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This dissertation addresses the measurement and evaluation of the energy and resource efficiency of software systems. Studies show that the environmental impact of Information and Communications Technologies (ICT) is steadily increasing and is already estimated to be responsible for 3 % of the total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Although it is the hardware that consumes natural resources and energy through its production, use, and disposal, software controls the hardware and therefore has a considerable influence on the used capacities. Accordingly, it should also be attributed a share of the environmental impact. To address this softwareinduced impact, the focus is on the continued development of a measurement and assessment model for energy and resource-efficient software. Furthermore, measurement and assessment methods from international research and practitioner communities were compared in order to develop a generic reference model for software resource and energy measurements. The next step was to derive a methodology and to define and operationalize criteria for evaluating and improving the environmental impact of software products. In addition, a key objective is to transfer the developed methodology and models to software systems that cause high consumption or offer optimization potential through economies of scale. These include, e. g., Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) and mobile apps, as well as applications with high demands on computing power or data volumes, such as distributed systems and especially Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems.
In particular, factors influencing the consumption of software along its life cycle are considered. These factors include the location (cloud, edge, embedded) where the computing and storage services are provided, the role of the stakeholders, application scenarios, the configuration of the systems, the used data, its representation and transmission, or the design of the software architecture. Based on existing literature and previous experiments, distinct use cases were selected that address these factors. Comparative use cases include the implementation of a scenario in different programming languages, using varying algorithms, libraries, data structures, protocols, model topologies, hardware and software setups, etc. From the selection, experimental scenarios were devised for the use cases to compare the methods to be analyzed. During their execution, the energy and resource consumption was measured, and the results were assessed. Subtracting baseline measurements of the hardware setup without the software running from the scenario measurements makes the software-induced consumption measurable and thus transparent. Comparing the scenario measurements with each other allows the identification of the more energyefficient setup for the use case and, in turn, the improvement/optimization of the system as a whole. The calculated metrics were then also structured as indicators in a criteria catalog. These indicators represent empirically determinable variables that provide information about a matter that cannot be measured directly, such as the environmental impact of the software. Together with verification criteria that must be complied with and confirmed by the producers of the software, this creates a model with which the comparability of software systems can be established.
The gained knowledge from the experiments and assessments can then be used to forecast and optimize the energy and resource efficiency of software products. This enables developers, but also students, scientists and all other stakeholders involved in the life cycleof software, to continuously monitor and optimize the impact of their software on energy and resource consumption. The developed models, methods, and criteria were evaluated and validated by the scientific community at conferences and workshops. The central outcomes of this thesis, including a measurement reference model and the criteria catalog, were disseminated in academic journals. Furthermore, the transfer to society has been driven forward, e. g., through the publication of two book chapters, the development and presentation of exemplary best practices at developer conferences, collaboration with industry, and the establishment of the eco-label “Blue Angel” for resource and energy-efficient software products. In the long term, the objective is to effect a change in societal attitudes and ultimately to achieve significant resource savings through economies of scale by applying the methods in the development of software in general and AI systems in particular.
The gender wage gap in labor market outcomes has been intensively investigated for decades, yet it remains a relevant and innovative research topic in labor economics. Chapter 2 of this dissertation explores the pressing issue of gender wage disparity in Ethiopia. By applying various empirical methodologies and measures of occupational segregation, this chapter aims to analyze the role of female occupational segregation in explaining the gender wage gap across the pay distribution. The findings reveal a significant difference in monthly wages, with women consistently earning lower wages across the wage distribution.
Importantly, the result indicates a negative association between female occupational segregation and the average earnings of both men and women. Furthermore, the estimation result shows that female occupational segregation partially explains the gender wage gap at the bottom of the wage distribution. I find that the magnitude of the gender wage gap in the private sector is higher than in the public sector.
In Chapter 3, the Ethiopian Demography and Health Survey data are leveraged to explore the causal relationship between female labor force participation and domestic violence. Domestic violence against women is a pervasive public health concern, particularly in Africa, including Ethiopia, where a significant proportion of women endure various forms of domestic violence perpetrated by intimate partners. Economic empowerment of women through increased participation in the labor market can be one of the mechanisms for mitigating the risk of domestic violence.
This study seeks to provide empirical evidence supporting this hypothesis. Using the employment rate of women at the community level as an instrumental variable, the finding suggests that employment significantly reduces the risk of domestic violence against women. More precisely, the result shows that women’s employment status significantly reduces domestic violence by about 15 percentage points. This finding is robust for different dimensions of domestic violence, such as physical, sexual, and emotional violence.
By examining the employment outcomes of immigrants in the labor market, Chapter 4 extends the dissertation's inquiry to the dynamics of immigrant economic integration into the destination country. Drawing on data from the German Socio-Economic Panel, the chapter scrutinizes the employment gap between native-born individuals and two distinct groups of first-generation immigrants: refugees and other migrants. Through rigorous analysis, Chapter 4 aims to identify the factors contributing to disparities in employment outcomes among these groups. In this chapter, I aim to disentangle the heterogeneity characteristic of refugees and other immigrants in the labor market, thereby contributing to a deeper understanding of immigrant labor market integration in Germany.
The results show that refugees and other migrants are less likely to find employment than comparable natives. The refugee-native employment gap is much wider than other migrant-native employment gap. Moreover, the findings vary by gender and migration categories. While other migrant men do not differ from native men in the probability of being employed, refugee women are the most disadvantaged group compared to other migrant women and native women in the probability of being employed. The study suggests that German language proficiency and permanent resident permits partially explain the lower employment probability of refugees in the German labor market.
Chapter 5 (co-authored with Uwe Jirjahn) utilizes the same dataset to explore the immigrant-native trade union membership gap, focusing on the role of integration in the workplace and into society. The integration of immigrants into society and the workplace is vital not only to improve migrant's performance in the labor market but also to actively participate in institutions such as trade unions. In this study, we argue that the incomplete integration of immigrants into the workplace and society implies that immigrants are less likely to be union members than natives. Our findings show that first-generation immigrants are less likely to be trade union members than natives. Notably, the analysis shows that the immigrant-native gap in union membership depends on immigrants’ integration into the workplace and society. The gap is smaller for immigrants working in firms with a works council and having social contacts with Germans. Moreover, the results reveal that the immigrant-native union membership gap is decreasing in the year since arrival in Germany.
Although universality has fascinated over the last decades, there are still numerous open questions in this field that require further investigation. In this work, we will mainly focus on classes of functions whose Fourier series are universal in the sense that they allow us to approximate uniformly any continuous function defined on a suitable subset of the unit circle.
The structure of this thesis is as follows. In the first chapter, we will initially introduce the most important notation which is needed for our following discussion. Subsequently, after recalling the notion of universality in a general context, we will revisit significant results concerning universality of Taylor series. The focus here is particularly on universality with respect to uniform convergence and convergence in measure. By a result of Menshov, we will transition to universality of Fourier series which is the central object of study in this work.
In the second chapter, we recall spaces of holomorphic functions which are characterized by the growth of their coefficients. In this context, we will derive a relationship to functions on the unit circle via an application of the Fourier transform.
In the second part of the chapter, our attention is devoted to the $\mathcal{D}_{\textup{harm}}^p$ spaces which can be viewed as the set of harmonic functions contained in the $W^{1,p}(\D)$ Sobolev spaces. In this context, we will also recall the Bergman projection. Thanks to the intensive study of the latter in relation to Sobolev spaces, we can derive a decomposition of $\mathcal{D}_{\textup{harm}}^p$ spaces which may be seen as analogous to the Riesz projection for $L^p$ spaces. Owing to this result, we are able to provide a link between $\mathcal{D}_{\textup{harm}}^p$ spaces and spaces of holomorphic functions on $\mathbb{C}_\infty \setminus \s$ which turns out to be a crucial step in determining the dual of $\mathcal{D}_{\textup{harm}}^p$ spaces.
