektrum aktueller Themen und Herausforderungen zusammen. Die Kapitel behandeln den Kontext populistischer Kommunikation, Kommunikation durch populistische Akteure, verschiedene Typen populistischer Botschaften (populistische Kommunikation in traditionellen und neuen Medien, populistische Medienkritik, populistische Diskurse zu verschiedenen Themen), Wirkungen und Konsequenzen populistischer Kommunikation, populistische Medienpolitik, aber auch antipopulistische Diskurse. Die Beiträge systematisieren vorhandene Forschung, schlagen neue Ansätze vor oder präsentieren neue Befunde zum Verhältnis von Populismus und Medien. Mit Beiträgen von Caroline Avila, Eleonora Benecchi, Florin Büchel, Donatella Campus, María Esperanza Casullo, Nicoleta Corbu, Ann Crigler, Benjamin De Cleen, Sven Engesser, Nicole Ernst, Frank Esser, Nayla Fawzi, Jana Goyvaerts, André Haller, Kristoffer Holt, Christina Holtz-Bacha, Marion Just, Philip Kitzberger, Magdalena Klingler, Benjamin Krämer, Katharina Lobinger, Philipp Müller, Elena Negrea-Busuioc, Carsten Reinemann, Christian Schemer, Anne Schulz, Christian Schwarzenegger, Torgeir Uberg Nærland, Rebecca Venema, Anna Wagner, Martin Wettstein, Werner Wirth, Dominique Stefanie Wirz
    Note: Literaturangaben
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783848755615
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druckausgabe Perspectives on Populism and the Media Baden-Baden : Nomos, 2020 ISBN 9783848755615
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3848755610
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-8452-9739-2
    Language: English
    Subjects: Political Science , General works , Sociology
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    Keywords: Populismus ; Medien ; Politische Kommunikation ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung
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    Author information: Krämer, Benjamin 1981-
    Author information: Holtz-Bacha, Christina 1953-
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    UID:
    almahu_9949602158302882
    Format: 1 online resource (341 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783030050757
    Series Statement: Demographic Research Monographs
    Note: Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- 1.1 The Need for Accurate Mortality Forecasts Is Greater Than Ever Before -- 1.2 Determinants and Dynamics of Life Expectancy - Pensions Are Upping the Ante for the Challenge Facing the Art of Projecting... -- 1.3 Cause of Death Forecasts -- 1.4 Period and Cohort Perspectives -- 1.5 Joint Forecasting of Mortality in Similar Populations -- 1.6 From Scenarios to Stochastic Modelling -- 1.7 How Conditions in Early Life Affect Mortality in Later Life -- 1.8 The Increasing Gap in Life Expectancy with Respect to Position in the Income Distribution -- References -- Part I: Current Practice -- Chapter 2: Life Expectancy Is Taking Center Place in Modern National Pension Schemes - A New Challenge for the Art of Projecti... -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Basic Pension Economics - The Role of Mortality -- 2.3 NDC and FDC Schemes - And Life Expectancy -- 2.4 Itś More Important Than Ever to Project Life Expectancy Accurately -- 2.5 Final Comments -- References -- Chapter 3: Experiences from Forecasting Mortality in Finland -- 3.1 Modeen and Törnqvist -- 3.2 Official Forecasts -- 3.3 Predictive Distribution of Mortality -- 3.4 Applications -- References -- Chapter 4: Mortality Projections in Norway -- 4.1 A Brief Description of the Norwegian Population Projection Model -- 4.2 A Short History of Mortality Projections in Norway -- 4.3 Current Methodology of Mortality Projections -- 4.3.1 Target Life Expectancies -- 4.3.2 Difference in Target e0 for Males and Females -- 4.3.3 Life Expectancies in the First Projection Year -- 4.3.4 Path of e0 from the Initial Until the Target Year -- 4.3.5 Slope of e0 in the Target Year -- 4.3.6 Alternative Mortality Assumptions -- 4.3.7 Age Groups -- 4.3.8 Cohort Mortality -- 4.4 Age-Specific Trends in Mortality Rates -- 4.5 Projections of Age-Specific Mortality Rates. , 4.6 Projection Results -- References -- Chapter 5: Mortality Assumptions for Sweden. The 2000-2050 Population Projection -- 5.1 Mortality Projection in Sweden -- 5.2 Sharply Lower Mortality in 1950-1999 -- 5.3 Reasons for the Decline in Mortality in 1980-1999 -- 5.4 Higher Average Life Expectancy in 1950-1999 -- 5.5 Future Mortality -- 5.6 Assumptions Used in the Forecast for the Immediate Future -- 5.7 Assumptions Used in the Forecast for the Longer Term -- 5.8 Mortality Trends over the Period 1950-2050 -- 5.9 Higher Average Life Expectancy -- 5.10 Assumptions Regarding Mortality Trends in Some Countries -- 5.11 Alternative Assumptions -- Chapter 6: Forecasting Life Expectancy: The SCOPE Approach -- References -- Chapter 7: Mortality Forecasts. Comments on How to Improve Existing Models - An Epidemiologistś Perspective -- 7.1 Are the Lifespans of Relatives Correlated? -- 7.2 The Relative Effects of Genetic and Environmental Factors on Lifespan -- 7.3 Prediction of Mortality -- 7.4 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 8: The Need for Looking Far Back in Time When Predicting Future Mortality Trends -- References -- Part II: Probabilistic Models -- Chapter 9: Erroneous Population Forecasts -- 9.1 Forecast Accuracy -- 9.2 Why Population Forecasts Are Inaccurate -- 9.3 Empirical Evidence from Historical Forecasts -- 9.3.1 Forecasts Are More Accurate for Short Than for Long Forecast Durations -- 9.3.2 Forecasts Are More Accurate for Large Than for Small Populations -- 9.3.3 Forecasts of the Old and the Young Tend to Be Less Accurate Than Those of Intermediate Age Groups -- 9.3.4 Accuracy Differs Between Components and Regions -- 9.4 The Expected Accuracy of Current Forecasts -- 9.5 Probabilistic Forecasts: An Alternative to Forecast Variants -- 9.6 Challenges in Probabilistic