LEHRSTUHL FÜR EMPIRISCHE THEORIEN DER POLITIK
Geschwister-Scholl-Institut für Politikwissenschaft
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Professor Knill Geschwister-Scholl-Institut für Politikwissenschaft an der LMU München

Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill

Lehrstuhlinhaber Vita ansehen
Lehrstuhl für Empirische Theorien der Politik

Wer wir sind

Die Forschungsschwerpunkte des Lehrstuhls liegen im Bereich der vergleichenden Policy-Forschung und Verwaltungswissenschaft. Dabei befassen wir uns mit Politikwandel und der Veränderung von Staatstätigkeit in verschiedenen Politikbereichen. In der vergleichenden Verwaltungswissenschaft liegt unser Schwerpunkt dagegen auf der Untersuchung von internationalen Verwaltungen, der Veränderung von nationalstaatlichen Verwaltungssystemen durch Europäisierung und Internationalisierung und der Beziehung zwischen Verwaltung und Politikgestaltung.

Erfahrt mehr über uns im Video.

Carbon Footprint Policy

Policy
Change

Sustainabiltiy & Governance

Public Administration

Moral Policy

Data GSI München

Forschungsarbeit & Daten

Die Forschungsschwerpunkte des Lehrstuhls liegen im Bereich der vergleichenden Policy-Forschung und Verwaltungswissenschaft. Aktuelle Projekte befassen sich mit den Ursachen und Konsequenzen der Politikakkumulation (ACCUPOL), verschiedenen Verwaltungsstilen in internationalen öffentlichen Administrationen (STYLES) und der Beteiligung von zivilgesellschaftlichen Akteuren an der Umsetzung von Moralpolitiken (Religion & Morality Policy).

VERGANGENE FORSCHUNGSPROJEKTE

Publikationen

AKTUELLE ZEITSCHRIFTENARTIKEL

Fernández-i-Marín, X., Knill, C., Steinbacher, C., & Zink, D. (2024). Tackling blind spots in Europeanisation research: the impact of EU legislation on national policy portfolios. Journal of European Public Policy, 1–29.

Steinbacher, C. (2024). The pursuit of welfare efficiency: when institutional structures turn ‘less’ into ‘more’. Policy Sciences, 1-26.

Steinbacher, C. (2024). The voice of implementation: Exploring the link between street‐level integration and sectoral policy outcomes. Regulation & Governance.

Fernández-i-Marín, X., Hinterleitner, M., Knill, C., & Steinebach, Y. (2024). Testing theories of policy growth: public demands, interest group politics, electoral competition, and institutional fragmentation. Journal of European Public Policy, 1-26.

Zink, D., Knill, C.. Steinebach Y. (2024). Bureaucratic overload and organizational policy triage: A comparative study of implementation agencies in five European countries. Regulation & Governance. Online First.

Knill, C., Steinebach, Y., & Zink, D. (2023). How policy growth affects policy implementation: bureaucratic overload and policy triage. Journal of European Public Policy. Online First.

Fernández-i-Marín, X., Knill, C., Steinbacher, C., & Steinebach, Y. (2023). Bureaucratic Quality and the Gap between Implementation Burden and Administrative Capacities. American Political Science Review, 1-21.

Bücher

Buchcover des Routledge Handbook of Environmental Policy
Routledge Handbook of Environmental Policy

Helge Jörgens, Christoph Knill & Yves Steinebach (2023)

Buchcover: International Public Administrations in Global Public Policy
International Public Administrations in Global Public Policy: Sources and Effects of Bureaucratic Influence

C. Knill & Y. Steinebach (2022)

Book: A matter of Style
A Matter of Style? Organizational Agency in Global Public Policy

Bayerlein, L., Knill, C. & Steinebach, Y. (2020)

Public Policy – A new Introduction. Book by Christoph KNill & Jale Tosun
Public Policy: A New Introduction

Knill, C. & Tosun, J. (2020)

Policy Accumulation and the Democratic Responsiveness Trap
Policy Accumulation and the Democratic Responsiveness Trap

Adam, C., Hurka, S., Knill, C. & Steinebach, Y. (2019)

Morality politics in a secular age: Strategic parties and divided governments.
Morality politics in a secular age: Strategic parties and divided governments

Euchner, E. (2019)

International Bureaucracy
Internationale Bürokratie

Bauer, M.W., Knill, C. & Eckhard, S. (2017)

On the Road to Permissiveness?
On the Road to Permissiveness?

Knill, C., Adam, C. & Hurka, S. (2015)

Einführung in die Policy-Analyse

Knill, C. & Tosun, J. (2015)

Higher Education Governance and Policy Change in Western Europe
Hochschulverwaltung und Politikwandel in Westeuropa

Dobbins, M. & Knill, C. (2014)

Moral Policy in Germany: national regulation of societal value conflicts in historical and international comparison
Moralpolitik in Deutschland

Knill, C., Heichel, S., Preidel, C. & Nebel, K. (2014)

Reforms of higher education policy in the wake of the Bologna Process
Hochschulpolitische Reformen im Zuge des Bologna-Prozesses

Knill, C., Vögtle, E.M. & Dobbins, M. (2012)

Aktuelles

Donnerstag, 12. September 2024 Neue Publikation: Tackling blind spots in Europeanisation research: the impact of EU legislation on national policy portfolios

Dr. Xavier Fernández-i-Marín, Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill, Christina Steinbacher und Dionys Zink haben ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

Tackling blind spots in Europeanisation research: the impact of EU legislation on national policy portfolios

Research on the European Union over the years has significantly advanced our understanding of the domestic impact of EU policies. However, notable blind spots persist regarding the broader impact of EU legislation on national policy portfolios and its interaction with domestic policy-making. To address this gap, we introduce a novel analytical concept that adopts a macro-perspective to scrutinise the impact of EU policy-making on national policy portfolios and their trajectories over time. We analyse EU-induced change dynamics through three dimensions of national policy portfolios: policy efforts, policy innovation, and policy design quality. Applying our framework to clean air policy across 13 EU countries over 38 years, we find ambiguous effects on national policy-making. Our findings reveal that while the EU’s role in clean air policy has expanded, it simultaneously has constrained innovative potentials within national portfolios and challenged design quality, substituting rather than complementing national policy efforts. We contribute to the state of the art by providing a novel conceptual framework on the macro dynamics of multi-level policy-making, offering theoretical arguments on the expected effects of EU influence, and presenting empirical evidence of these dynamics.

