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With many OECD countries experiencing a decline in their populations, this book offers a theoretical model of coping with demographic change and examines different strategies that societies have used to come to terms with demographic change. In particular, it details the different ways that Germany and Poland have tried to cope with this challenge and reveals three conflicting strategies: expansion, reduction, and phasing out. Coverage includes: · How and why demographic change was used in Poland to expand the education system · The variance of linkage between demographic change and growth rates in different fields of education in a German Bundesland · Modes of reflexivity and personnel policy in German and Polish municipalities · Effects of demographic change and forms of coping on fiscal capacity and unemployment rates in German municipalities. Coping with Demographic Change examines how and why societies cope with these detrimental effects. It conceptualizes the challenges a society faces as a result of demographic change and focuses on the processes by which actors, organizations and nation-states try to cope with this new situation.
Demography --- Germany --- Poland
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Gesellschaft --- Volkswirtschaft --- Politik --- Deutschland --- Munich (Germany) --- München. --- München --- Germany --- München (Germany) --- Mnichov (Germany) --- Minhen (Germany) --- Munique (Germany) --- Miwnkhēn (Germany) --- Mi︠u︡nkhen (Germany) --- Minkhen (Germany) --- Monaco di Baviera (Germany) --- Landeshauptstadt München --- Minga (Germany) --- Münhen (Germany) --- Горад Мюнхен (Germany) --- Horad Mi︠u︡nkhen (Germany) --- Мюнхен (Germany) --- Munic (Germany) --- Monacu di Baviera (Germany) --- Μόναχο (Germany) --- Monacho (Germany) --- Munkeno (Germany) --- Munĥeno (Germany) --- 뮌헨 (Germany) --- Mwinhen (Germany) --- Mnichow (Germany) --- מינכן (Germany) --- Monacum (Germany) --- Monachium (Germany) --- Minhene (Germany) --- Miunchenas (Germany) --- Минхен (Germany) --- ミュンヘン (Germany) --- Myunhen (Germany) --- Monaco 'e Baviera (Germany) --- Minche (Germany) --- Mùnich ëd Baviera (Germany) --- Minca (Germany) --- Mu̇nkhėn (Germany) --- Monaco de Baviera (Germany) --- Mynihu (Germany) --- Mònacu (Germany) --- Munike (Germany) --- Münih (Germany) --- Minkhn (Germany) --- Munix (Germany) --- Mionchens (Germany) --- 慕尼黑 (Germany) --- Munihei (Germany) --- Muenchen (Germany) --- Monakovo (Germany) --- Hauptstadt München --- Munich --- Monachum --- Munichen --- K. Haupt- und Residenzstadt München --- Königliche Haupt- und Residenzstadt München --- Monaco --- Mjunchen --- Myunken --- Mnichov --- Munihei --- Minga --- Monacho --- Monachon --- Hauptstadt der Bewegung --- Minkhen --- Münich --- Groß-München --- Monaco di Baviera --- Monachium --- Monacum --- Moncium --- Duits --- bedrijfsbeheer --- officemanagement --- 3 --- abonnementen --- actualiteiten --- Actualiteit --- Sociale wetenschappen --- Periodicals --- German periodicals --- -053.1 --- Electronic information resources --- -München (Germany) --- Informatieve tijdschriften --- Duits. --- actualiteit --- Social Sciences --- Journalism, Mass Communication, Media & Publishing --- Duitsland --- Economie --- Sociaal beleid --- Taal --- -Periodicals --- -Informatieve tijdschriften --- -Electronic information resources --- Munich (Germany) -
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Archeology --- archaeology --- Kelten --- archeologie --- Germany
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Sculpture --- sculpting --- beeldhouwkunst --- anno 500-1499 --- Germany
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Art --- Kiefer, Anselm --- anno 2000-2099 --- Germany
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This book challenges the idea that Western media systems are becoming more American in the digital age, arguing that journalistic cultures are not only significantly different from each other still but also variably open and resistant to change. Drawing upon extensive field research of political reporters and examination of discourses of journalistic professionalism as well institutional analysis, this book finds that occupational norms and values of journalism in the US are vigorously upheld but in fact relatively porous and malleable. In Germany, by contrast, professional boundaries are rather strong and resilient but treated matter-of-factly. Revers argues that this is both a consequence of institutional arrangements of media systems and historically evolved cultural principles of journalism in both countries which mutually constitute each other.
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Taking Plato’s allegory of the cave as its starting-point, this book demonstrates how later European thinkers can be read as a reaction and a response to key aspects of this allegory and its discourse of enchainment and liberation. Focusing on key thinkers in the tradition of European (and specifically German) political thought including Kant, Marx, Hegel, Nietzsche, Heidegger, and the Frankfurt School, it relates them back to such foundational figures as Rousseau, Aristotle, and in particular Plato. All these thinkers are considered in relation to key passages from their major works, accompanied by an explanatory commentary which seeks to follow a conceptual and imagistic thread through the labyrinth of these complex, yet fascinating, texts. This book will appeal in particular to scholars of political theory, philosophy, and German language and culture. Paul Bishop is William Jacks Chair of Modern Languages at University of Glasgow, UK. His previous publications include Carl Jung (2014), A Companion to Friedrich Nietzsche, Life and Works (2012), and Nietzsche and Antiquity: His Reaction and Response to the Classical Tradition (2004). .
Political philosophy. Social philosophy --- Plato --- Germany
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