The last section of this chapter deals with the Cauchy dual which has a close connection to the Fantappié transform. As an application, we will determine the Cauchy dual of the spaces $D_\alpha$ and $D_{\textup{harm}}^p$, two results that will prove to be very helpful later on. Finally, we will provide a useful criterion that establishes a connection between the density of a set in the direct sum $X \oplus Y$ and the Cauchy dual of the intersection of the respective spaces.
The subsequent chapter will delve into the theory of capacities and, consequently, potential theory which will prove to be essential in formulating our universality results. In addition to introducing further necessary terminologies, we will define capacities in the first section following [16], however in the frame of separable metric spaces, and revisit the most important results about them.
Simultaneously, we make preparations that allow us to define the $\mathrm{Li}_\alpha$-capacity which will turn out to be equivalent to the classical Riesz $\alpha$-capacity. The $\mathrm{Li}_\alpha$-capacity proves to be more adapted to the $D_\alpha$ spaces. It becomes apparent in the course of our discussion that the $\mathrm{Li}_\alpha$-capacity is essential to prove uniqueness results for the class $D_\alpha$. This leads to the centerpiece of this chapter which forms the energy formula for the $\mathrm{Li}_\alpha$-capacity on the unit circle. More precisely, this identity establishes a connection between the energy of a measure and its corresponding Fourier coefficients. We will briefly deal with the complement-equivalence of capacities before we revisit the concept of Bessel and Riesz capacities, this time, however, in a much more general context, where we will mainly rely on [1]. Since we defined capacities on separable metric spaces in the first section, we can draw a connection between Bessel capacities and $\mathrm{Li}_\alpha$-capacities. To conclude this chapter, we would like to take a closer look at the geometric meaning of capacities. Here, we will point out a connection between the Hausdorff dimension and the polarity of a set, and transfer it to the $\mathrm{Li}_\alpha$-capacity. Another aspect will be the comparison of Bessel capacities across different dimensions, in which the theory of Wolff potentials crystallizes as a crucial auxiliary tool.
In the fourth chapter of this thesis, we will turn our focus to the theory of sets of uniqueness, a subject within the broader field of harmonic analysis. This theory has a close relationship with sets of universality, a connection that will be further elucidated in the upcoming chapter.
The initial section of this chapter will be dedicated to the notion of sets of uniqueness that is specifically adapted to our current context. Building on this concept, we will recall some of the fundamental results of this theory.
In the subsequent section, we will primarily rely on techniques from previous chapters to determine the closed sets of uniqueness for the class $\mathcal{D}_{\alpha}$. The proofs we will discuss are largely influenced by [16, p.\ 178] and [9, pp.\ 82].
One more time, it will become evident that the introduction of the $\mathrm{Li}_\alpha$-capacity in the third chapter and the closely associated energy formula on the unit circle, were the pivotal factors that enabled us to carry out these proofs.
In the final chapter of our discourse, we will present our results on universality. To begin, we will recall a version of the universality criterion which traces back to the work of Grosse-Erdmann (see [26]). Coupled with an outcome from the second chapter, we will prove a result that allows us to obtain the universality of a class using the technique of simultaneous approximation. This tool will play a key role in the proof of our universality results which will follow hereafter.
Our attention will first be directed toward the class $D_\alpha$ with $\alpha$ in the interval $(0,1]$. Here, we summarize that universality with respect to uniform convergence occurs on closed and $\alpha$-polar sets $E \subset \s$. Thanks to results of Carleson and further considerations, which particularly rely on the favorable behavior of the $\mathrm{Li}_\alpha$-kernel, we also find that this result is sharp. In particular, it may be seen as a generalization of the universality result for the harmonic Dirichlet space.
Following this, we will investigate the same class, however, this time for $\alpha \in [-1,0)$. In this case, it turns out that universality with respect to uniform convergence occurs on closed and $(-\alpha)$-complement-polar sets $E \subset \s$. In particular, these sets of universality can have positive arc measure. In the final section, we will focus on the class $D_{\textup{harm}}^p$. Here, we manage to prove that universality occurs on closed and $(1,p)$-polar sets $E \subset \s$. Through results of Twomey [68] combined with an observation by Girela and Pélaez [23], as well as the decomposition of $D_{\textup{harm}}^p$, we can deduce that the closed sets of universality with respect to uniform convergence of the class $D_{\textup{harm}}^p$ are characterized by $(1,p)$-polarity. We conclude our work with an application of the latter result to the class $D^p$. We will show that the closed sets of divergence for the class $D^p$ are given by the $(1,p)$-polar sets.
In dieser Dissertation wird der Workflow der Erstellung einer Augmented Reality App für
das Projekt „ARmob” auf Androidgeräten beschrieben. Diese App positioniert durch SfM-Technik
erstellte, nach dem neuesten Stand der Forschung rekonstruierte 3D-Objekte an ihren
ursprünglichen Standort in der Realität. Die virtuellen Objekte werden jeweils vom Standpunkt
und Blickwinkel des Betrachters passend in die reale Welt eingeblendet, so dass der Eindruck
entsteht, die Objekte seien Teil der Realität. Die lagegenaue Darstellung ist abhängig von
der Satellitenerreichbarkeit der GNSS und der Genauigkeit der weiteren Sensoren. Die App
soll als Grundlage und Framework für weitere Apps zur Erforschung der Raumwahrnehmung
im Bereich der Kartographie dienen.
Rechts und radikal liberal
(2022)
Die Masterarbeit untersucht den Zusammenhang zwischen Libertarismus und Rechtsextremismus, wobei der Fokus auf der Entwicklung der libertären Szene in Deutschland liegt. Zunächst wird ein ausführlicher theoretischer Teil präsentiert, in dem gezeigt wird, dass zwischen einer radikal wirtschaftsliberalen und einer rechtsextremen Weltauffassung partiell gemeinsame Elemente bestehen. Insbesondere werden ein spezifischer Antiegalitarismus, eine Naturalisierung gesellschaftlicher Sachverhalte sowie eine gemeinsame Feindbildkonstruktion als verbindende Merkmale identifiziert, die beide Ideologien, die auf Ungleichwertigkeitsvorstellungen basieren, prägen. Im Anschluss folgt eine empirische Analyse des libertären Magazins eigentümlich frei, das eine zentrale Rolle in der deutschsprachigen libertären Bewegung spielt. Der soziologische Neo-Institutionalismus dient als theoretische Perspektive, um den institutionellen Wandel innerhalb der libertären Szene zu erfassen und zu analysieren. Die empirische Untersuchung bestätigt die theoretischen Annahmen und zeigt, dass sich im libertären Diskurs eine zunehmende Annäherung an rechtsextreme Ideologien vollzieht. Fünf Phasen des institutionellen Wandels werden identifiziert, die mit einer verstärkten Vernetzung der libertären Bewegung mit dem rechtsextremen Spektrum und der Veränderung von Diskursen einhergehen. Die Arbeit kommt zu dem Schluss, dass die libertäre Szene um eigentlich frei dem rechtsextremen Spektrum zuzuordnen ist. Die Untersuchung schlägt vor, den Libertarismus im Rahmen dieser Entwicklung als „Paläolibertarismus“ zu bezeichnen, was auf eine ideologische Nähe zur Alt-Right-Bewegung hinweist. Zentrale Merkmale dieser Ideologie sind neben einer radikal wirtschaftsliberalen Ausrichtung auch die Forderung nach einer Privatisierung gesellschaftlicher Institutionen und die Etablierung von sozialen Autoritäten wie Familie und Kirche zum Schutz des Individuums vor staatlicher Einflussnahme.