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Freitag, 05. Juli 2024 Neue Publikation: The voice of implementation: Exploring the link between street‐level integration and sectoral policy outcomes

Christina Steinbacher hat ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

The voice of implementation: Exploring the link between street‐level integration and sectoral policy outcomes

Ineffective policies plague democratic systems and challenge their legitimacy. While existing research highlights the impor- tance of street-level bureaucrats (SLBs) as de facto “policymakers,” our understanding of SLBs’ aggregate effects on policy out- comes remains limited. Therefore, this paper proposes a shift in perspective, redirecting attention from the micro level toward institutional structures. It introduces the concept of street-level integration, which captures institutional structures enabling SLBs to form a strong voice of implementation and contribute to policy design through three integrative pathways. Analyzing the effects of street-level integration on environmental outcomes in 21 OECD countries over time, the findings reveal that street-level integration not only directly enhances outcomes through increased implementation performance but also acts as a vital factor for policy formulation increasing the effectiveness of existing and newly adopted policies. While highlighting the importance of institutional structures and SLBs for successful policymaking, the paper also offers practical recommendations for institutional reforms.

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Freitag, 05. Juli 2024 Neue Publikation: The pursuit of welfare efficiency: when institutional structures turn ‘less’ into ‘more’

Christina Steinbacher hat ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

The pursuit of welfare efficiency: when institutional structures turn ‘less’ into ‘more’

Addressing current socio-economic crises strains public budgets and may threaten fiscal sustainability. Particularly in the welfare sector, where high expenditures meet poor con- trollability, efficient resource usage is essential to ensure future governments’ capability to act while alleviating current problems. Consequently, this paper asks: why are some coun- tries more efficient in translating social expenditure into welfare outcomes? To answer this question, it is argued that efficiency is a matter of institutional structures and their vertical policy-process integration (VPI): efficiency depends on institutional structures’ capability to (1) ensure policymakers’ responsibility and to (2) provide coordinated feedback, thus pushing for considerate and informed resource use. Analysing the effect of VPI on the rela- tionship between welfare efforts and social outcomes in 21 OECD countries over three dec- ades, the results show that VPI can not only turn ‘less’ into ‘more’, but it also compensates for performance losses in the face of spending cuts.

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Freitag, 05. Juli 2024 Neue Stellenausschreibung: PhD Researcher (M/F/D) for the ERC Project “Systemic Effects of Crises on Policy-Making in Modern Democracies” (CRISPOL)

About the position

The Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich (LMU) is one of Germany’s largest and most prestigious universities. The Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Political Science (GSI), invites applications for a PhD Researcher position starting on November 1st, 2024, or shortly thereafter. This position is initially limited to three years with the possibility of extension based on performance. Compensation is based on the E13 TV-L pay scale (65%), with potential increases for additional responsibilities such as teaching.

About the project

The position will be part of the research project “Systemic Effects of Crises on Policy- Making in Modern Democracies” (CRISPOL), which is funded by the European Research Council. The primary aim of CRISPOL is to investigate how crises create systemic trade- offs that affect policy adaptation across various sectors. CRISPOL seeks to understand the complex dynamics of policy-making in times of crisis.

The main questions to answer in the project will be:

  • How do crisis events affect the government’s policy-making activities in different policy areas? Are there shifts in policy-making activities from one policy area to the other?
  • Which political systems exhibit stronger capabilities to manage crises without neglecting policy issues in other areas, and what factors contribute to this resilience?

The project is co-organized between the LMU and the University of Oslo (UiO). The LMU Munich team is led by Christoph Knill, who is also the Principal Investigator of the overall project. The University of Oslo team will be headed by Yves Steinebach and will form part of the department’s research group on Policy, Bureaucracy, and Organisation (PBO).

Your Task

  • Collaborate in developing a novel measuring approach to map crisis events across time and regions.
  • Collaborate with other team members on research outputs with the potential for publication in leading international journals.
  • Opportunity to complete a PhD aligned with the project goals.

Your Profile

  • A Master’s degree (completed or near completion) in Political Science or a related field with excellent grades.
  • Strong interest in quantitative methods, preferably in computational social science (e.g., text-as-data approaches).
  • Experience in coding with Python and/or R.

We offer

  • Salary according to TV-L pay grade E13
  • A vibrant research environment.
  • Opportunities for international cooperation.
  • Support for publishing in leading international journals.
  • Support for participation in international conferences.
  • Opportunities to further develop your research skills (e.g., participation insummer schools).

Necessary documents

  • A cover letter (max. 2 pages) including a statement of motivation.
  • A writing sample (e.g., term paper or master’s thesis).
  • A CV detailing your prior experiences.
  • Relevant degrees and — if not yet completed — current transcript of records.

Application Process

The application deadline is September 10th, 2024. Screening and evaluation of candidates will begin immediately. We expect the evaluation process, from application deadline to offer, to take 4 weeks, depending on the number of applications. The expected start date is November 1st, 2024, or shortly thereafter. We are committed to increasing diversity in our staff and especially encourage women to apply. To apply, please provide all necessary documents via email to sekretariat.knill@gsi.uni- muenchen.de.

 

Aktuelles

Sonntag, 21. April 2024 ERC Advanced Grant für Professor Christoph Knill

Professor Christoph Knill erhält für sein Projekt CRISPOL (Systemic Effects of Crises on Policy-Making in Modern Democracies) einen Advanced Grant vom Europäischen Forschungsrat ERC. Er ist Inhaber des Lehrstuhls für Empirische Theorien der Politik am Geschwister-Scholl-Institut für Politikwissenschaft der LMU. In seiner Forschung beschäftigt er sich mit Politikwandel, der Veränderung von Staatstätigkeit, der Veränderung von nationalstaatlichen Verwaltungssystemen und der Beziehung zwischen Verwaltung und Politikgestaltung. CRISPOL untersucht die systemischen Auswirkungen von Krisen auf die demokratische Politikgestaltung.