Population Forecasting -- References. , Chapter 10: Remarks on the Use of Probabilities in Demography and Forecasting -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Binomial and Poisson Models -- 10.3 Random Rates -- 10.4 Handling of Trends -- 10.5 On Judgment and Subjectivity in Statistical Modeling -- 10.6 On the Interpretation of Probabilities -- 10.7 Eliciting Expert Views on Uncertainty -- References -- Chapter 11: An Expert Knowledge Approach to Stochastic Mortality Forecasting in the Netherlands -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Stochastic Population Forecasts: Methodology -- 11.2.1 An Analysis of Errors of Past Forecasts -- 11.2.2 Model-Based Estimate of Forecast Errors -- 11.2.3 Expert Judgement -- 11.3 Using Expert Knowledge -- 11.4 Expert Knowledge in the Dutch Stochastic Mortality Forecasts -- 11.5 Conclusions -- Appendix: An Explanatory Model for Dutch Mortality -- References -- Chapter 12: Stochastic Forecasts of Mortality, Population and Pension Systems -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Stochastic Forecasts -- 12.3 Mortality Forecasts -- 12.4 From Population to Pension Systems and Policy -- References -- Part III: The Linear Rise in Life Expectancy: History and Prospects -- Chapter 13: The Linear Rise in the Number of Our Days -- 13.1 Better Forecasts -- 13.2 Continuing Belief in Looming Limits -- References -- Chapter 14: Mortality Forecasts and Linear Life Expectancy Trends -- 14.1 Introduction -- 14.2 Linear Change in Life Expectancy over Long Historical Periods -- 14.3 What Is Fundamental, Age at Death or Risk of Death? -- 14.4 Using These Findings to Improve Mortality Forecasts -- 14.5 Considering National Mortality Change in an International Context -- 14.6 Extensions -- 14.6.1 Heterogeneous Targets -- 14.6.2 Heterogeneous Rates of Convergence -- 14.7 Forecasting Mortality -- References -- Chapter 15: Forecasting Life Expectancy: A Statistical Look at Model Choice and Use of Auxiliary Series. , 15.1 Why Forecast Life Expectancy? -- 15.2 Changes in Life Expectancy in 19 Industrialized Countries in 1950-2000 -- 15.3 Conditions on the Usefulness of an Auxiliary Series -- 15.4 Model Choice -- 15.5 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 16: Life Expectancy Convergence Among Nations Since 1820: Separating the Effects of Technology and Income -- 16.1 Limits and Convergence in Life Expectancy -- 16.2 The Classic Article: Preston (1975) -- 16.3 Extending the Analysis -- 16.4 New Data -- 16.5 National Effects: A Shopping Analogy -- 16.6 Multilevel Models -- 16.7 Model Results -- 16.8 National Patterns -- 16.9 Convergence -- 16.10 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 17: Linear Increase in Life Expectancy: Past and Present -- 17.1 Descriptive Overview -- 17.2 Causes -- 17.3 Summary and Discussion -- References -- Part IV: Causes of Death -- Chapter 18: How Useful Are the Causes of Death When Extrapolating Mortality Trends. An Update -- 18.1 Extrapolation of Mortality by Cause Risks Absurdity -- 18.2 Would More Sophisticated Methods Be Any Better? -- 18.2.1 A Better Adjustment of Chronological Series of Rates by Age -- 18.2.2 ``Age-Period ́́Adjustment (Lee-Carter Model) -- 18.2.3 ``Age-Period-Cohort ́́Adjustment (APC Model) -- 18.3 The Models Put to the Proof -- 18.4 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 19: Forecasting Life Expectancy and Mortality in Sweden - Some Comments on Methodological Problems and Potential Appro... -- 19.1 Introduction -- 19.2 The Relationships Between Incidence, Prevalence and Mortality -- 19.3 Extrapolating Mortality Trends or Predicting Disease-Specific Causes of Death -- 19.4 Predicting Mortality Based on Potential Elimination of Causes of Death -- 19.5 Predicting Mortality Based on Development of Risk Factors -- 19.6 Methodological Problems in Predicting Mortality Based on Risk Factor Predictions. , 19.7 Future Mortality and Longevity -- 19.8 Implications for the Future -- References -- Chapter 20: How Analysis of Mortality by Cause of Death Is Currently Influencing UK Forecasts -- 20.1 Mortality Improvement in the UK -- 20.2 Current Methodologies and Research in the UK -- 20.3 Understanding the ``UK Cohort Effect ́́-- 20.4 Modelling Mortality by Cause of Death -- 20.5 Implications and Conclusions -- References -- Part V: Cohort Factors: How Conditions in Early Life Influence Mortality Later in Life -- Chapter 21: A Life Course Perspective to the Modern Secular Mortality Decline and Socioeconomic Differences in Morbidity and M... -- 21.1 The Secular Mortality Decline: Early Life and Cohort Explanations and Their Indicators -- 21.2 Historical Trends and Socioeconomic Mortality Differences in a Life Course and Cohort Perspective -- 21.3 Cohort Effects on Mortality and Mortality Predictions: Indicators and Models -- References -- Chapter 22: Early Life Events and Later Life Health: Twin and Famine Studies -- 22.1 Introduction -- 22.2 Famine Early in Life and Later Life Health -- 22.3 Later Life Health for Twins -- 22.4 Twins and Genetic Confounding -- 22.5 Overview -- References -- Chapter 23: The Month of Birth: Evidence for Declining but Persistent Cohort Effects in Lifespan -- 23.1 Introduction -- 23.2 Data -- 23.3 Methods -- 23.4 Results -- 23.4.1 Differences in Lifespan in the United States, Austria, Denmark and Australia -- 23.4.2 Changes in the Month-of-Birth Pattern over Cohorts in Denmark -- 23.4.3 Changes in the 20-Year Survival Probability by Quarter of Birth in the United States -- 23.5 Discussion -- 23.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 24: Early-Life Conditions and Old-Age Mortality in a Comparative Perspective: Nineteenth Century Sweden and Belgium -- 24.1 Introduction -- 24.2 Models -- 24.3 Data for Scania -- 24.4 Data for Sart. , 24.5 Results.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Bengtsson, Tommy Old and New Perspectives on Mortality Forecasting Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2019 ISBN 9783030050740