Peter Krause verstarb am 19. Februar 2023 nur wenige Tage vor seinem 87. Geburtstag. Zum Andenken an Peter Krause fand am 21. Juni 2024 eine Gedächtnisfeier an der Universität Trier statt – der Universität, an der Peter Krause von 1974 bis zu seiner Emeritierung am 31. März 2004 als ordentlicher Professor für Öffentliches Recht, Sozialrecht und Rechtsphilosophie forschte und lehrte und deren Gründung er maßgeblich begleitete.
Die auf der Gedächtnisfeier gehaltenen Vorträge wurden für die vorliegende Schrift überarbeitet. Sie befassen sich mit Themen, die dem Verstorbenen während seines juristischen Wirkens ein Anliegen waren und spiegeln das breite wissenschaftliche Interessen- und Betätigungsfeld Peter Krauses wider.
Convex Duality in Consumption-Portfolio Choice Problems with Epstein-Zin Recursive Preferences
(2025)
This thesis deals with consumption-investment allocation problems with Epstein-Zin recursive utility, building upon the dualization procedure introduced by [Matoussi and Xing, 2018]. While their work exclusively focuses on truly recursive utility, we extend their procedure to include time-additive utility using results from general convex analysis. The dual problem is expressed in terms of a backward stochastic differential equation (BSDE), for which existence and uniqueness results are established. In this regard, we close a gap left open in previous works, by extending results restricted to specific subsets of parameters to cover all parameter constellations within our duality setting.
Using duality theory, we analyze the utility loss of an investor with recursive preferences, that is, her difference in utility between acting suboptimally in a given market, compared to her best possible (optimal) consumption-investment behaviour. In particular, we derive universal power utility bounds, presenting a novel and tractable approximation of the investors’ optimal utility and her welfare loss associated to specific investment-consumption choices. To address quantitative shortcomings of those power utility bounds, we additionally introduce one-sided variational bounds that offer a more effective approximation for recursive utilities. The theoretical value of our power utility bounds is demonstrated through their application in a new existence and uniqueness result for the BSDE characterizing the dual problem.
Moreover, we propose two approximation approaches for consumption-investment optimization problems with Epstein-Zin recursive preferences. The first approach directly formalizes the classical concept of least favorable completion, providing an analytic approximation fully characterized by a system of ordinary differential equations. In the special case of power utility, this approach can be interpreted as a variation of the well-known Campbell-Shiller approximation, improving some of its qualitative shortcomings with respect to state dependence of the resulting approximate strategies. The second approach introduces a PDE-iteration scheme, by reinterpreting artificial completion as a dynamic game, where the investor and a dual opponent interact until reaching an equilibrium that corresponds to an approximate solution of the investors optimization problem. Despite the need for additional approximations within each iteration, this scheme is shown to be quantitatively and qualitatively accurate. Moreover, it is capable of approximating high dimensional optimization problems, essentially avoiding the curse of dimensionality and providing analytical results.
This dissertation examines the relevance of regimes for stock markets. In three research articles, we cover the identification and predictability of regimes and their relationships to macroeconomic and financial variables in the United States.
The initial two chapters contribute to the debate on the predictability of stock markets. While various approaches can demonstrate in-sample predictability, their predictive power diminishes substantially in out-of-sample studies. Parameter instability and model uncertainty are the primary challenges. However, certain methods have demonstrated efficacy in addressing these issues. In Chapter 1 and 2, we present frameworks that combine these methods meaningfully. Chapter 3 focuses on the role of regimes in explaining macro-financial relationships and examines the state-dependent effects of macroeconomic expectations on cross-sectional stock returns. Although it is common to capture the variation in stock returns using factor models, their macroeconomic risk sources are unclear. According to macro-financial asset pricing, expectations about state variables may be viable candidates to explain these sources. We examine their usefulness in explaining factor premia and assess their suitability for pricing stock portfolios.
In summary, this dissertation improves our understanding of stock market regimes in three ways. First, we show that it is worthwhile to exploit the regime dependence of stock markets. Markov-switching models and their extensions are valuable tools for filtering the stock market dynamics and identifying and predicting regimes in real-time. Moreover, accounting for regime-dependent relationships helps to examine the dynamic impact of macroeconomic shocks on stock returns. Second, we emphasize the usefulness of macro-financial variables for the stock market. Regime identification and forecasting benefit from their inclusion. This is particularly true in periods of high uncertainty when information processing in financial markets is less efficient. Finally, we recommend to address parameter instability, estimation risk, and model uncertainty in empirical models. Because it is difficult to find a single approach that meets all of these challenges simultaneously, it is advisable to combine appropriate methods in a meaningful way. The framework should be as complex as necessary but as parsimonious as possible to mitigate additional estimation risk. This is especially recommended when working with financial market data with a typically low signal-to-noise ratio.
Mixed-Integer Optimization Techniques for Robust Bilevel Problems with Here-and-Now Followers
(2025)
In bilevel optimization, some of the variables of an optimization problem have to be an optimal solution to another nested optimization problem. This specific structure renders bilevel optimization a powerful tool for modeling hierarchical decision-making processes, which arise in various real-world applications such as in critical infrastructure defense, transportation, or energy. Due to their nested structure, however, bilevel problems are also inherently hard to solve—both in theory and in practice. Further challenges arise if, e.g., bilevel problems under uncertainty are considered.
In this dissertation, we address different types of uncertainties in bilevel optimization using techniques from robust optimization. We study mixed-integer linear bilevel problems with lower-level objective uncertainty, which we tackle using the notion of Gamma-robustness. We present two exact branch-and-cut approaches to solve these Gamma-robust bilevel problems, along with cuts tailored to the important class of monotone interdiction problems. Given the overall hardness of the considered problems, we additionally propose heuristic approaches for mixed-integer, linear, and Gamma-robust bilevel problems. The latter rely on solving a linear number of deterministic bilevel problems so that no problem-specific tailoring is required. We assess the performance of both the exact and the heuristic approaches through extensive computational studies.
In addition, we study the problem of determining optimal tolls in a traffic network in which the network users hedge against uncertain travel costs in a robust way. The overall toll-setting problem can be seen as a single-leader multi-follower problem with multiple robustified followers. We model this setting as a mathematical problem with equilibrium constraints, for which we present a mixed-integer, nonlinear, and nonconvex reformulation that can be tackled using state-of-the-art general-purpose solvers. We further illustrate the impact of considering robustified followers on the toll-setting policies through a case study.
Finally, we highlight that the sources of uncertainty in bilevel optimization are much richer compared to single-level optimization. To this end, we study two aspects related to so-called decision uncertainty. First, we propose a strictly robust approach in which the follower hedges against erroneous observations of the leader's decision. Second, we consider an exemplary bilevel problem with a continuous but nonconvex lower level in which algorithmic necessities prevent the follower from making a globally optimal decision in an exact sense. The example illustrates that even very small deviations in the follower's decision may lead to arbitrarily large discrepancies between exact and computationally obtained bilevel solutions.
Partial differential equations are not always suited to model all physical phenomena, especially, if long-range interactions are involved or if the actual solution might not satisfy the regularity requirements associated with the partial differential equation. One remedy to this problem are nonlocal operators, which typically consist of integrals that incorporate interactions between two separated points in space and the corresponding solutions to nonlocal equations have to satisfy less regularity conditions.
In PDE-constrained shape optimization the goal is to minimize or maximize an objective functional that is dependent on the shape of a certain domain and on the solution to a partial differential equation, which is usually also influenced by the shape of this domain. Moreover, parameters associated with the nonlocal model are oftentimes domain dependent and thus it is a natural next step to now consider shape optimization problems that are governed by nonlocal equations.
Therefore, an interface identification problem constrained by nonlocal equations is thoroughly investigated in this thesis. Here, we focus on rigorously developing the first and second shape derivative of the associated reduced functional. In addition, we study first- and second-order shape optimization algorithms in multiple numerical experiments.