Mit Advanced Grants unterstützt der ERC etablierte Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissenschaftler aller Fachbereiche, deren hochinnovative Forschung erheblich über den bisherigen Forschungsstand hinausgeht und neue Forschungsgebiete erschließt. Die Auszeichnung ist mit einer Förderung in Höhe von maximal 2,5 Millionen Euro über einen Zeitraum von fünf Jahren verbunden. Für Knill ist es bereits der dritte Advanced Grant in seiner Karriere.

Weitere Informationen zum Advanced Grant gibt es hier. 

Aktuelles

Sonntag, 03. März 2024 Neue Publikation: Testing theories of policy growth: public demands, interest group politics, electoral competition, and institutional fragmentation

Dr. Xavier Fernández-i-Marín, Dr. Markus Hinterleitner, Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill und Dr. Yves Steinebach haben ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

Testing theories of policy growth: public demands, interest group politics, electoral competition, and institutional fragmentation

Policy growth is a ubiquitous feature of modern democracies that has attracted increased attention in political science and beyond. However, the literature is characterised by considerable disagreement on why policy growth occurs. Existing explanations centre on the influence of (1) public demands, (2) interest group politics, (3) electoral competition, and (4) institutional fragmentation. While all four explanations are plausible, there are no studies that assess their relative explanatory power within a single empirical analysis. This article provides such an analysis by examining the drivers of policy growth in 21 OECD countries from 1976 to 2020 in the area of environmental policy. We identify strong ties between organised interests and the government as the primary driver of policy growth. Public demands and institutional fragmentation are relevant but comparatively less important factors, while the intensity of electoral competition has no influence on policy growth. These findings have important implications for our understanding of the functioning of democracy in the long run.

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Sonntag, 11. Februar 2024 Neue Publikation: Bureaucratic overload and organizational policy triage: A comparative study of implementation agencies in five European countries

Dionys Zink, Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill und Dr. Yves Steinebach haben ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

Bureaucratic overload and organizational policy triage: A comparative study of implementation agencies in five European countries

Research on policy implementation traditionally has focused on understanding the success or failure of individual policies within specific contexts. Little attention has been given to the challenges that emerge from the cumulative growth of policy portfolios over time. This paper is addressing this research gap by examining the phenomenon of organizational policy triage, which occurs when implementation organizations face overload and are forced to make trade-off decisions between the implementation of the different policies in their portfolios. We investigate empirical patterns of policy triage across 16 social and environmental implementation agencies in five European countries (Denmark, Germany, Ireland, Italy, and UK). We show that variation in policy triage can be explained by the combination of three central factors: blame-shifting opportunities, the mobilization of external resources, and the commitment to compensate for overload by implementation authorities.

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Sonntag, 11. Februar 2024 Neue Publikation: How policy growth affects policy implementation: bureaucratic overload and policy triage

Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill, Dr. Yves Steinebach und Dionys Zink haben ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

How policy growth affects policy implementation: bureaucratic overload and policy triage

While policies pile up in modern democracies, the effect of policy growth on policy implementation has not been addressed so far. Implementation research has focused on individual policies instead of studying the challenges implementation organizations face in dealing with growing policy stocks. In this paper, we address this research gap in three ways. First, we introduce the novel concept of organizational ‘policy triage’ which captures implementation effectiveness from an organizational rather than a policy-based perspective. Second, we develop a theoretical framework to account for variations in the prevalence of policy triage across organizations. We argue that policy triage is affected by the interplay of several factors related to (1) organizational overload vulnerability and (2) organizational overload compensation. Third, we provide an initial empirical test of our conceptual and theoretical considerations through four comparative case studies on environmental policy implementation in Ireland and England.

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Dienstag, 14. November 2023 Neue Publikation: Bureaucratic Quality and the Gap between Implementation Burden and Administrative Capacities

Xavier Fernández-i-Marín, Christina Steinbacher, Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill und Dr. Yves Steinebach haben ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

Bureaucratic Quality and the Gap between Implementation Burden and Administrative Capacities

Democratic governments produce more policies than they can effectively implement. Yet, this gap between the number of policies requiring implementation and the administrative capacities available to do so is not the same in all democracies but varies across countries and sectors. We argue that this variation depends on the coupling of the sectoral bureaucracies in charge of policy formulation and those in charge of policy implementation. We consider these patterns of vertical policy- process integration an important feature of bureaucratic quality. The more the policymaking level is involved in policy implementation (top-down integration) and the easier the policy-implementing level finds it to feed its concerns into policymaking (bottom-up integration), the smaller the so-called “burden- capacity gap.” We demonstrate this effect through an empirical analysis in 21 OECD countries over a period of more than 40 years in the areas of social and environmental policies.

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Montag, 11. September 2023 Neue Publikation: Bureaucratic Overburdening in Advanced Democracies

Xavier Fernández-i-Marín, Dr. Markus Hinterleitner, Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill und Dr. Yves Steinebach

Bureaucratic Overburdening in Advanced Democracies

Constant policy growth can overburden bureaucracies if implementation capacities are not expanded in lockstep with policy production. This development may undermine policy effectiveness and hence the long-term legitimacy of democracies. This article provides a systematic analysis of this phenomenon. We demonstrate that (i) overburdening is a general trend in advanced democracies; (ii) the extent of overburdening varies by the institutional context in which policy-makers operate; and that, in consequence, (iii) countries’ bureaucracies differ in their distance (or closeness) to the “tipping point” after which additional policies do more harm than good. We provide information on the ratio between the policies up for implementation and the bureaucratic capacities available for 21 OECD countries over a period of 45 years (1976-2020), focusing on the areas of environmental and social policy as two major areas of governmental intervention. Bayesian analyses and background interviews serve to illuminate the reasons for and consequences of overburdened bureaucracies.

