Program SPSA Annual Conference & Dreiländertagung
ETH Zurich Zentrum, Main Building
14 – 16 February 2019
Version 13 February 2019
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Contents
FOREWORD 3
2 PROGRAM OVERVIEW 4
2.1 Thursday, 14 February 2019 4
2.2 Friday, 15 February 2019 5
2.3 Saturday, 16 February 2019 6
2.4 Schedule Overview 7
3 PLENARY 11
4 YOUNG SCHOLARS FORUM 12
5 PANELS AND WORKSHOP SESSIONS 13
5.1. Comparative Politics 13
5.2. International Affairs 21
5.3. European Studies 27
5.4. Peace and Security Policy 31
5.5. Public Policy 33
5.6. Political Behaviour and Communication 37
5.7. Political Theory 43
5.8. Gender and Politics 45
5.9. Political Economy and Social Policy 46
5.10. Empirical Methods 51
5.11. Development and Environment 53
5.12. Federalism and Territorial Politics 57
5.13. International Political Sociology 60
6 CONFERENCE DINNER 62
7 DIRECTIONS AND MAPS 63
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Foreword
Dear colleagues,
Welcome to Zurich! This conference comes at a critical point in the development of our political systems and international relations. Thirty years after the breakdown of Soviet communism and the fall of the Berlin wall, the triumphant ‘West’ appears shaken to its foundations.
The hallmark of the ‘West’ is the interplay of liberal domestic and international orders. The common commitment to liberal human rights, the rule of law and democracy underpins the Western community of values; open and rights-based societies find their equivalent in an open and rights-based international order. Both orders are under pressure. The rise of right-wing populism in Europe and the United States challenges liberal democracy, European integration and the transatlantic alliance when the West faces an emerging China and an assertive Russia. These developments also pose a formidable intellectual challenge to political science.
For its 2019 annual meeting, the Swiss Political Science Association (SPSA) is happy to host a Trilateral Conference co-sponsored by the Austrian and German Political Science Associations. I look forward to our exchange of current research and debates on the conference theme in the plenary sessions on transatlantic relations and European integration and in a large series of panels.
I would also like to take the opportunity to thank those who have made the organization of the conference possible. The Swiss Academy of the Humanities and Social Sciences (SAGW) and the Center for Comparative and International Studies at ETH and the University of Zurich (CIS) provided the core funding. At the CIS, Benita Cserépy has taken the organization of the event from A to Z into her able hands. Fabiana Koller, a recent graduate of the CIS Master program, has helped compiling the program. In addition, Alexandra Feddersen and Monika Spinatsch at the SPSA have provided valuable assistance. The chairpersons of the SPSA working groups assessed the proposals submitted for this conference and helped putting the panels together. The Young Scholars Forum contributed dedicated panels. Finally, I would like to thank the ETH Infrastructure Services for providing us generously with rooms as the conference kept growing bigger.
I wish everyone a stimulating and enjoyable conference and a good time in Zürich.
Frank Schimmelfennig (CIS, ETH Zürich)
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2 Program Overview
2.1 Thursday, 14 February 2019
Time Item Venue
10h00 Registration opens Foyer HG E Süd
10h00 – 12h00 Young Scholars Forum 1 HG D 7.1
10h00 – 12h00 Young Scholars Forum 2 HG D 7.2
09h00 – 13h00 MA Info-Day (Coffee Break 10h30) HG D 3.2 / Foyer HG D Süd
12h00 – 14h00 Board Meeting (not public) HG E 41
12h00 – 14h00 Lunch Break ETH Cafeterias (individual)
14h00 – 15h30 Panels, Session 1
15h30– 16h00 Coffee Break Foyer HG E Süd/D Süd
16h00 – 17h00 General Assembly SPSA HG G 26.5
17h00 – 19h00 Welcome (Frank Schimmelfennig) Plenary Session The End of the West? Dr. Karen Donfried, Director, German Marshall Fund of the US, Washington Prof. Dr. Manfred Elsig, WTI Bern Prof. Dr. Thomas Risse, FU Berlin
HG F 30
19h00 – 21h00 Welcome Apéro Riche Foyer HG E Süd/D Süd
20h00 Registration closes Foyer HG E Süd
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2.2 Friday, 15 February 2019
Time Item Venue