Moreover, we also propose Schwarz methods for nonlocal Dirichlet problems as well as regularized nonlocal Neumann problems. Particularly, we investigate the convergence of the multiplicative Schwarz approach and we conduct a number of numerical experiments, which illustrate various aspects of the Schwarz method applied to nonlocal equations.
Since applying the finite element method to solve nonlocal problems numerically can be quite costly, Local-to-Nonlocal couplings emerged, which combine the accuracy of nonlocal models on one part of the domain with the fast computation of partial differential equations on the remaining area. Therefore, we also examine the interface identification problem governed by an energy-based Local-to-Nonlocal coupling, which can be numerically computed by making use of the Schwarz method. Here, we again present a formula for the shape derivative of the associated reduced functional and investigate a gradient based shape optimization method.
Based on data collected from two surveys conducted in Germany and Taiwan, my first paper (Chapter 2) examines the impact of culture through language priming (Chinese vs. German or English) on individuals’ price fairness perception and attitudes towards government intervention and economic policy involving inequality. We document large cross-language differences: in both surveys, subjects who were asked and answered in Chinese demonstrated significantly higher perceived price fairness in a free market mechanism than their counterparts who completed the survey in German or English language. They were also more inclined to accept a Pareto improvement policy which increases social and economic inequality. In the second survey, Chinese language induced also a lower readiness to accept government intervention in markets with price limits compared to English language. Since language functions as a cultural mindset prime, our findings imply that culture plays an important role in fairness perception and preferences regarding social and economic inequality.
Chapter 3 of this work deals with patriotism priming. By conducting two online experimental studies conducted in Germany and China, we tested three different kinds of priming methods for constructive and blind patriotism respectively. Subjects were randomly distributed to one of three treatments motivated by previous studies in different countries: a constructive patriotism priming treatment, a blind patriotism priming treatment and a non-priming baseline. While the first experiment had a between-subject design, the second one enabled both a between-subject and within-subject comparison, since the level of patriotism of individuals was measured before and after priming respectively. The design of the second survey also enabled a comparison among the three priming methods for constructive and blind patriotism. The results showed that the tested methods, especially the national achievements as a priming mechanism, functioned well overall for constructive patriotism.
Surprisingly, the priming for blind patriotism did not work in either Germany or China and the opposite results were observed. Discussion and implications for future studies are provided at the end of the chapter.
Using data from the same studies as in Chapter 3, Chapter 4 examines the impact of patriotism on individuals’ fairness perception and preferences regarding inequality and on their attitudes toward economic policy involving inequality. Across surveys and countries, a positive and significant effect of blind patriotism on economic individualism was found. For China, we also found a significant relationship between blind patriotism and the agreement to unequal economic policy. In contrast to blind patriotism, we did not find an association of constructive patriotism to economic individualism and to attitudes toward economic policy involving inequality. Political and economic implications based on the results are discussed.
The last chapter (Chapter 5) studies the self-serving bias (when an individual’s perception about fairness is biased by self-interest) in the context of price setting and profit distribution. By analyzing data from four surveys conducted in six countries, we found that the stated appropriate product price and the fair allocation of profit was significantly higher, when the outcome was favorable to oneself. This self-serving bias in price fairness perception, however, differed across countries significantly and was significantly higher in Germany, Taiwan and China than in Vietnam, Estonia and Japan.
Although economic individualism and masculinity were found to have a significant negative effect on self-interest bias in price fairness judgment, they did not sufficiently explain the differences in self-interest bias between countries. Furthermore, we also observed an increase of self-interest bias in profit allocation over time in time-series data for one country (Germany) with data from 2011 to 2023.
The four papers are all co-authored with Prof. Marc Oliver Rieger, and the first paper has been accepted for publications in Review of Behavioral Economics.
The End of an Era? Embedding MONUSCO’s Withdrawal in the Current State of UN Peace Operations
(2024)
Veterinärantibiotika werden weltweit in großem Umfang zur Behandlung von Tierkrankheiten eingesetzt. Aufgrund der schlechten Resorption der Mittel im Darm der Tiere gelangen sie zum Großteil unverändert über Ausscheidungen auf landwirtschaftliche Nutzflächen. Dort können sie von Nichtzielorganismen, wie Gefäßpflanzen, aufgenommen werden und deren frühe Entwicklung bedrohen. In diesem Kontext wurde bisher vor allem der Einfluss auf Kulturpflanzen untersucht, während Wildpflanzenarten des ökologisch bedeutsamen Kulturgraslandes, die vor allem durch Gülleausbringung in Kontakt mit Antibiotikastoffen kommen, deutlich weniger fokussiert wurden. Deshalb wurde in dieser Arbeit der Einfluss realistischer Konzentrationen (0,1 - 20 mg/L) zweier häufig verwendeter Veterinärantibiotika, Tetracyclin und Sulfamethazin, auf die Keimung und das frühe Wachstum von typischen Arten des temperaten Kulturgraslandes untersucht. Da in der Natur oft mehrere Stressoren gleichzeitig auf einen Organismus einwirken, wurden auch zwei Multistressszenarien, nämlich Pharmazeutikamischungen und das Zusammenspiel von pharmazeutischem Wirkstoff mit abiotischen Bedingungen (Trockenstress) untersucht. In vier Themenblöcken wurden sowohl standardisierte Laborversuche als auch naturnähere Topf- und Feldversuche durchgeführt.
Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass sowohl die Keimung als auch das frühe Wachstum durch beide Wirkstoffe, jedoch häufiger durch Tetracyclin, beeinträchtigt wurden. Während die Keimung uneinheitlich in Bezug auf die Effektrichtung beeinflusst wurde, zeigte sich eine starke, antibiotika- und konzentrationsabhängige Reduktion der Wurzellänge vor allem durch Tetracyclin, in den Petrischalenversuchen (20 mg/L bis 96 %, bei Dactylis glomerata). Das oberirdische Wachstum (Blattlänge, Wuchshöhe, Biomasse) wurde geringer beinflusst, und dabei oft wachstumsfördernd. In der gesamten Arbeit zeigten sich immer wieder Hormesis- Effekte, d.h. geringe Konzentrationen, die stimulierend wirkten, während höhere Konzentrationen toxisch wirkten. Die betrachteten Kombinationen verschiedener Faktoren führten entgegen der Erwartung nicht eindeutig zu stärkeren oder alleinigen Einflüssen. In einzelnen Fällen zeigten sich solche Muster, jedoch wurden auch Verluste von Einzeleffekten bei den Kombinationen beobachtet oder Einzeleffekte, die sich dort erneut abbildeten.
Es zeigten sich, wenn auch uneinheitlich, signifikante Einflüsse auf die frühen Entwicklungsstadien von typischen Wildpflanzenarten, die bereits durch andere Faktoren einen Rückgang erfahren. Gerade im Hinblick auf die wiederholte Ausbringung von Gülle und die potenzielle Akkumulation dieser hoch persistenten Stoffe stellen Veterinärantibiotika einen weiteren wichtigen Einflussfaktor dar, der die Biodiversität und Artzusammensetzung gefährdet, weshalb zu einem umweltbewussten Umgang mit ihnen geraten wird.
This thesis contains three parts that are all connected by their contribution to research about the effects of trading apps on investment behavior. The primary motivation for this study is to investigate the previously undetermined consequences and effects of trading apps, which are a new phenomenon in the broker market, on the investment and risk behavior of Neobroker users.
Chapter 2 addresses the characteristics of a typical Neobroker user and a former Neobroker user and the impact of trading apps on the investment and risk behavior of their users. The results show that Neobroker users are significantly more risk tolerant than the general German population and are influenced by trading apps regarding their investment and risk behavior. Low trading fees and the low minimum investment amount are the main reasons for the use of trading apps. Investors who stop using trading apps mostly stop investing altogether. Another worrying result is that financial literacy among all groups is low and most Neobroker users have wrong conceptions about how trading apps earn money. In general, the financial literacy of all groups considered in this chapter is surprisingly low.