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Mittwoch, 16. August 2023 Neue Publikation: Religiosity and attitudes toward muslim immigrants in the context of a terrorist attack

Religiosity and attitudes toward muslim immigrants in the context of a terrorist attack

Abstract: Research on religiosity and attitudes toward immigrants is inconclusive, while it has repeatedly been reported that Islamist terrorist attacks lead to anti-immigrant attitudes. In this context, it remains unclear how these aspects interact, especially, since we can assume that religion plays an important role in light of an attack by an extremist religious group like ISIS: How does an Islamist terrorist attack moderate the relationship between religiosity and attitudes toward immigrants? The present study, therefore, analyses the relationship between religiosity and attitudes toward Muslim immigrants before and after the ‘Charlie Hebdo Attack’. It builds on the Uncertainty-Identity-Theory and the Religious Coping Literature. Analyses of European Social Survey (ESS) data reveal that the relationship varies over time: Religiosity does not predict the attitudes before the attack. Immediately after the attack, more religious individuals are less accepting. Lastly, with temporal distance, greater religiosity makes liberal attitudes more likely.

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Mittwoch, 16. August 2023 Neue Publikation: Contested social care – is there a ‘right’ way? How public investments diminish attitudinal differences towards social care in 34 European countries
Eva-Maria Euchner haben ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

Contested social care – is there a ‘right’ way? How public investments diminish attitudinal differences towards social care in 34 European countries

Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic has uncovered the critical nature of social care for modern societies and the moral dilemmas related to the organisation of care, specifically in terms of frail adults. The scarcity of personnel in nursing homes challenged the possibility of adequate care, spurring debates on both the dignity of dependent people and end-of-life treatments. While ‘classical’ social care policies already stimulate conflicts about the ‘right way’ of caring, non-classical care policies, such as assisted dying, are particularly contested. We advance existing research by analysing public attitudes on both care policies jointly and, hence, integrate the literature on morality policy and social care. Based on multi-level analyses, combining individual-level with macro-level data from 34 countries, we uncover that gender and religious identity drive deviating attitudes in both fields, while long-term care expenditure mitigates scepticism among Catholics but less so among Muslims.

Aktuelles

Mittwoch, 16. August 2023 Neue Publikation: Policy growth, implementation capacities, and the effect on policy performance

Xavier Fernández-i-Marín, Markus Hinterleitner, Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill und Dr. Yves Steinebach haben ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

Policy growth, implementation capacities, and the effect on policy performance

Abstract: Democratic governments have constantly added new policies to existing policy stocks to confront societal, economic, and environmental challenges. This development has the potential to overburden public administrations in charge of policy implementation. To address this issue, we theorize and analyze how the relationship between the size of sectoral policy portfolios and implementation capacities affects sectoral policy performance. Our Bayesian analysis of the environmental policies of 21 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries from 1976 to 2020 reveals a widening “gap” between the policies up for implementation and the implementation capacities available and shows that this gap negatively affects environmental policy performance. Qualitative insights from 47 in-depth interviews with implementers validate these findings and shed light on the underlying causal processes. Our findings suggest that in advanced democracies transforming additional policies into effective problem-solving crucially hinges on the deliberate expansion of implementation capacities.

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Samstag, 15. Juli 2023 Neues Buch: Routledge Handbook of Environmental Policy

Helge Jörgens, Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill und Dr. Yves Steinebach haben ihr neues Buch veröffentlicht:

This Handbook provides a state-of-the-art review of research on environmental policy and governance.

The Routledge Handbook of Environmental Policy has a strong focus on new problem structures – a perspective that emphasizes the preconditions and processes of environmental policymaking – and a comparative approach that covers all levels of local, national, and global policymaking. The volume examines the different conditions under which environmental policymaking takes place in different regions of the world and tracks the theoretical, conceptual, and empirical developments that have been made in recent years. It also highlights emerging areas where new and/or additional research and reflection are warranted. Divided into four key parts, the accessible structure and the nature of the contributions allow the reader to quickly find a concise expert review on topics that are most likely to arise in the course of conducting research or developing policy, and to obtain a broad, reliable survey of what is presently known about the subject.

The resulting compendium is an essential resource for students, scholars, and policymakers working in this vital field.

Hier geht’s zum Buch

Aktuelles

Donnerstag, 06. Juli 2023 Neue Publikation: Autocracies and policy accumulation: the case of Singapore

Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill, Dr. Yves Steinebach and Christian Aschenbrenner haben ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

Autocracies and policy accumulation: the case of Singapore

Abstract: The tendency of vote-seeking politicians to produce ever-more policies in response to the citizens’ demands has been identified as a central driver of the process of “policy accumulation.” If we accept this premise, policy accumulation should be a central feature of modern democracies but overall be less pronounced in autocracies. Due to its highly ambivalent nature, policy accumulation and its implications may thus constitute an important but so far neglected facets of the new system competition between democracies and autocracies. In this article, we test this argument in the context of the authoritarian regime of Singapore. Singapore is one of the very few autocracies that display elements of political competition and has a level of socio-economic development that is comparable to advanced democracies. Singapore thus constitutes a least-likely case for low levels of policy accumulation. By studying changes in Singapore’s environmental policy over a period of more than four decades (1976 to 2020) and by contrasting the patterns observed with the policy developments in 21 OECD democracies, we find that autocratic regimes do indeed tend to accumulate less than democratic regimes. More precisely, we find that Singapore (1) has only produced about one-fourth of the environmental policy measures of an “average” democracy and (2) is constantly the country with the lowest level of policy accumulation in our sample. These findings hold even when controlling for alternative explanations, such as the effectiveness of the administration and the government’s ability to opt for stricter and more hierarchical forms of intervention.

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Mittwoch, 17. Mai 2023 Neue Publikation: Rules as policy data? Measuring and linking policy substance and legislative context

Dr. Steffen Hurka, Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill and Dr. Yves Steinebach haben ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

Rules as policy data? Measuring and linking policy substance and legislative context

Abstract: There is growing scholarly interest in analyzing changes in policies, laws, and regulations. Some concepts depart from the goal of identifying changes in policy substance. Other contributions have concentrated on the structural characteristics of laws and regulations containing these substantive changes. Extracting measures of policy substance from legislative texts is a challenging and time-consuming endeavor as it requires the manual assessment and coding of legal acts. The assessment of the structural characteristics of laws and regulations, by contrast, can be done applying automated natural language processing. An important critical question is, thus, whether we can combine these approaches and simplify the information extraction by inferring changes in the policy substance from the legislative context in which these changes are embedded. Examining more than 100 legal acts in the area of EU environmental and climate policy, we find that the measures capturing policy substance and the structural characteristics of legal acts context are not systematically linked. In other words: changes in the structural features of legal acts cannot be used as an approximation for changes in policy substance. We conclude by sketching out a research agenda when (and when not) to use the different concepts and related measurements.