    Language: English
    Subjects: Medicine , Sociology
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    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Electronic books
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  • 3
    UID:
    b3kat_BV035413539
    Format: ix, 319 p. , 24 cm
    Edition: Online_Ausgabe Boulder, Colo NetLibrary 2004 E-Books von NetLibrary Sonstige Standardnummer des Gesamttitels: 22382847
    ISBN: 0585496811
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , The culture and practice of pluralism in postcolonial Malaysia / Abdul Rahman Embong -- Social pluralism in Singapore / Chua Beng Huat and Kwok Kian-Woon -- Social resources for civility and participation: the case of Yogyakarta, Indonesia / Mohtar Mas"ed, S. Rizal Panggabean, and Muhammad Najib Azca -- Boundaries and beyond: whither the cultural bases of political community in Malaysia? / Sumit K. Mandal -- Corporate pluralism: Singapore Inc. and the Association of Muslim Professionals / Sharon Siddique -- Where has (ethnic) politics gone? The case of the BN non-Malay politicians and political parties / Francis Loh Kok Wah -- The redefinition of politics and the transformation of Malaysian pluralism / Shamsul A.B. -- What Islam, whose Islam?: Sisters in Islam and the struggle for women's rights / Zainah Anwar -- Gender and pluralism in Indonesia / Siti Ruhaini Dzuhayatin -- Mirroring the past or reflecting the future?: class and religious pluralism in Indonesian labor / Vedi R. H
    Additional Edition: Reproduktion von The politics of multiculturalism c2001
    Language: English
    Subjects: Political Science , Ethnology , Sociology
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    Keywords: Südostasien ; Indonesien ; Malaysia ; Islam ; Politik ; Indonesien ; Multikulturelle Gesellschaft ; Politik ; Malaysia ; Multikulturelle Gesellschaft ; Politik ; Singapur ; Multikulturelle Gesellschaft ; Politik ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Electronic books. ; Electronic books ; Electronic books. ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Wiesbaden :Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH,
    UID:
    almahu_9949602163302882
    Format: 1 online resource (334 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783658253936
    Series Statement: Stadt, Raum und Gesellschaft Series
    Note: Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Content -- List of Figures -- Introduction -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Research Gap: "The World in the City" and "The World in a Store" -- 1.2 Conceptual Framework and Research Design -- 2 The Meso-Level: Social Life and Trade on a Metropolitan Shopping Street -- 2.1 The Street's Physical History -- 2.2 "Trade is change." The Street's Retail History and its Current Changes -- 2.3 "This is the free market. We set only the political framework." The History of Local Urban Renewal -- 2.4 "Now we go through a new change, now the employed come back." The Current Gentrification of Karl-Marx-Straße -- 2.5 Summary: "The main focus is on the site's development." -- 3 Theories of the Ground: The Sensitizing Theoretical Concepts -- 3.1 Sensitizing Concepts I: Third Place and Public Character -- 3.2 Sensitizing Concepts II: Interaction in Semi-Public/ Public Spaces -- 3.3 Sensitizing Concepts III: Community Building/ Senses of Belonging -- 3.4 Summary: Use of Sensitizing Concepts for the Sampling rocess -- 4 Realities on the Ground: Sampling Process and Methodology -- 4.1 Theoretical Sampling -- 4.2 Sampling Process -- 4.3 The Core Sample -- 4.4 Methodology -- 4.4.1 Working on the Ground: Grounded Theory Method and Small Social Life Worlds -- 4.4.2 Inquiry Methods: Interviews, Participant Observations, Secondary Material -- 4.4.3 Design of Data Analysis -- 5 Grounding the Social Life Worlds - The Case Businesses' Material Space and Social Context -- 5.1 Organic Store -- 5.2 Main Café -- 5.3 Pharmacy -- 5.4 Flower Store -- 5.5 Butcher -- 5.6 Additional Cases and Conclusion -- 6 Businesses as Spaces where Community is Practiced? The Socio-Spatial Features for "talking about everything," "coming down," and "staying in touch" -- 6.1 "The idea was to create a meeting point." Neutral Grounds or Inclusive Publicness. , 6.2 "We are committed to all and we also want the store to be for all." Businesses as Levelers -- 6.3 "They are pulling my leg a lot." The Conversations -- 6.4 "For quality we need to go to another neighborhood, this is really difficult here." The Businesses' Accessibility and Accommodation -- 6.5 "We really have lots of regulars." The Role of Regular Customers -- 6.6 "Stability" and "Reliance" allowing for the Practice of Community: The Businesses' Appeal and Profile -- 6.7 Businesses as "Male Playful Places," Businesses for "Self-Confident Women." -- 6.8 Home away from home? A Synthesis of the Community Practices in and the Third Place Features of the Businesses -- 7 Store Owners that Offer "More" - Public Characters on Changing Karl-Marx-Straße -- 7.1 The Structure of Public Character Practices -- 7.2 Caring about the Street in Times of Urban Renewal: "It all looks spick and span in front of my door" -- 7.3 Connecting People: "The idea was a place for encounter, with a feel-good-character" -- 7.4 "Certainly, packages always get delivered at the butcher's." Store Owners as Trusted Persons -- 7.5 Conclusion: Offering "More" as Leading to an Excellent Social Status? -- 8 Conclusion: "Lifting the curtain" of Karl-Marx-Straße's Places where Community is Practiced -- Bibliography.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Steigemann, Anna The Places Where Community Is Practiced Wiesbaden : Springer Vieweg. in Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH,c2019 ISBN 9783658253929
    Language: English
    Subjects: Sociology
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  • 5
    UID:
    almahu_9949602154902882
    Format: 1 online resource (157 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783030117900
    Series Statement: IMISCOE Research Series
    Note: Youth Transitions among Descendants of Turkish Immigrants in Amsterdam and Strasbourg: -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Youth Transitions of Descendants of Turkish Immigrants -- 1.1 Youth Transitions -- 1.2 Conceptual Tools of the Study -- 1.2.1 Social Class: Parents' Forms of Capital -- 1.2.2 Social Class in the Making: Developing Forms of Capital Along Social Trajectories -- 1.2.3 Gendered Transitions -- 1.2.4 The Role of Ethnicity -- 1.3 Case Selection and Methodology -- 1.4 Data Collection and Research Techniques -- 1.4.1 Quantitative Data: The TIES Survey, Sampling and Research Design -- 1.4.2 Qualitative Fieldwork: In-depth Interviews in Amsterdam and Strasbourg -- References -- Chapter 2: Prolonged Transitions: Early Tracking and Its Implications for Transitions -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Stratification in Education Systems -- 2.2.1 Streaming in the Dutch Education System (TIES Data Analysis) -- 2.2.2 Streaming in the French Education System (TIES Data Analysis) -- 2.2.3 Comparative Analysis of the Dutch and French Education Systems -- 2.3 Transition Experience in Amsterdam and Strasbourg -- 2.3.1 Merit and Cultural Capital of the Parents -- 2.3.2 Teachers as 'Significant Others' -- 2.4 Social Trajectories and Habitus -- Experiences of Respondents in a Given Track and How the Track Shapes Them -- 2.5 Conclusion: Pre-conditioned Youth Transitions and the Role of Parents -- References -- Chapter 3: Blurring of the Transition Point: Combining Work and Study -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Structural Contexts for Student Employment in the Netherlands and France from 2005 to 2009 -- 3.2.1 Labour Market Contexts -- 3.2.2 Student Finance Systems -- 3.2.3 Education System and Labour Market -- 3.3 Work-Study Combination in Amsterdam and Strasbourg -- 3.3.1 Nature of Student Employment. , 3.3.2 Financial Motivations to Work in Amsterdam and Strasbourg -- 3.3.3 The Role of Family Support and Students' Educational Capital in Choice of Part-Time Jobs in Amsterdam and Strasbourg -- 3.4 Conclusion: Implications of Work and Study Combinations -- References -- Chapter 4: Transition Decisions: Intersections of Social Class, Gender and Ethnicity -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Institutional Structures -- 4.2.1 Educational Credentials -- 4.2.2 Labour Market Structure -- 4.3 Making the Transition -- 4.3.1 Educational Outcomes of School Leavers in TIES Survey -- 4.3.2 Transition Pathways: Insights from the Detailed Respondent Biographies -- Early School Leavers -- Early School Leavers in Amsterdam -- Early School Leavers in Strasbourg -- Post-secondary Vocational Graduates -- Post-secondary Vocational Education Graduates in Amsterdam -- Post-secondary Vocational Education Graduates in Strasbourg -- Post-secondary Academic Education Graduates -- Higher Education Graduates -- Academic Track Students' Experiences of Higher Education and Beyond: Prolongation Practice -- Vocational Track Students' Experiences of Higher Education and Beyond: Prolongation Practice -- 4.4 Conclusion: Gendered Pathways and the Role of Family Support -- References -- Chapter 5: A Typology of Transition Trajectories -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Transition Typologies in Previous Studies -- 5.3 A New Transition Typology -- 5.3.1 Choice of Indicators -- 5.3.2 Active Transition Trajectories -- 5.3.3 Inactive Transition Trajectories -- 5.3.4 Distributions of the Latent Classes by Immigrant Background, Gender, Education Level, Age and Job Status -- 5.4 Refining the Transition Typologies: Qualitative Profiles -- 5.4.1 Early Stable and Stable Transitions -- Early Stable Transitions: Tülin, 25, Doctor's Assistant in a GP's Office, Amsterdam. , Stable Transition: Deniz, 28, Administrative Worker in a Notary's Office, Strasbourg -- 5.4.2 Shifting Rather Than In-transition or Stagnant Transitions: "It's Easy to Find a Job -- It's Hard to Find a Good Job" -- Shifting Transition: Cengiz, 28, Plumber, Strasbourg -- Stagnant/In-transition/Shifting Transition: Emre, 25, Unemployed, Amsterdam -- 5.4.3 Inactive Transition Trajectories -- Inactive: Kader, 26, Homemaker, Strasbourg -- 5.5 Conclusion: Stable versus Shifting Transitions Among Descendants of Migrants from Turkey -- Appendix -- References -- Chapter 6: Conclusion: Developing Forms of Capital in Youth Transitions -- 6.1 Developing Forms of Capital Throughout the Transition Process -- 6.2 The Intersections of Social Class, Gender and Ethnicity in Youth Transitions -- 6.3 Comparative Research Design: Amsterdam and Strasbourg -- 6.4 Possible Future Avenues of Research and Policy Implications -- References -- Correction to: Youth Transitions among Descendants of Turkish Immigrants in Amsterdam and Strasbourg: -- Correction to: E. Keskiner, Youth Transitions among Descendants of Turkish Immigrants in Amsterdam and Strasbourg:, IMISCOE Research Series, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-11790-0.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Keskiner, Elif Youth Transitions among Descendants of Turkish Immigrants in Amsterdam and Strasbourg: Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2019 ISBN 9783030117894
    Language: English
    Subjects: Sociology
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    UID:
    almahu_9949602164802882
    Format: 1 online resource (246 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783030113735
    Series Statement: IMISCOE Research Series