The third chapter investigates the effects of trading apps on investment behavior over time and compares the investment and risk behavior of Neobroker users and general investors. By using representative data of German Neobroker users, who were surveyed repeatedly over a 8-month time interval, it becomes possible to determine causal effects of the use of trading apps over time. In total, the financial literacy of Neobroker users increases with the longer use of a trading app. A worrying result is that the risk tolerance of Neobroker users rises significantly over time. Male Neobroker users gain a higher annual return (non-risk-adjusted) than female Neobroker users. In comparison to general investors, Neobroker users are significantly younger, more risk tolerant, more likely to buy derivatives and gain a higher annual return (non-risk-adjusted).
The fourth chapter analyses the impact of personality traits on the investment and risk behavior of Neobroker users. The results show that the BIG-5 personality traits have an impact on the investment behavior of Neobroker users. Two personality traits, openness and conscientiousness, stand out the most, as these two have explanatory power over various aspects of the behavior of Neobroker users. In particular, whether they buy different financial products than planned, the time they inform themselves about financial markets, the variety of financial products owned, and the reasons to use a Neobroker. Surprisingly, the risk tolerance of Neobroker users and the reasons to invest are not connected to any personal dimension. Whether a participant uses a trading app or a traditional broker to invest is respectively influenced by different personality traits.
Die Hauptzielsetzung der vorliegenden Arbeit besteht in der Erarbeitung von Möglichkeiten zur Optimierung der Bewirtschaftung der Riveristalsperre. Dazu werden zunächst alle relevanten Einflussgrößen und Gefahrenpotentiale des Systems aus dem Einzugsgebiet und der Talsperre analysiert und bewertet. Letztlich wird die Konzeption eines integrierten Bewirtschaftungsplanes für die Riveristalsperre auf der Basis einer neuen Pilotierungsanlage im SWT-Wasserwerk in Trier-Irsch dargestellt, diskutiert und auf Funktionsfähigkeit geprüft.
Mit einer aus ca. 90% des Einzugsgebiets bestehenden Waldfläche ist die Hauptsperre der Riveristalsperre durchschnittlich als eindeutig oligotroph eingestuft und das Rohwasser der Riveristalsperre von ausgezeichneter Qualität mit nur wenigen und beherrschbaren Gefahrenpotentialen.
Unter Berücksichtigung der Pilotierungsergebnisse war die In/Out, PES, UF- geeigneter als die Out/In, PVDF-Membran. Die Anordnung der UF-Anlage auf der Rohwasserseite nach der Flockung für die Abtrennung der partikulären Wasserinhaltsstoffe mit einer nachgeschalteten Wasseraufhärtung, pH-Wert-Anhebung und Entmanganung in einer CaCO3-Filterstufe und abschließenden Desinfektion durch eine UV-Bestrahlung stellte sich als ideal für die Aufbereitung des Rohwassers der Riveristalsperre heraus.
Die Ergebnisse der Pilotanlage sind in einer großtechnischen Trinkwasseraufbereitung im Wasserwerk in Trier-Irsch umgesetzt und seit 2013 offiziell in Betrieb genommen.
Abschließend werden Maßnahmen gegen eventuelle Minderwassermengen bei z.B. langanhaltenden Trockenwetterperioden (Klimawandel !) und für die allgemeine Erhöhung der Versorgungssicherheit diskutiert, wobei in Trier und in der Region schon seit langem sehr stark in die Verbundnetzsysteme investiert wird.
In machine learning, classification is the task of predicting a label for each point within a data set. When the class of each point in the labeled subset is already known, this information is used to recognize patterns and make predictions about the points in the remainder of the set, referred to as the unlabeled set. This scenario falls in the field of supervised learning.
However, the number of labeled points can be restricted, because, e.g., it is expensive to obtain this information. Besides, this subset may be biased, such as in the case of self-selection in a survey. Consequently, the classification performance for unlabeled points may be limited. To improve the reliability of the results, semi-supervised learning tackles the setting of labeled and unlabeled data. Moreover, in many cases, additional information about the size of each class can be available from undisclosed sources.
This cumulative thesis presents different studies to combine this external cardinality constraint information within three important algorithms for binary classification in the supervised context: support vector machines (SVM), classification trees, and random forests. From a mathematical point of view, we focus on mixed-integer programming (MIP) models for semi-supervised approaches that consider a cardinality constraint for each class for each algorithm.
Furthermore, since the proposed MIP models are computationally challenging, we also present techniques that simplify the process of solving these problems. In the SVM setting, we introduce a re-clustering method and further computational techniques to reduce the computational cost. In the context of classification trees, we provide correct values for certain bounds that play a crucial role for the solver performance. For the random forest model, we develop preprocessing techniques and an intuitive branching rule to reduce the solution time. For all three methods, our numerical results show that our approaches have better statistical performances for biased samples than the standard approach.
Nachdem er in den 1750er und 1760er Jahren graphische Bildsatiren zu aktuellen innen- und außenpolitischen Themen veröffentlich hatte, wurde William Hogarth selbst in zahlreichen Karikaturen verspottet und verleumdet. Ausgehend von dieser Beobachtung fragt die vorliegende Dissertation, welche Haltung sich den politischen Blättern des Künstlers entnehmen lässt und mit welchen künstlerischen Mitteln er dieser Ausdruck verlieh. Durch Analyse der politischen Ikonographie lassen sich die Themen und Akteure beschreiben. Mit der rezeptionsästhetischen Methode unter Hinzunahme der Sprech- und Bildakttheorie und der Propaganda Studies werden ihre tendenziösen Aussagen und manipulative Absichten entschlüsselt.
In ihrer Regierungsaffinität unterscheidet sich Hogarths politische Kunst maßgeblich von der oppositionellen Bildsatire Londons. Die Differenz spiegelt sich v. a. in den persönlichen Angriffen, mit denen zeitgenössische Satiriker Hogarth kritisierten. Als erstes reagierte Paul Sandby („The Painter’s March from Finchly“, 1753) auf Hogarths Darstellung des Jakobitischen Aufstandes 1745, womit er eine Begründung für die von William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland angestrebte Militärreform lieferte („March of the Guards to Finchley“, 1751); Für seine Gin Act-Kampagne („Gin Lane“ und „Beer Street“, 1750/51) erweiterte er die Pro-Gin-Ikonographie der 1730er Jahre (Anonymous: „The lamentable Fall of Madam Geneva”, 1736, Anonymous: „To those melancholly Sufferers the Destillers […] The Funeral Procession of Madam Geneva“, 1751), um sich für die staatliche Reglementierung der Destillen auszusprechen. In seinen Publikationen zum Siebenjährigen Krieg, mit denen er die Politik der jeweiligen Regierungen unter Thomas Pellham-Holles, Duke of Newcastle und William Pitt (the Elder) („The Invasion“, 1756) oder John Stuart, Earl of Bute („The Times Pl. 1“, 1763) unterstützte, zeigt sich Hogarths Opportunismus. Letztlich wurde seine Fürsprache für die unbeliebte Tory-Regierung und seine Kritik an William Pitt Anlass für Hogarths Herabwürdigung durch die Whig-treue Satire. Nach diesem Bruch publizierten beide Seiten verunglimpfende Portraitkarikaturen, die auf Rufmord des Gegners durch Kriminalisierung, Deformation und Dämonisierung setzten (William Hogarth: „John Wilkes Esqr.“, 1763, Anonymous „Tit for Tat“, 1763, Anonymous: „An Answer to the Print of John Wilkes Esqr. by WM Hogarth“, 1763, Anonymous: „Pug the snarling cur chastised Or a Cure for the Mange“, 1763).