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Montag, 24. April 2023 Neue Publikation: More control–less agency slack? Principal control and the risk of agency slack in international organizations

Dr. Vytautas Jankauskas, Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill und Louisa Bayerlein haben kürzlich ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

„More control–less agency slack? Principal control and the risk of agency slack in international organizations“

Abstract:

Principal-agent theorizing is based on the idea of a linear inverse relationship between principal control and agency slack: the higher the control over the agent, the less likely is the agent to slack. In this paper, we challenge this assumption by explicitly taking the varying nature of agents into account. While control may reduce the agent’s room for maneuver, it does not explain the extent to which different agents are inclined to put efforts in circumventing these obstacles. Focusing on international organizations (IOs), we measure member states‘ as principals‘ control over IO administrations as their agents as well as the latter’s intrinsic propensity to slack across eight major IOs. The analysis shows that low control by the principal is not necessarily associated with run-away agents, whereas high control is not necessarily associated with servant-like agents. The assumed control–slack relationship can thus be distorted and determining an ideal level of control is not possible without considering the agent’s entrepreneurialism.

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Freitag, 20. Januar 2023 Neue Publikation: Political challengers and norm erosion in advanced democracies

Dr. Markus Hinterleitner und Dr. Fritz Sager haben ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

„Political challengers and norm erosion in advanced democracies“

Abstract: How do politicians in advanced democracies get away with violating political norms? Although norm violators confront a powerful establishment that can penalize them, norm violations currently occur in many advanced democracies. This article analyzes the conflicts between norm-violating challengers and established politicians and parties as norm defenders in multiparty systems to contribute to the discipline’s understanding of norm erosion processes. Based on diachronic and synchronic comparisons of conflicts over norm violations in Austria and Germany, the article reveals how political challengers can already damage democratic norms from a position of institutional weakness. Norm violators that make ambiguous provocations and can leverage their previously acquired democratic credentials, can more credibly dispel attempts to stigmatize them as undemocratic. In doing so, they turn the tables on the political establishment and portray its sanctions as a form of ‘excessive retaliation’ that constitutes a norm violation in itself. The article concludes with the unsettling finding that (verbal) norm protection can facilitate norm erosion.

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Montag, 16. Januar 2023 Neue Publikation: Blame games and democratic responsiveness

Dr. Markus Hinterleitner hat jüngst seine neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

„Blame games and democratic responsiveness“

Abstract: The link between opinion and policy is central to the functioning of representative democracy. Democracies are responsive to their citizens’ preferences if citizens can influence governments’ policy output. This article conceptualizes political blame games about policy controversies as venues of democratic responsiveness to obtain a more comprehensive understanding of the opinion-policy link in policy-heavy, conflictual democracies. The article shows how political actors convert public feedback to a policy controversy into blame game interactions, which in turn lead to political and policy responses by the government. A comparative-historical analysis of nine blame games in the United Kingdom, Germany and Switzerland reveals how institutions structure blame game interactions, and thus influence a political system’s responsiveness during blame games. The analysis suggests that an important, yet neglected, expression of democratic quality of political systems is their ability to translate blame game interactions into policy responses. The study of blame games as venues of democratic responsiveness thus provides a new conceptual tool for assessing the health of representative democracies in more conflictual times.

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Samstag, 14. Januar 2023 Neues Buch: International Public Administrations in Global Public Policy

Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill und Dr. Yves Steinebach haben ein neues Buch veröffentlicht:

„International Public Administrations in Global Public Policy – Sources and Effects of Bureaucratic Influence“

Über das Buch: This book examines the rise and agency of International Organizations (IOs) and their bureaucratic bodies— the International Public Administrations (IPAs)— as a reflection of an ongoing transfer of political authority and power from the domestic to the international level.

It shows that IPAs represent actors per se, with autonomy and resources that allow them to exert an independent influence on global policy-making processes and outputs. Providing a combination of novel conceptual lenses and research design to capture IPAs as an empirical phenomenon, the book takes an open, theoretically and methodologically diverse approach to show that IPAs are far from being negligible actors in global public policy and must be taken seriously as actors in policy-making beyond the nation-state.

This book will be of key interest to students, scholars, and practitioners in Public Policy and Public Administration, International Relations, International Political Economy, as well as Organizational Studies.

Hier geht’s zum Buch.

Aktuelles

Donnerstag, 12. Januar 2023 Neues Buch veröffentlicht: Street-Level Workers as Institutional Entrepreneurs

Olivia Mettang hat jüngst ihr erstes Buch veröffentlicht:

„Street-Level Workers as Institutional Entrepreneurs“

Über das Buch: Introducing the institutional logics perspective to street-level analysis, this book examines how street-level workers deal with the institutional logics that guide their organization – whether they follow or challenge them. While doing so, the book develops a theoretical framework to study street-level workers’ institutional agency within organizations from different institutional backgrounds.

The book conceptualizes street-level workers as institutional entrepreneurs and presents an original process model to capture deinstitutionalization efforts in street-level discourse. This ordinal model accounts for embedded agency and institutional entrepreneurship as well as for more gradual moves towards deinstitutionalization through the hybridization of institutional logics. The author tests the model empirically using interview data and discusses how street-level workers diverge from the institutional logic of their organization in almost two thirds of their statements, indicating a tendency towards institutional entrepreneurship. The book finally combines two literature strands: institutionalism and implementation research, showing how street-level workers may be perceived as institutional entrepreneurs.

This book will appeal to students, scholars, and researchers of political science, public policy, public administration, and organizational studies, as well as to practitioners and policy-makers interested in a better understanding of institutional entrepreneurs, street work, and the institutional logics perspective.