    Note: Constructing Roma Migrants -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Roma Westward Migration in Europe: Rethinking Political, Social, and Methodological Challenges -- 1.1 Problematizing the Assumptions -- 1.2 The Securitarian Shift of "Roma Integration" Initiatives -- 1.3 Coping Strategies and Counter-Narratives -- 1.4 The Contribution of an Ethnographic Approach to "Roma Migration" -- 1.5 Book Structure -- 1.6 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Part I: Methodological, Legal, Policy, and Media Debates -- Chapter 2: Conceptual and Methodological Considerations in Researching "Roma Migration" -- 2.1 The Multiple Faces of the Concept of "the Roma" and "the Migrant" -- 2.2 Roma and Migrant: Two Similarly Complex and Contested Concepts -- 2.3 Literature and Statistics on Roma Migration -- 2.3.1 Statistics on "Roma Migration" -- 2.3.2 Academic Literature on "Roma Migration" -- 2.4 Conceptual and Methodological Considerations -- 2.5 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Chapter 3: A Roma European Crisis Road-Map: A Holistic Answer to a Complex Problem -- 3.1 The Persistence of the Roma Crisis -- 3.2 The European Union's Scope for Action and Initiatives -- 3.3 The Limitations of a Discrimination Policy Approach -- 3.4 Looking for the Answer in Human Rights and Minorities' Protection -- 3.5 Adopting a Holistic View of EU Roma Law and Policy -- 3.6 In Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Chapter 4: Conformism or Inadequacy of Roma Inclusion Policies? Missed Opportunities at the European and Local Levels -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The Marginalized Roma: A European Union "Issue" -- 4.2.1 Data Collection for Evidence-Based Policy Development -- 4.3 The European Parliament Pilot Project on Marginalized Roma Inclusion: Defining the Problem and Identifying Areas of Action -- 4.3.1 The European Structural Funds 2007-2013. , 4.3.2 The National Roma Integration Strategy as Precondition for the European Structural and Investment Funds Investments -- 4.4 ROMACT: Administrative Capacity at the Local Level -- 4.5 Conclusions -- Bibliography -- Chapter 5: 'Modern-Day Fagins', 'Gaudy Mansions' and 'Increasing Numbers': Narratives on Roma Migrants in the Build-Up to the British EU Referendum -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Migration Policy Narratives -- 5.3 Representation and Stigmatisation of Roma Migrants -- 5.4 Migration, Benefits and the Roma -- 5.4.1 Early Developments at the National Level -- 5.4.2 Local Developments: Ţăndărei Roma in Manchester -- 5.4.3 The Big Issue "Loophole": From Local to National Concern -- 5.4.4 Benefits as a Pull Factors and the "Roma Flood" Scare -- 5.5 Concluding Remarks -- Bibliography -- Part II: Securitization and Integration Policies -- Chapter 6: When Housing Policies Are Ethnically Targeted: Struggles, Conflicts and Contentions for a "Possible City" -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Going Beyond Camps in the "Crisis" Context -- 6.3 Seeking the Right to Be Included in the Possible City -- 6.4 Contesting the Ethnic Character of the Project: The Occupation of via Traves -- 6.5 Contesting the Selective Character of the Project: The Occupation of via Asti -- 6.6 Conclusions -- Bibliography -- Chapter 7: Dwelling in Limbo. Temporality in the Governance of Romani Migrants in Spain -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 The Temporality of the Inhabited Space -- 7.2.1 The Perceived Temporality of Migrants' Life Course -- 7.3 Temporary Devices of Governance -- 7.4 Citizenship Timeline -- 7.5 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Chapter 8: The Stilled-Other of the Citizen. "Roma Beggars" and Regimes of (Im)mobility in an Austrian City -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.1.1 Intersecting Border Studies and Mobility Studies -- 8.1.2 The Effectiveness of Regimes-of-(Im)mobility. , 8.2 Methodology and Research Context -- 8.2.1 Research Context -- 8.2.2 The Discourse on "Roma Beggars" in Town -- 8.3 Discourses, Practices and Policies Governing "Roma Beggars" (and Others) in Karlstadt -- 8.3.1 Criminalizing Transport -- 8.3.2 Invisibilizing Borders -- 8.3.3 Educating Beggars -- 8.3.4 Criminalization Through Victimization -- 8.3.5 Stillness -- 8.3.6 Deportability -- 8.4 Discussion -- Bibliography -- Chapter 9: The Migrating Poor: Romanian Roma Under Social Authoritarianism in Poland -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Changing Patterns of Migration and Policies in Poland -- 9.3 Policies and Narrative Towards Roma Migrants -- 9.4 The Flourishing Power of Social Authoritarianism -- 9.5 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Part III: Coping Strategies and Counter-Narratives -- Chapter 10: Identity Game for Welfare: Circumventing Surveillance of Legal Migrants in Europe -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Financial Sorting as Migration Governance -- 10.3 Producing, Challenging and Transmitting the Ethnic Frame -- 10.4 Passing the Virtual Sally Port: Coping Strategies of Roma Newcomers -- 10.4.1 Tax Credit Procedures: The Castle of HMRC -- 10.4.2 Child Tax Credit Claims: Identity Management Online -- 10.4.3 Hide and Seek: HMRC's Electronic Monitoring Mechanisms -- 10.5 Eluding Social Sorting by Identity Fraud Online -- 10.6 The Reality Gap -- 10.7 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Chapter 11: Contesting the Structural Constraints. A Case Study of Roma Asylum Seekers from Serbia -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 The Case of Roma Migrants from Serbia -- 11.3 Framing the Roma -- 11.4 "Roma Migrants" as Social Actors with Agency -- 11.5 Experiencing the Restrictive Regime -- 11.6 Challenging the Regime of Deportability -- 11.7 Conclusions -- Bibliography -- Chapter 12: Patchwork Economies in Europe: Economic Strategies Among Homeless Romanian Roma in Copenhagen. , 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Methodology -- 12.3 Analytical Perspectives -- 12.4 When Employment (muncă) Is Not an Option, Then You Turn to Business (afacere) -- 12.5 The badocari Economic Niche in Copenhagen -- 12.6 Income Opportunities at Home in Romania -- 12.7 Patchwork Household Economies Configured Around Debt -- 12.8 Micro-economics as a Challenge to Political, Economic and Social Contexts -- 12.9 Concluding Comments -- Bibliography -- Chapter 13: Differing Romani Mobilities? The Case of Cross-Border Migration of Roma Between Slovenia and Austria -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 The Representation of Romani Migrants in Europe -- 13.3 Migration Histories of Roma from the Former Yugoslav Space -- 13.4 The Position of Roma in Slovenia -- 13.5 Contextualizing Economic Migration of Roma from the Pomurje Region -- 13.6 Romani Individuals as Economic Migrants: Life Stories Between Slovenia and Austria -- 13.7 Conclusion -- Bibliography.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Magazzini, Tina Constructing Roma Migrants Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2019 ISBN 9783030113728