Die Bildvergleiche zwischen Hogarths politischen Werken und den Reaktionen, die sie hervorriefen, zeigen, dass der Unterschied nicht im Bildgegenstand oder der politischen Ikonographie liegt, sondern in der Ausrichtung ihrer politischen Einflussnahme. Dabei ist vor allem Hogarths regierungsloyale Haltung hervorzuheben. Folglich muss die Forschungsmeinung von einer grundsätzlich kritischen Haltung Hogarths redigiert werden, da er sich nachweislich konservativ positioniert und dem Regierungshandeln und Machterhalt der Eliten Vorschub leistete.
Das vorliegende Dissertationsvorhaben untersucht die propagandistische Qualität der Werke Hogarths im Vergleich zu den zeitgenössischen Satirikern und macht die unterschiedliche politische Stoßrichtung sichtbar. Aufschluss gibt dabei die Anwendung künstlerischer und karikaturesker Mittel (das „Wie“) zum Zweck der burlesque (Posse/Parodie), des ridicule (Lächerlichmachung/Spott) bis bin zur Agitation, sowohl in Hogarths Werken als auch in den Karikaturen, die gegen ihn gerichtet waren. Da William Hogarth diese Stilmittel maßgeblich prägte und ihre Entwicklung forcierte, werden sie in der vorliegenden Arbeit unter dem Begriff Hogarthian Wit summiert. Mithilfe der Methode und Begriffe der Propaganda Studies lassen sich Intention und Zweck (das „Was“) als Bildakte beschreiben: Während es sich bei den Werken grundsätzlich um bias handelte, die basierend auf einer Ideologie die öffentliche Meinung beeinflusste, nahm ihre Schlagkraft in den 1760er Jahren stark zu; auf verrätselte Stellungnahmen folgte persönliche und offene Kritik an öffentlichen Personen, bis hin zum Rufmord. Dabei rezipierten sich die Künstler gegenseitig und bildeten Thesen und Antithesen aus. Hogarths einseitige Darstellungen wurden korrigiert und ergänzt, seine politische Kunst als Propaganda enttarnt. Schließlich wurden ihm Lügen und üble Nachrede vorgeworfen. Indem sie ihn anklagten oder durch Sekundärstigmatisierung eine Bestrafung in effigie vornahmen, forderten die Werke vom Rezipienten ein strafendes Urteil. Zu den künstlerischen Mitteln, die dabei zur Anwendung kommen, gehören eine politische Ikonographie und stereotype Feindbilder sowie nationale Konstruktionen, rezeptionsästhetische Mittel wie Juxtapositionen, Rezeptions- und Identifikationsfiguren sowie rhetorische und Mittel des Sprechakts, bis hin zu Perlokutionen. Die Werke lassen sich als Propaganda und somit als hierarchische Kommunikation beschreiben, die manipulative Bildstrategien nutzten, welche nicht nur der Beeinflussung der öffentlichen Meinung dienten, sondern politische Handlungen forcierten. Bezeichnend ist, dass beide Seiten dieselben Ikonographie, Stil-, Kompositions- und Kommunikationsmittel anwendeten, unabhängig von ihrer politischen Aussage, wodurch der Hogarthian Wit gefestigt und stetig weiterentwickelt wurde.
The positive consequences of performance pay on the wages and productivity have been well documented in the last decades. Yet, the increased pressure and work commitment associated with performance pay suggest that performance pay may have unintended negative consequences on worker’s health and well-being. As firms increasingly use performance pay worldwide, it becomes crucial to evaluate positive and negative consequences of performance pay. Thus, Chapters 2 – 4 of this doctoral thesis investigate the unintended adverse consequences of performance pay on stress, alcohol consumption, and loneliness, respectively. Chapter 5 investigates the positive role of performance pay on mitigating the overeducation wage penalty and enhancing labor market position of overeducated workers.
In Chapter 2, together with John S. Heywood and Uwe Jirjahn, I examine the hypothesis that performance pay is positively associated with employee stress. Using unique survey data from the German Socio-Economic Panel, I find performance pay consistently and importantly associates with greater stress even controlling for a long list of economic, social, and personality characteristics. The finding also holds in instrumental variable estimations accounting for the potential endogeneity of performance pay. Moreover, I show that risk tolerance and locus of control moderate the relationship between performance pay and stress. Among workers receiving performance pay, the risk tolerant and those believing they can control their environment suffer to a lesser degree from stress.
Chapter 3 examines the relationship between performance pay and alcohol use. Together with John S. Heywood and Uwe Jirjahn, I examine the hypothesis that alcohol use as “self-medication” is a natural response to the stress and uncertainty associated with performance pay. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel, I find that the likelihood of consuming each of four types of alcohol (beer, wine, spirits, and mixed drinks) is higher for those receiving performance pay even controlling for a long list of economic, social, and personality characteristics and in sensible instrumental variable estimates. I also show that the number of types of alcohol consumed is larger for those receiving performance pay and that the intensity of consumption increases. Moreover, I find that risk tolerance and gender moderate the relationship between performance pay and alcohol use.
In Chapter 4, I examine the hypothesis that performance pay increases the risk of employee loneliness due to increased stress, job commitment, and uncooperativeness associated with performance pay. Using the German Socio-Economic Panel, I find that performance pay is positively associated with both the incidence and intensity of loneliness. Correspondingly, performance pay decreases the social life satisfaction of workers. The findings also hold in instrumental variable estimations addressing the potential endogeneity of performance pay and in various robustness checks. Interestingly, investigating the potential role of moderating factors reveals that the association between performance pay and loneliness is particularly large for private sector employees.
Finally, in Chapter 5, I study the association between overeducation, performance pay, and wages. Overeducated workers are more productive and have higher wages in comparison to their adequately educated coworkers in the same jobs. However, they face a series of challenges in the labor market, including lower wages in comparison to their similarly educated peers who are in correctly matched jobs. Yet, less consensus exists over the adjustment mechanisms to overcome the negative consequences of overeducation. In this study, I examine the hypotheses that overeducated workers sort into performance pay jobs as an adjustment mechanism and that performance pay enhances their wages. Using the German Socio-Economic Panel, I show that overeducation associates with a higher likelihood of sorting into performance pay jobs and that performance pay moderates the wages of overeducated workers positively. It also holds in endogenous switching regressions accounting for the potential endogeneity of performance pay. Importantly, I show that the positive role of performance pay is particularly larger for the wages of overeducated women.
Au Luxembourg, des médiateur·trice·s scolaires externes apportent leur aide quand des conflits surgissent en milieu scolaire. Le Service de médiation scolaire fournit un soutien en cas de risque de décrochage scolaire et de conflits en lien avec l’inclusion et l’intégration d’élèves à besoins éducatifs spécifiques ou issu·e·s de l’immigration. Michèle Schilt s’est entretenue avec la directrice du service, Lis De Pina, sur le travail des médiateur·trice·s scolaires.
Des sentiments puissants : Aborder avec les enfants la question des émotions dans les conflits
(2024)
Les émotions sont le reflet de nos besoins personnels. Dans les discussions sur les conflits ou dans la médiation, en particulier, il est important de ne pas se concentrer uniquement sur le moment où un conflit est survenu, mais de déceler aussi les besoins et les émotions qui ont eu un impact sur nos actions, nos réflexions et notre ressenti. Le matériel que nous allons vous présenter vous permettra de découvrir comment aborder, en tant qu’enseignant·e, les émotions et les disputes avec des enfants dans l’enseignement fondamental.
Les conflits sont inévitables. Ils surviennent même au sein d’établissements scolaires empreints d’une culture démocratique. L’instauration d’une culture d’échange constructif sur les questions conflictuelles permet toutefois d’utiliser les litiges comme des opportunités d’apprentissage et de développement personnel et organisationnel.