Aktuelles

Mittwoch, 11. Januar 2023 Neue Publikation: Christian churches and social welfare in secular times: How goal congruence shapes religious involvement in morality-based social services

Olivia Mettang und Dr. Eva-Maria Euchner haben ihre neueste Forschung in Politics and Religion veröffentlicht:

„Christian churches and social welfare in secular times: How goal congruence shapes religious involvement in morality-based social services“

Abstract: We study the extent and nature of Christian engagement in morality policy implementation by means of a comparative case study in Germany. In particular, we observe that the nature of engagement varies between unconnected and corresponding types of activities, and we explain this variation with the policy-specific goal congruence between religious organizations (ROs) and the state. Goal congruence, in turn, can be linked to Catholic and Protestant moral doctrines that tell us about ROs‘ position on morality issues. The study contributes to the literature on faith-based welfare by highlighting the role of moral doctrines as drivers of ROs‘ social engagement.

Hier gibt’s die Publikation als PDF.

Aktuelles

Dienstag, 06. Dezember 2022 Ausgezeichnete Publikation: Gordon Smith and Vincent Wright Memorial Prizes – WEP prizes 2022

Dr. Eva-Maria Euchner wurde gemeinsam mit Irina Ciornei und Ilay Yesil für ihre Forschung ausgezeichnet. Die Publikation „Political parties and Muslims in Europe: the regulation of Islam in public education“, die 2022 in West European Politics, Volume: 45, Number: 5 erschienen, erhielt nun den Gordon Smith and Vincent Wright Memorial Prize.

Die Forschung entstand im Rahmen des DFG-/SNF-geförderten Projekts „Religion und Morality Policies„.

Der Artikel skizziert und erklärt die unterschiedliche Integration von Islamischem Religionsunterricht an staatlichen Schulen in 13 europäischen Ländern und für einen Zeitraum von 40 Jahren (1970-2010). Basierend auf einem neuen Datensatz illustriert die Arbeit, dass linksorientierte Regierungen tendenziell den Integrationsprozess beschleunigen, während christ-demokratisch dominierte Regierungen förderlich für eine gleichwertige Integration von Islam in staatliche Lehrpläne sind.  Die Studie bereichert somit unser Verständnis von parteipolitischem Handeln in Zeiten der Säkularisierung, und illustriert, dass christdemokratische Parteien die Integration von Muslimen fördern, um religiöse Elemente im Schulsystem zu bewahren.

Wir gratulieren Frau Dr. Euchner zu dieser Auszeichnung.

Aktuelles

Sonntag, 11. September 2022 Neue Publikation: Analyzing Policy Proximity Through Media Reporting

Christoph Knill, Yves Steinebach und Bastian Buitkamp haben ihren neuesten Forschungsbericht

„Analyzing Policy Proximity Through Media Reporting“

in „der moderne Staat“ veröffentlich.

Abstract: Policy changes in one subsystem can easily spill over to other subsystems. An approach that addresses these interconnections is the concept of ‚policy proximity‘. This concept posits that different policy issues share common features that make them more or less likely to change together. Unfortunately, however, we have no systematic knowledge of the proximity between policy areas. In this article, we address this shortcoming by proposing a novel measurement concept of policy proximity that captures the proximity between different policy issues based on their joint appearance in media reporting. To do so, we conduct a relational content analysis of all media reports aired by the German news broadcast ‚Tagesschau‘ between the years 2013 to 2021. We show that policy issues substantially differ in their connectivity with other subjects and identify for each subsystem the closest ’neighbors‘. We conclude by discussing our results in light of existing policy change theories.

Den ganzen Text als PDF.

Aktuelles

Sonntag, 11. September 2022 Neue Publikation – Systemic Dynamics of Policy Change: Overcoming Some Blind Spots of Punctuated Equilibrium Theory

Xavier Fernandez-i-Marín, Steffen Hurka, Christoph Knill und Yves Steinebach haben einen neuen Forschungsbericht in „Policy Studies Journal“ publiziert:

„Systemic Dynamics of Policy Change: Overcoming Some Blind Spots of Punctuated Equilibrium Theory“

Abstract: In this article, we analyze dynamics of policy change from the perspective of Punctuated Equilibrium Theory (PET). In particular, we investigate how economic crises impact on patterns of policy change in policy areas that vary in terms of their proximity to economic matters: social, environmental, and morality policy. We make two contributions. First, we show that economic crises lead to more incrementalist patterns of policy change in crisis-remote policy subsystems and make policy punctuations in these areas less likely. However, if such punctuations do occur, they tend to be particularly extreme. Second, we argue that the empirical implications of PET are best tested by separately analyzing variance as an indicator for incrementalism and degrees of freedom as an indicator for punctuations. The empirical analysis builds on two data sets capturing policy output changes in 13 European countries over a period of 34 years (1980–2013).

Aktuelles

Dienstag, 26. Juli 2022 Neue Publikation: Religious identification and Muslim immigrants’ acculturation preferences for newly arriving immigrants in Germany

Verena Benoit hat Ihre neueste Forschung in der aktuellen Ausgabe der Ethnic and Racial Studies veröffentlicht:

Religious identification and Muslim immigrants’ acculturation preferences for newly arriving immigrants in Germany

Abstract: 

Acculturation preferences of immigrants and the host population differ substantially. Research on the former predominantly focused on immigrants’ preferences for their acculturation process. It remains unclear what they prefer for other immigrants. Therefore, the present study analyses how Muslim immigrants’ religious identification shapes their preferences for the acculturation of other immigrants. It focuses on religious identification as the central determinant because Muslim immigrants’ faith differentiates them from a Christian or secular host population. Furthermore, it is a source of self-identification that affects attitudes and preferences. The study relies on the Social Identity Theory and utilizes a sample of Muslim immigrants in Germany. The analyses reveal that stronger identification makes it more likely to prefer combined culture and (to a lesser extent) separation, while it makes it less likely to prefer assimilation. Additionally, members of the minority within Islam in Germany are more likely to prefer separation than the majority.

Sie können den Artikel jetzt herunterladen.