    Language: English
    Subjects: Ethnology , Sociology
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    UID:
    almahu_9949602157302882
    Format: 1 online resource (308 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783030105341
    Series Statement: Demographic Research Monographs
    Note: Intro -- Preface -- Bibliography -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Part I Introductory and Methodological -- 1 Introduction: Sensitivity Analysis - What and Why? -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Sensitivity, Calculus, and Matrix Calculus -- 1.3 Some Issues -- 1.3.1 Prospective and Retrospective Analyses: Sensitivity and Decomposition -- 1.3.2 Uncertainty Propagation -- 1.3.3 Why Not Just Simulate? -- 1.3.4 Sensitivity and Identifying Targets for Intervention -- 1.3.5 The Dream of Easy Interpretation -- 1.4 The Importance of Change -- Bibliography -- 2 Matrix Calculus and Notation -- 2.1 Introduction: Can It Possibly Be That Simple? -- 2.2 Notation and Matrix Operations -- 2.2.1 Notation -- 2.2.2 Operations -- 2.2.3 The Vec Operator and Vec-Permutation Matrix -- 2.2.4 Roth's Theorem -- 2.3 Defining Matrix Derivatives -- 2.4 The Chain Rule -- 2.5 Derivatives from Differentials -- 2.5.1 Differentials of Scalar Function -- 2.5.2 Differentials of Vectors and Matrices -- 2.6 The First Identification Theorem -- 2.6.1 The Chain Rule and the First IdentificationTheorem -- 2.7 Elasticity -- 2.8 Some Useful Matrix Calculus Results -- 2.9 LTRE Decomposition of Demographic Differences -- 2.10 A Protocol for Sensitivity Analysis -- Bibliography -- Part II Linear Models -- 3 The Sensitivity of Population Growth Rate: Three Approaches -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Hamilton's Equation for Age-Classified Populations -- 3.2.1 Effects of Changes in Mortality -- 3.2.2 Effects of Changes in Fertility -- 3.2.3 History and Perspectives -- 3.3 Stage-Classified Populations: Eigenvalue Perturbations -- 3.3.1 Age-Classified Models as a Special Case -- 3.3.2 Sensitivity to Lower-Level DemographicParameters -- 3.3.3 History -- 3.4 Growth Rate Sensitivity via Matrix Calculus -- 3.5 Second Derivatives of Population Growth Rate -- 3.6 Conclusion -- Bibliography. , 4 Sensitivity Analysis of Longevity and Life Disparity -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Life Expectancy in Age-Classified Populations -- 4.2.1 Derivation -- 4.3 A Markov Chain Model for the Life Cycle -- 4.3.1 A Markov Chain Formulation of the Life Cycle -- 4.3.2 Occupancy Times -- 4.3.3 Longevity -- 4.3.4 Age or Stage at Death -- 4.3.5 Life Lost and Life Disparity -- 4.4 Sensitivity Analysis -- 4.4.1 Sensitivity of the Fundamental Matrix -- 4.4.2 Sensitivity of Life Expectancy -- 4.4.3 Generalizing the Keyfitz-Pollard Formula -- 4.4.4 Sensitivity of the Variance of Longevity -- 4.4.5 Sensitivity of the Distribution of Age at Death -- 4.4.6 Sensitivity of Life Disparity -- 4.5 A Time-Series LTRE Decomposition: Life Disparity -- 4.6 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- 5 Individual Stochasticity and Implicit Age Dependence -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.1.1 Age and Stage, Implicit and Explicit -- 5.1.2 Individual Stochasticity and Heterogeneity -- 5.1.3 Examples -- 5.2 Markov Chains -- 5.2.1 An Absorbing Markov Chain -- 5.2.2 Occupancy Times and the Fundamental Matrix -- 5.2.3 Sensitivity of the Fundamental Matrix -- 5.3 From Stage to Age -- 5.3.1 Variance in Occupancy Time -- 5.3.2 Longevity and Life Expectancy -- 5.3.3 Variance in Longevity -- 5.3.4 Cohort Generation Time -- 5.4 The Net Reproductive Rate -- 5.4.1 Net Reproductive Rate in Periodic Environments -- 5.4.2 Sensitivity of the Net Reproductive Rate -- 5.4.3 Invasion Exponents, Selection Gradients, and R0 -- 5.4.4 Beyond R0: Individual Stochasticity in Lifetime Reproduction -- 5.5 Variable and Stochastic Environments -- 5.5.1 A Model for Variable Environments -- 5.5.2 The Fundamental Matrix -- 5.5.3 Longevity in a Variable Environment -- 5.5.3.1 Variance in Longevity -- 5.5.4 A Time-Varying Example: Lomatium bradshawii -- 5.6 The Importance of Individual Stochasticity -- 5.7 Discussion. , A Appendix: Derivations -- A.1 Variance in Occupancy Times -- A.2 Life Expectancy -- A.3 Variance in Longevity -- A.4 Net Reproductive Rate -- A.5 Cohort Generation Time -- A.5.1 Sensitivity of Generation Time -- Bibliography -- 6 AgeStage-Classified Models -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Model Construction -- 6.3 Sensitivity Analysis -- 6.4 Examples -- 6.4.1 Population Growth Rate and Selection Gradients -- 6.4.2 Distributions of Age and Stage at Death -- 6.4.2.1 Perturbation Analysis -- 6.5 Discussion -- 6.5.1 Reducibility and Ergodicity -- 6.5.2 A Protocol for AgeStage-Classified Models -- A Appendix: Population Growth and Reducible Matrices -- Bibliography -- Part III Time-Varying and Stochastic Models -- 7 Transient Population Dynamics -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Time-Invariant Models -- 7.3 Sensitivity of What? Choosing Dependent Variables -- 