Les carnets paraissent deux fois par an et offrent aux dirigeant(e)s des écoles ainsi qu’au personnel des fondements théoriques et du matériel pratique pour la mise en oeuvre d’un développement scolaire démocratique. Chaque publication traite d’une méthode de l’éducation à la démocratie ou d’une question stratégique du développement scolaire. Les carnets en langue allemande sont mis à la disposition des écoles luxembourgeoises en version imprimée. L’ensemble du matériel ainsi que la version en langue française sont disponibles en ligne.
Strategien der Komik im Internet-Meme - Ambivalente Funktionen einer internationalen Populärkultur
(2024)
Internet-Memes sind ein globales, populäres Medium, oft und zumeist unproblematisiert rezipiert und in ihrer Komik meist nur fragmentarisch, auf bestimmte Aspekte fokussiert analysiert. Die vorliegende Arbeit bemüht sich um eine möglichst umfassende Darstellung der Komik in Memes basierend auf klassischen und modernen Komikkategorien. Auf Grundlage einer umfassend-kritischen Synthese der vorliegenden Fachliteratur und eines präzisen Analysemodells kann so eine begründete Diskussion über memetische Komik, ihre Funktionen und ihre positiven wie problematischen Aspekte geführt werden.
Optimal Error Bounds in Normal and Edgeworth Approximation of Symmetric Binomial and Related Laws
(2024)
This thesis explores local and global normal and Edgeworth approximations for symmetric
binomial distributions. Further, it examines the normal approximation of convolution powers
of continuous and discrete uniform distributions.
We obtain the optimal constant in the local central limit theorem for symmetric binomial
distributions and its analogs in higher-order Edgeworth approximation. Further, we offer a
novel proof for the known optimal constant in the global central limit theorem for symmetric
binomial distributions using Fourier inversion. We also consider the effect of simple continuity
correction in the global central limit theorem for symmetric binomial distributions. Here, and in
higher-order Edgeworth approximation, we found optimal constants and asymptotically sharp
bounds on the approximation error. Furthermore, we prove asymptotically sharp bounds on the
error in the local case of a relative normal approximation to symmetric binomial distributions.
Additionally, we provide asymptotically sharp bounds on the approximation error in the local
central limit theorem for convolution powers of continuous and discrete uniform distributions.
Our methods include Fourier inversion formulae, explicit inequalities, and Edgeworth expansions, some of which may be of independent interest.
Income is one of the key indicators to measure regional differences, individual opportunities, and inequalities in society. In Germany, the regional distribution of income is a central concern, especially regarding persistent East-West, North-South, or urban-rural inequalities.
Effective local policies and institutions require reliable data and indicators on
regional inequality. However, its measurement faces severe data limitations: Inconsistencies
in the existing microdata sources yield an inconclusive picture of regional inequality.
While survey data provide a wide range of individual and household information but lack top incomes, tax data contain the most reliable income records but offer a limited range of socio-demographic variables essential for income analysis. In addition, information on the
long-term evolution of the income distribution at the small-scale level is scarce.
In this context, this thesis evaluates regional income inequality in Germany from various perspectives and embeds three self-contained studies in Chapters 3, 4, and 5, which present different data integration approaches. The first chapter motivates this thesis, while the second chapter provides a brief overview of the theoretical and empirical concepts as well
as the datasets, highlighting the need to combine data from different sources.
Chapter 3 tackles the issue of poor coverage of top incomes in surveys, also referred to as the ’missing rich’ problem, which leads to severe underestimation of income inequality. At the regional level this shortcoming is even more eminent due to small regional sample sizes. Based on reconciled tax and survey data, this chapter therefore proposes a new multiple
imputation top income correction approach that, unlike previous research, focuses on the regional rather than the national level. The findings indicate that inequality between and within the regions is much larger than previously understood with the magnitude of the adjustment depending on the federal states’ level of inequality in the tail. To increase the potential of the tax data for income analysis and to overcome the lack
of socio-demographic characteristics, Chapter 4 enriches the tax data with information on education and working time from survey data. For that purpose, a simulation study evaluates missing data methods and performant prediction models, finding that Multinomial
Regression and Random Forest are the most suitable methods for the specific data fusion scenario. The results indicate that data fusion approaches broaden the scope for regional inequality analysis from cross-sectional enhanced tax data.
Shifting from a cross-sectional to a longitudinal perspective on regional income inequality, Chapter 5 contributes to the currently relatively small body of literature dealing with the potential development of regional income disparities over time. Regionalized dynamic microsimulations provide a powerful tool for the study of long-term income developments. Therefore, this chapter extends the microsimulation model MikroSim with an income module
that accounts for the individual, household, and regional context. On this basis, the potential dynamics in gender and migrant income gaps across the districts in Germany are simulated under scenarios of increased full-time employment rates and higher levels
of tertiary education. The results show that the scenarios have regionally differing effects on inequality dynamics, highlighting the considerable potential of dynamic microsimulations for regional evidence-based policies. For the German case, the MikroSim model is well suited to analyze future regional developments and can be flexibly adapted for further specific research questions.
Der vorliegende Beitrag greift die öffentliche Diskussion um den rechtspolitischen Umgang mit Hass, Hetze und Antisemitismus auf, die insbesondere nach dem Terroranschlag der Hamas am 07.10.2023 an Intensität und Dringlichkeit zugenommen hat. Dabei beleuchtet er einerseits das Straf- und Zivilrecht, legt andererseits einen besonderen Fokus auf öffentlich-rechtliche Konstellationen. Auf jedem dieser Gebiete werden Schwächen und Potenziale des Rechts und der Rechtsprechung aufgezeigt, zugleich aber auch die Grenzen staatlicher Gewalt verdeutlicht. Denn letztlich handelt es sich um ein gesellschaftliches Problem, dem – trotz aller Notwendigkeit staatlichen Handelns – in erster Linie durch Information, und erst in zweiter Linie durch das Recht begegnet werden muss.
This thesis consists of four highly related chapters examining China’s rise in the aluminium industry. The first chapter addresses the conditions that allowed China, which first entered the market in the 1950s, to rise to world leadership in aluminium production. Although China was a latecomer, its re-entry into the market after the oil crises in the 1970s was a success and led to its ascent as the world’s largest aluminium producer by 2001. With an estimated production of 40.4 million tonnes in 2022, China represented almost 60% of the global output. Chapter 1 examines the factors underlying this success, such as the decline of international aluminium cartels, the introduction of innovative technology, the US granting China the MFN tariff status, Chinese-specific factors, and supportive government policies. Chapter 2 develops a mathematical model to analyze firms’ decisions in the short term. It examines how an incumbent with outdated technology and a new entrant with access to a new type of technology make strategic decisions, including the incumbent’s decision whether to deter entry, the production choice of firms, the optimal technology adoption rate of the newcomer, and cartel formation. Chapter 3 focuses on the adoption of new technology by firms upon market entry in four scenarios: firstly, a free market Cournot competition; secondly, a situation in which the government determines technology adoption rates; thirdly, a scenario in which the government controls both technology and production; and finally, a scenario where the government dictates technology adoption rates, production levels, and also the number of market participants. Chapter 4 applies the Spencer and Brander (1983) framework to examine strategic industrial policy. The model assumes that there are two exporting firms in two different countries that sell a product to a third country. We examine how the domestic firm is influenced by government intervention, such as the provision of a fixed-cost subsidy to improve its competitiveness relative to the foreign company. Chapter 4 initially investigates a scenario where only one government offers a fixed-cost subsidy, followed by an analysis of the case when both governments simultaneously provide financial help. Taken together, these chapters provide a comprehensive analysis of the strategic, technological, and political factors contributing to China’s leadership in the global aluminium industry.