Aktuelles

Dienstag, 19. Juli 2022 Neue Publikation: Policy’s role in democratic conflict management

Markus Hinterleitner und Fritz Sager haben Ihre neueste Forschung veröffentlicht:

Policy’s role in democratic conflict management

 

Abstract:

This article proposes rethinking democratic conflict management by acknowledging the increasingly important role policy plays in it. As the debate on the health of democracy intensifies, research on how democracies manage and absorb political and societal conflicts becomes broadly relevant. Existing theories and perspectives view conflict management through the lens of elections and other institutional mechanisms, or they examine the social and economic preconditions for successful conflict management while inadequately understanding how policies contribute to conflict management. The article develops a theoretical framework that allows for the analysis of how policies’ material and interpretive effects influence societal conflicts and thereby strengthen (or weaken) democracy. While the article focuses on hypothesis-generation rather than hypothesis-testing, it draws on a large variety of policy and case examples to corroborate and illustrate the theoretical expectations embodied in the framework. Insights into policy’s role in democratic conflict management expand our understanding of the challenges to democracy in the twenty-first century and create new possibilities for comparative, policy-focused research into what makes democracy work.

Hier gibt’s den gesamten Text als PDF zum Download.

Bitte zitieren Sie den Text wie folgt: Hinterleitner, M., Sager, F. Policy’s role in democratic conflict management. Policy Sci 55, 239–254 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11077-022-09461-7

Aktuelles

Dienstag, 07. Juni 2022 Gastvortrag im Rahmen des Master- und Doktorandenkolloquiums am Lehrstuhl für Empirische Theorien der Politik:

Prof. Dr. Detlef Jahn (Universität Greifswald): Politics and Climate Change: The Nexus of Domestic and International Politics in Environmental Politics

Am Dienstag, 14. Juni 2022

18.00 – 19.30 Uhr (s.t.)

Raum 169

Abstract: In this paper, I focus on the complex relationship between politics, policy, and outcome at the national and international levels. The research interest is to find out if there are factors that have a significant impact on the overall outcome. To this end, I focus on carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in 21 OECD countries from 1965 to 2017. The paper is innovative not only because it examines the different domains in a common model, but also in terms of the conceptualization of key variables and processes. Most importantly, it operationalizes the influence of government positions by using country-specific parliamentary procedures. Another neglected aspect considered in this paper is the inclusion of time effects in the causal chain. On the one hand, this aspect is particularly important as it shows that the (non)results found so far may be based on incorrect modeling of time. On the other hand, such an analysis also shows that environmental problems cannot be treated in the short term. The results of the present study indicate that it will take several years for policy measures to have an effect. This also has a fundamental practical-political significance.

Aktuelles

Dienstag, 31. Mai 2022 Master-, Magister- und Doktorandenkolloquium am 31.05.2022

Der Lehrstuhl für Empirische Theorien der Politik lädt im Rahmen des Lehrstuhlkolloquiums ein zum Vortrag von

Prof. Dr. Achim Goerres,

Professor of Empirical Political Science  | University of Duisburg-Essen

Living in Novaland: Can we Simulate the Experience of

States and Public Policies in an Artificial Online State?

 31. Mai 2022, 18 Uhr s.t.

Geschwister-Scholl-Institut, Room 169

What if we could experimentally manipulate all characteristics of states and public policies and estimate their effects on citizens? This presentation puts forward the first evidence from a pilot of Novaland.

Novaland is an artificial liberal democracy that only exists online and that has characteristics realistically drawn from German, Romanian and US contexts.

The pilot consists of an experimental online platform based on text, images and audio in which volunteers (a) are surveyed before they go into the experience, (b) are randomly assigned to different experiences, such as defined by income, quality of government or state corruption, (c) interact with each other simultaneously and (d) thereby co-create collective decisions, such as elections or donation pools, that then determine the course of Novaland and thereby the subsequent experiences of the participants.

The pilot gives us many insights into the usefulness of such full experiential simulations in the social sciences.

Can this technically and organizationally be done?  Do participants behave in an externally valid manner?

Do they behave sincerely? What is the potential of such an approach for finding causal effects?

The project is financed by a Consolidator Grant of the European Research Council.

More details about the project at https://bit.ly/politsolid

And about the presenter at www.achimgoerres.de

Aktuelles

Montag, 20. Mai 2019 Gastbeitrag in der NZZ von Christoph Knill, Christian Adam, Steffen Hurka und Yves Steinebach

Die Politik wird in ihrer wachsenden Regulierungsdichte auch immer komplexer. Um die Akzeptanz gegenüber dem demokratischen Prozess zu erhalten, müssen Bürger wissen, wie Gesetze erlassen werden und wie sie selber von diesen betroffen sind.

Vollständiger Artikel [https://www.nzz.ch/meinung/die-moderne-demokratie-droht-sich-selber-zu-ueberfordern-ld.1464383]

Aktuelles

Freitag, 18. Mai 2018 ERC Advanced Grant for Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill

Prof. Christoph Knill ist vom European Research Council mit einem der renommierten Advanced Grants ausgezeichnet worden. Die Förderung im Rahmen von ERC Advanced Grants richtet sich an international renommierte Wissenschaftler mit einer herausragenden wissenschaftlichen Leistungsbilanz. Für Professor Knill ist es nach 2010 bereits die zweite Auszeichnung dieser Art. Im Rahmen des Projektvorhaben soll in den nächsten fünf Jahren untersucht werden, welche demokratischen Legitimationserfordernisse sich aus einem konstant fortschreitenden Politikwachstum ergeben und wie diesen Herausforderungen effektiv begegnet werden kann. Das Projekt wird im Herbst 2018 beginnen und über einen Zeitraum von fünf Jahren laufen. Es wird im Umfang von 2.4 Mio. EUR gefördert. Nähere Informationen zu Projekt, das im Herbst 2018 beginnen wird, finden sich unter: https://publicpolicy-knill.org/forschung/accupol/

Aktuelles

Mittwoch, 31. Mai 2017 Christian Adam, Christoph Knill und Xavier Fernandez-i-Marín bekommen den Wissenschaftspreis Bürokratie verliehen

Die Gemeinschaftsarbeit von Christian Adam, Christoph Knill und Xavier Fernandez-i-Marín untersucht das Verhältnis zwischen dem Wachstum von Regeln und der Effektivität von Regierungen. Sie trügen mit ihrer Studie dazu bei, die Bedeutung der Bürokratie für die Entwicklung staatlicher Regelsysteme besser zu verstehen, begründet die Jury ihr Urteil.