7.4 Elasticity Analysis -- 7.5 Sensitivity of Time-Varying Models -- 7.6 Sensitivity of Subsidized Populations -- 7.7 Sensitivity of Nonlinear Models -- 7.8 Sensitivity of Population Projections -- 7.9 Discussion -- Bibliography -- 8 Periodic Models -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.1.1 Perturbation Analysis -- 8.2 Linear Models -- 8.2.1 A Simple Harvest Model -- 8.3 Multistate Models -- 8.4 Nonlinear Models and Delayed Density Dependence -- 8.4.1 Averages -- 8.4.2 A Nonlinear Example -- 8.5 LTRE Decomposition Analysis -- 8.6 Discussion -- Bibliography -- 9 LTRE Decomposition of the Stochastic Growth Rate -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Decomposition with Derivatives -- 9.3 Kitagawa and Keyfitz: Decomposition Without Derivatives -- 9.4 Stochastic Population Growth -- 9.4.1 Environment-Specific Sensitivities -- 9.5 LTRE Decomposition Analysis for logλs -- 9.5.1 Case 1: Vital Rates Differ, Environments Identical -- 9.5.2 Case 2: Vital Rates Identical, Environments Differ -- 9.5.3 Case 3: Vital Rates and Environments Differ. , 9.6 An Example: Fire and an Endangered Plant -- 9.6.1 The Stochastic Fire Environment -- 9.6.2 LTRE Analysis -- 9.7 Discussion -- Bibliography -- Part IV Nonlinear Models -- 10 Sensitivity Analysis of Nonlinear Demographic Models -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Density-Dependent Models -- 10.2.1 Linearizations Around Equilibria -- 10.2.2 Sensitivity of Equilibrium -- 10.2.3 Dependent Variables: Beyond -- 10.2.4 Reactivity and Transient Dynamics -- 10.2.5 Elasticity Analysis -- 10.2.6 Continuous-Time Models -- 10.3 Environmental Feedback Models -- 10.4 Subsidized Populations and Competition for Space -- 10.4.1 Density-Independent Subsidized Populations -- 10.4.2 Linear Subsidized Models with Competitionfor Space -- 10.4.3 Density-Dependent Subsidized Models -- 10.5 Stable Structure and Reproductive Value -- 10.5.1 Stable Structure -- 10.5.2 Reproductive Value -- 10.5.3 Sensitivity of the Dependency Ratio -- 10.5.4 Sensitivity of Mean Age and Related Quantities -- 10.5.5 Sensitivity of Variance in Age -- 10.6 Frequency-Dependent Two-Sex Models -- 10.6.1 Sensitivity of the Population Structure -- 10.6.2 Population Growth Rate in Two-Sex Models -- 10.6.3 The Birth Matrix-Mating Rule Model -- 10.7 Sensitivity of Population Cycles -- 10.7.1 Sensitivity of the Population Vector -- 10.7.2 Sensitivity of Weighted Densities and TimeAverages -- 10.7.3 Sensitivity of Temporal Variance in Density -- 10.7.4 Periodic Dynamics in Periodic Environments -- 10.8 Dynamic Environmental Feedback Models -- 10.9 Stage-Structured Epidemics -- 10.10 Moments of Longevity in Nonlinear Models -- 10.11 Summary -- References -- Part V Markov Chains -- 11 Sensitivity Analysis of Discrete Markov Chains -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Absorbing Chains -- 11.2.1 Occupancy: Visits to Transient States -- 11.2.2 Time to Absorption -- 11.2.3 Number of States Visited Before Absorption. , 11.2.4 Multiple Absorbing States and Probabilities of Absorption -- 11.2.5 The Quasistationary Distribution -- 11.3 Life Lost Due to Mortality -- 11.4 Ergodic Chains -- 11.4.1 The Stationary Distribution -- 11.4.2 The Fundamental Matrix -- 11.4.3 The First Passage Time Matrix -- 11.4.4 Mixing Time and the Kemeny Constant -- 11.4.5 Implicit Parameters and Compensation -- 11.5 Species Succession in a Marine Community -- 11.5.1 Biotic Diversity -- 11.5.2 The Kemeny Constant and Ecological Mixing -- 11.6 Discussion -- A Appendix A: Proofs -- A.1 Derivatives of the Moments of Occupancy Times -- A.2 Derivatives of the Moments of Time to Absorption -- B Appendix B: Marine Community Matrix -- References -- 12 Sensitivity Analysis of Continuous Markov Chains -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.1.1 Absorbing Markov Chains -- 12.2 Occupancy Time in Transient States -- 12.3 Longevity: Time to Absorption -- 12.4 Multiple Absorbing States and Probabilities of Absorption -- 12.5 The Embedded Chain: Discrete Transitions Within a Continuous Process -- 12.6 An Example: A Model of Disease Progression -- 12.6.1 Sensitivity Results -- 12.6.2 Sensitivity of the Embedded Chain -- 12.7 Discussion -- References.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Caswell, Hal Sensitivity Analysis: Matrix Methods in Demography and Ecology Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2019 ISBN 9783030105334
    Language: English
    Subjects: Economics , Sociology
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York :New York University Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9949687545602882
    Format: 1 online resource (240 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 0-8147-8510-7 , 0-8147-8511-5
    Content: Mónica waits in the Anti-Venereal Medical Service of the Zona Galactica, the legal, state-run brothel where she works in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Mexico. Surrounded by other sex workers, she clutches the Sanitary Control Cards that deem her registered with the city, disease-free, and able to work. On the other side of the world, Min stands singing karaoke with one of her regular clients, warily eyeing the door lest a raid by the anti-trafficking Public Security Bureau disrupt their evening by placing one or both of them in jail.Whether in Mexico or China, sex work-related public policy varies considerably from one community to the next. A range of policies dictate what is permissible, many of them intending to keep sex workers themselves healthy and free from harm. Yet often, policies with particular goals end up having completely different consequences.Policing Pleasure examines cross-cultural public policies related to sex work, bringing together ethnographic studies from around the world—from South Africa to India—to offer a nuanced critique of national and municipal approaches to regulating sex work. Contributors offer new theoretical and methodological perspectives that move beyond already well-established debates between “abolitionists” and “sex workers’ rights advocates” to document both the intention of public policies on sex work and their actual impact upon those who sell sex, those who buy sex, and public health more generally.