Chapter 1: The Rise of China as a Latecomer in the Global Aluminium Industry
This chapter examines China’s remarkable transformation into a global leader in the aluminium industry, a sector in which the country accounted for approximately 58.9% of worldwide production in 2022. We examine how China, a latecomer to the aluminium industry that started off with labor-intensive technology in 1953, grew into the largest aluminium producer with some of the most advanced smelters in the world. This analysis identifies and discusses several opportunities that Chinese aluminium producers took advantage of. The first set of opportunities happened during the 1970s oil crises, which softened international competition and allowed China to acquire innovative smelting technology from Japan. The second set of opportunities started at about the same time when China opened its economy in 1978. The substantial demand for aluminium in China is influenced by both external and internal factors. Externally, the US granted China’s MFN tariff status in 1980 and China entered the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001. Both events contributed to a surge in Chinese aluminium consumption. Internally, China’s investment-led growth model boosted further its aluminium demand. Additional factors specific to China, such as low labor costs and the abundance of coal as an energy source, offer Chinese firms competitive advantages against international players. Furthermore, another window of opportunity is due to Chinese governmental policies, including phasing out old technology, providing subsidies, and gradually opening the economy to enhance domestic competition before expanding globally. By describing these elements, the study provides insights into the dynamic interplay of external circumstances and internal strategies that contributed to the success of the Chinese aluminium industry.
Chapter 2: Technological Change and Strategic Choices for Incumbent and New Entrant
This chapter introduces an oligopoly model that includes two actors: an incumbent and a potential entrant, that compete in the same market. We assume that two participants are located in different parts of the market: the incumbent is situated in area 1, whereas the potential entrant may venture into the other region, area 2. The incumbent exists in stage zero, where it can decide whether to deter the newcomer’s entry. A new type of technology exists in period one, when the newcomer may enter the market. In the short term, the incumbent is trapped with the outdated technology, while the new entrant may choose to partially or completely adopt the latest technology. Our results suggest the following: Firstly, the incumbent only tries to deter the new entrant if a condition for entry cost is met. Secondly, the new entrant is only interested in forming a cartel with the incumbent if a function of the ratio of the variable to new technology’s fixed-cost parameters is sufficiently high. Thirdly, if the newcomer asks to form a cartel, the incumbent will always accept this request. Finally, we can obtain the optimal new technology adoption rate for the newcomer.
Chapter 3: Technological Adoption and Welfare in Cournot Oligopoly
This study examines the difference between the optimal technology adoption rates chosen by firms in a homogeneous Cournot oligopoly and that preferred by a benevolent government upon firms’ market entry. To address the question of whether the technology choices of firms and government are similar, we analyze several different scenarios, which differ in the extent of government intervention in the market. Our results suggest a relationship between the number of firms in the market and the impact of government intervention on technology adoption rates. Especially in situations with a low number of firms that are interested in entering the market, greater government influence tends to lead to higher technology adoption rates of firms. Conversely, in scenarios with a higher number of firms and a government that lacks control over the number of market players, the technology adoption rate of firms will be highest when the government plays no role.
Chapter 4: International Technological Innovation and Industrial Strategies
Supporting domestic firms when they first enter the market may be seen as a favorable policy choice by governments around the world thanks to their ability to enhance the competitive advantage of domestic firms in non-cooperative competition against foreign enterprises (infant industry protection argument). This advantage may allow domestic firms to increase their market share and generate higher profits, thereby improving domestic welfare. This chapter utilizes the Spencer and Brander (1983) framework as a theoretical foundation to elucidate the effects of fixed-cost subsidies on firms’ production levels, technological innovations, and social welfare. The analysis examines two firms in different countries, each producing a homogeneous product that is sold in a third, separate country. We first examine the Cournot-Nash equilibrium in the absence of government intervention, followed by analyzing a scenario where just one government provides a financial subsidy for its domestic firm, and finally, we consider a situation where both governments simultaneously provide financial assistance for their respective firms. Our results suggest that governments aim to maximize social welfare by providing fixed-cost subsidies to their respective firms, finding themselves in a Chicken game scenario. Regarding technology innovation, subsidies lead to an increased technological adoption rate for recipient firms, regardless of whether one or both firms in a market receive support, compared to the situation without subsidies. The technology adoption rate of the recipient firm is higher than of its rival when only the recipient firm benefits from the fixed-cost subsidy. The lowest technology adoption rate of a firm occurs when the firm does not receive a fixed-cost subsidy, but its competitor does. Furthermore, global welfare will benefit the most in case when both exporting countries grant fixed-cost subsidies, and this welfare level is higher when only one country subsidizes than when no subsidies are provided by any country.
Im Rahmen psychologischer Wissenschaftskommunikation werden Plain Language Summaries (PLS, Kerwer et al., 2021) zunehmend bedeutsamer. Es handelt sich hierbei um
zugängliche, überblicksartige Zusammenfassungen, welche das Verständnis von Lai:innen
potenziell unterstützen und ihr Vertrauen in wissenschaftliche Forschung fördern können.
Dies erscheint speziell vor dem Hintergrund der Replikationskrise (Wingen et al., 2019) sowie Fehlinformationen in Online-Kontexten (Swire-Thompson & Lazer, 2020) relevant. Die
positiven Auswirkungen zweier Effekte auf Vertrauen sowie ihre mögliche Interaktion fanden im Kontext von PLS bisher kaum Berücksichtigung: Zum einen die einfache Darstellung von Informationen (Easiness-Effekt, Scharrer et al., 2012), zum anderen ein möglichst wissenschaftlicher Stil (Scientificness-Effekt, Thomm & Bromme, 2012). Diese Dissertation hat zum Ziel, im Kontext psychologischer PLS genauere Bestandteile beider Effekte zu identifizieren und den Einfluss von Einfachheit und Wissenschaftlichkeit auf Vertrauen zu beleuchten. Dazu werden drei Artikel zu präregistrierten Online-Studien mit deutschsprachigen Stichproben vorgestellt.
Im ersten Artikel wurden in zwei Studien verschiedene Textelemente psychologischer PLS systematisch variiert. Es konnte ein signifikanter Einfluss von Fachtermini, Informationen zur
Operationalisierung, Statistiken und dem Grad an Strukturierung auf die von Lai:innen berichtete Einfachheit der PLS beobachtet werden. Darauf aufbauend wurden im zweiten Artikel vier PLS, die von Peer-Review-Arbeiten abgeleitet wurden, in ihrer Einfachheit und
Wissenschaftlichkeit variiert und Lai:innen zu ihrem Vertrauen in die Texte und Autor:innen befragt. Hier ergab sich zunächst nur ein positiver Einfluss von Wissenschaftlichkeit auf
Vertrauen, während der Easiness-Effekt entgegen der Hypothesen ausblieb. Exploratorische Analysen legten jedoch einen positiven Einfluss der von Lai:innen subjektiv wahrgenommenen Einfachheit auf ihr Vertrauen sowie eine signifikante Interaktion mit der
wahrgenommenen Wissenschaftlichkeit nahe. Diese Befunde lassen eine vermittelnde Rolle der subjektiven Wahrnehmung von Lai:innen für beide Effekte vermuten. Im letzten Artikel
wurde diese Hypothese über Mediationsanalysen geprüft. Erneut wurden zwei PLS
präsentiert und sowohl die Wissenschaftlichkeit des Textes als auch die der Autor:in manipuliert. Der Einfluss höherer Wissenschaftlichkeit auf Vertrauen wurde durch die
subjektiv von Lai:innen wahrgenommene Wissenschaftlichkeit mediiert. Zudem konnten
dimensionsübergreifende Mediationseffekte beobachtet werden.
Damit trägt diese Arbeit über bestehende Forschung hinaus zur Klärung von Rahmenbedingungen des Easiness- und Scientificness-Effektes bei. Theoretische
Implikationen zur zukünftigen Definition von Einfachheit und Wissenschaftlichkeit, sowie
praktische Konsequenzen hinsichtlich unterschiedlicher Zielgruppen von
Wissenschaftskommunikation und dem Einfluss von PLS auf die Entscheidungsbildung von
Lai:innen werden diskutiert.