Der mit 5.000 Euro dotierte Wissenschaftspreis Bürokratie wurde von Fritz Hellwig, Gründungsdirektor des Instituts der deutschen Wirtschaft Köln (IW), gestiftet und erstmals im Jahr 2015 vergeben. Der Preis soll die Wissenschaft anregen, sich mit der Arbeitsweise und der Entwicklungsdynamik von Bürokratien zu beschäftigen sowie deren Wirkung auf Betroffene und das Gemeinwesen auf den Grund zu gehen. Anlass für die Preisstiftung war die Sorge, „dass Regulierungs- und Verwaltungsvorschriften das Marktgeschehen überwuchern“, sagt Hellwig.

Die Jury des Wissenschaftspreis Bürokratie bestand in diesem Jahr aus Martin Hellwig, Direktor am Max-Planck-Institut zur Erforschung von Gemeinschaftsgütern Bonn, Johannes Ludewig, Vorsitzender des Nationalen Normenkontrollrates, Renate Mayntz, emeritierte Direktorin des Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung Köln, Daniel Zimmer, Direktor des Instituts für Handels- und Wirtschaftsrecht an der Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, und Michael Hüther, Direktor des IW. Die Geschäftsführung für den Wissenschaftspreis liegt beim IW.

Pressemeldung [https://publicpolicy-knill.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Wissenschaftspreis-Wenn-Burok-ratie-überhandnimmt.pdf]

Aktuelles

Mittwoch, 27. Mai 2015 DFG supports research unit on the topic international public administration

The German Research Foundation (DFG) has approved the project „International Public Administration. Emergence and Development of Administrative Patterns and their Effects on International Policy-Making“ led by Professor Dr. Christoph Knill.

A nationwide research unit will be granted funds amounting to 2.8 million euros for a total of six years. Ten researchers will study various topic areas of international public administration in a total of eight projects. As from the start of the funding on 1 April 2014, different administration styles and single decision-making processes in international administration will be investigated.

With the increasing importance of global institutions, bureaucracy has become an essential characteristic of the international system. The administrative body of international organisations has never before played a more important role in national and international policy-making. Nevertheless, only little is known about the internal organisational structures and decision-making processes, administrative processes as well as about the organisation’s independence vis-à-vis political interests and its relations to other administrations and social players. The research unit led will address exactly these topics in order to analyse how administrative patterns emerge and develop.

In close dialogue with neighbouring subdisciplines, particularly in the field of international relations, the central questions will be: How autonomous is the administration vis-à-vis the member states? How is it linked to the national administration? Does the administration have its own expertise?

„The close collaboration of highly regarded researchers of that field and the systematic involvement of young researchers will contribute to consolidating the importance of public administration as a subdiscipline of political science“, emphasises Christoph Knill, who is the spokesman of the nationwide research unit.

Aktuelles

Mittwoch, 27. Mai 2015 Prof. Knill zum Ordentlichen Mitglied des Center for Advanced Studies (CAS) bestellt

Prof. Dr. Christoph Knill ist zum 1.10.2014 vom Präsidenten der LMU zum Ordentlichen Mitglied des Center for Advanced Studies bestellt worden. Das „Center for Advanced Studies“ der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Münchenversteht sich als Forum für den intensiven wissenschaftlichen Austausch über die etablierten Fächergrenzen hinweg. Mit seinen Aktivitäten fördert es verschiedenste Formen kooperativer Forschung sowie die interdisziplinäre Kommunikation innerhalb der Universität; daneben unterstützt es die Einbindung von Gastwissenschaftlern in das akademische Leben der LMU. Anders als die traditionellen „Institutes for Advanced Study“ stellt das CAS keine vom Alltag der universitären Forschung getrennte akademische Einrichtung dar. Vielmehr sollen herausragende, an der LMU forschende und lehrende Persönlichkeiten, die zu Mitgliedern bestellt werden, hier weitere Anregung und Unterstützung für die Durchführung innovativer Kooperationsprojekte erhalten. Den Mitgliedern steht ein umfassendes Angebot zur Auslotung und Durchführung wissenschaftlicher Projekte und Kooperationen zu Verfügung.

Ø 02

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Lehre

Sommersemester 2024
Veranstaltung
Dozent
Zeit
Ort
image descriptionRaum
Master- und Doktorandenseminar
Tue. 16:00-18:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
061
Vorlesungsübung: Theorien und Konzepte der Policy-Analyse
Wed. 10:00-12:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
057
Bachelorseminar (Deutsch und Englisch)
Tue. 16:00-18:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
C 007
Citizens and Public Administration
Mon. 14:00-16:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
165
Wissenschaftliches Arbeiten
Tue. 14:00-16:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
U127
Public Policy Analysis
Thu. 16:00-18:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
065
Public Policy Evaluation
Thu. 14:00-16:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
U151
Policy Implementation: Putting Legislation Into Effect
Tue. 14:00-16:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
133
Social Policy in Europe
Thu. 10:00-12:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
061
Exploring Green Growth Strategies
Thu. 16:00-18:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
169
Wissenschaftliches Arbeiten
Wed. 12:00-14:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
165
Klimapolitk – Policy-Analyse eines interdisziplinären Politikfelds
Tue. 12:00-14:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
161
Wissenschaftliches Arbeiten
Tue. 14:00-16:00 Uhr c.t.
Oettingenstr. 67
U151
Vergangene Semester

Kontakt


Adresse

  • Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Geschwister-Scholl-Institut für Politikwissenschaft Lehrstuhl für Empirische Theorien der Politik
  • Oettingenstrasse 67
    80538 München
  • Sekretariat
    Annette Ohlenhard
  • sekretariat.knill@gsi.uni-muenchen.de
    +49 89 2180 9060