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Introduction : sex work and the politics of public policy / Susan Dewey and Patty Kelly -- International trends in the control of sexual services / Michael Goodyear and Ronald Weitzer -- Into the galactic zone : managing sexuality in neoliberal Mexico / Patty Kelly -- Sex work and the state in contemporary China / Tiantian Zheng -- Smart sex in the neoliberal present : rethinking single parenthood in a Mexican tourist destination / Dawn Pankonien -- On the boundaries of the global margins : violence, labor and surveillance in a Rust Belt topless bar / Susan Dewey -- The virtues of dockside dalliance : why maritime sugar girls are safer than urban streetwalkers in South Africa's prostitution industry / Henry Trotter -- "Their own way of having power" : female adolescent prostitutes' strategies of resistance in Cape Town, South Africa / Zosa De Sas Kropiwnicki -- Hata watufanyeje, kazi itaendelea [No matter what they do to us, work must continue] : everyday negotiation of state regulation among female sex workers in Nairobi, Kenya / Chimaraoke Izugbara -- Prostitution in contemporary Rio de Janeiro / Thaddeus Gregory Blanchette and Ana Paula da Silvia -- Prevailing voices in debates over child prostitution / Heather Montgomery -- Organizational challenges among male sex workers in Brazil's tourist zones / Gregory Mitchell -- "What is the use of getting a cow if you can't make any money from it?" : the reproduction of inequality within contemporary social reform of devadasis / Treena Orchard -- Moral panics : sex tourism, trafficking, and the limits of transnational mobility in Bahia / Erica Williams. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-8147-8509-3
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-8147-8508-5
    Language: English
    Subjects: Sociology
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bielefeld :transcript Verlag,
    UID:
    almahu_9949741333802882
    Format: 1 online resource (265 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 3-8394-6905-8
    Series Statement: Edition Moderne Postmoderne Series
    Content: Wie sieht ethische Verantwortung im Zeitalter der Digitalisierung, Datafizierung und Künstlichen Intelligenz aus? Die Beiträger*innen geben fundierte Einsichten in die KI-gestützte Entscheidungs- und Urteilsfindung. Von der digitalen Operationalisierung über die Rolle des Menschen im Zentrum des technischen Fortschritts bis hin zur Konzeption von vertrauenswürdigen Systemen - im Fokus steht die Diskussion von Chancen und Herausforderungen, die nicht nur Akademiker*innen vielseitige Anregungen zur weiteren Auseinandersetzung mit dem Thema gibt.
    Note: Frontmatter -- , Editorial -- , Inhalt -- , Über das Verhältnis von Ethik und Algorithmen -- , Geist, Intelligenz, Information und Daten – Artificial Intelligence im Wandel der Wissenschaftskulturen -- , Moral Decision-Making via AI – deep ethics? About shifting or losing responsibility -- , AI-assisted reflection in child welfare -- , Addressing the needs and demands of child welfare: A connection between AI Ethics and Ethics of Vulnerability -- , Verantwortungsvolle Empfehlungssysteme für die medizinische Diagnostik -- , Zu viel Gewissheit? Herausforderungen künstlich-intelligenter Gesundheitsprädiktionen für die öffentliche Gesundheitsversorgung -- , Algorithmische Differenzierung und Diskriminierung aus Sicht der Menschenwürde -- , Normung und Standardisierung von KI-Systemen aus soziotechnischer Perspektive -- , Vertrauen im Kontext – Messung und Operationalisierung -- , Humaner als der Mensch? Zur sozialen Imagination autonomer Waffentechnik -- , Democratic Autonomy vs. Algorithms? Limits and opportunities for public reasoning -- , Autor*innenverzeichnis
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-8376-6905-X
    Language: German
    Subjects: Computer Science , General works , Philosophy , Sociology
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  • 10
    UID:
    b3kat_BV035413489
    Format: xi, 369 p. , 24 cm
    Edition: Online_Ausgabe Boulder, Colo NetLibrary 2004 E-Books von NetLibrary Sonstige Standardnummer des Gesamttitels: 22382847
    ISBN: 0511042027
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , The kaleidoscope of adolescence: experiences of the world's youth at the beginning of the 21st century /B. Bradford BrownandReed W. Larson --Demographic trends affecting youth around the world /Elizabeth FussellandMargaret E. Greene --Adolescence in sub-Saharan Africa: an image constructed from Africa's triple inheritance /A. Bame Nsamenang --Adolescence in India: street urchins or Silicon Valley millionaires? /Suman VermaandT.S. Saraswathi --Adolescence in China and Japan: adapting to a changing environment /Harold W. StevensonandAkane Zusho --Youth in Southeast Asia: living within the continuity of tradition and the turbulence of change /Madelene Santa Maria --Arab adolescents facing the future: enduring ideals and pressures to change /Marilyn Booth --Adolescents in Russia: surviving the turmoil and creating a brighter future /Anna Stetsenko --Adolescence in Latin America: facing the future with skepticism /Carlos Welti --Adolescents in Western countries in the 21st century: vast
    Additional Edition: Reproduktion von The world's youth 2002
    Language: English
    Subjects: Sociology
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    Keywords: Jugend ; Soziale Situation ; Internationaler Vergleich ; Heranwachsender ; Internationaler Vergleich ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Electronic books.
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