08h00 Registration opens Foyer HG E Süd
08h30 – 10h00 Panels, Session 2
10h00 – 10h30 Coffee Break Foyer HG E Süd/D Süd
10h30 – 12h00 Panels, Session 3
12h00 – 13h30 Lunch Break ETH Cafeterias (individual)
13h30 – 15h00 Panels, Session 4
15h00 – 15h30 Coffee Break Foyer HG E Süd/D Süd
15h30 – 17h00 Panels, Session 5
16h 00 Registration closes
17h15 ̶ 18h45 Plenary Lecture and Discussion
'A few quotes and some funerals' - wie gesichert ist unser gesichertes Wissen über den Populismus? Prof. Dr. Philip Manow Universität Bremen
HG F 30
19h30 – 23h00 Conference Dinner Restaurant Lakeside
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2.3 Saturday, 16 February 2019
Time Item Venue
08h00 Registration opens Foyer HG E Süd
08h30 – 10h00 Panels, Session 6
10h00 ̶ 10h30 Coffee Break Foyer HG E Süd/D Süd
10h30 ̶ 12h00 Panels, Session 7
12h00 End of Conference
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2.4 Schedule Overview
Session 1, Thursday 14:00-15:30
Group Panel Room
Comparative Politics Populism, Constitutions and Mainstream Parties HG D 3.2
Comparative Politics Konfigurationen von Demokratie/ Configurations of Democracy HG D 5.2
International Affairs Roundtable Michael Zürns "A Theory of Global Governance: Authority, Legitimacy & Contestation" HG D 7.1
Political Economy and Social Policy The Political Consequences of Fiscal Austerity HG D 7.2
International Affairs Innovation in Research on International and Regional Organizations HG E 33.1
International Affairs The Parliamentary Organization of International Relations HG E 33.3
Political Behaviour and Communication Voting Behavior HG E 33.5
European Studies Political Participation and Voting in Europe HG E 41
Public Policy Policy Instruments and Sustainable Economy Trade-Offs in Forests HG F 26.1
Political Behaviour and Communication Political Preferences, Attitudes, and Decisions HG F 26.3
Political Economy and Social Policy Labor Markets and Immigration in Europe HG G 26.1
Empirical Methods Harking, P-Hacking, Publication Bias: Die Replikationskrise in den Politikwissenschaften (I) HG G 26.3
Session 2, Friday 08:30-10:00
Group Panel Room
International Political Sociology Tracing and Conceptualising the Contestation of International Norms, Knowledge(s) and Discourses HG D 1.1
Empirical Methods ROUNDTABLE: Die Replikationskrise in den Politikwissenschaften: Ursachen, Konsequenzen, Lösungen HG D 1.2
Comparative Politics Comparative History and Revolution HG D 3.2
Comparative Politics Democratization, Electoral Reforms and Political Strategies HG D 5.2
Comparative Politics Issues of Representation in Contemporary Democracies HD D 7.1
Political Economy and Social Policy Economic Insecurity, Political Representation and Non-Mainstream Parties HG D 7.2
Political Behaviour and Communication Political Strategies (and its Effects) HG E 1.1
Political Behaviour and Communication Digitalization as a Challenge to Democracy HG E 1.2
International Affairs Geopolitics and Rising Powers HG E 33.3
International Affairs Normative Change in International Institutions HG E 33.5
European Studies Loosing Appeal, Forfeitung Power? Shifting Dynamics in the EU’s Neighborhood Relations HG E 41
Public Policy Die Umstrittenheit von Expertenwissen: das politisch-administrative System unter Druck HG F 26.1
Development and Environment Whose Future do we Want and How? Norm and Standard Development, Contestation, and Implementation in Global Sustainability Politics HG G 26.3
Federalism and Territorial Politics Panel I: Federalism and Democracy HG G 26.1
International Affairs Rising Powers and the Western-Centered Liberal International Order: Influence and Challenges HG G 26.3
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Session 3, Friday 10:30-12:00
Group Panel Room
Public Policy Landscape, Environment and Climate Policy HG D 1.1
International Affairs Panel I: Varieties of Qualitative Methods in International Relations HG D 1.2
Comparative Politics Voter-Party Linkages HG D 3.2
Federalism and Territorial Politics Local Government Cooperation HD D 7.1
Political Economy and Social Policy Priorities and Preferences towards Fiscal Policies and the Welfare State in the Aftermath of the Great Recession HG D 7.2
Political Behaviour and Communication Party Competition and Partisanship HG E 1.1
Political Behaviour and Communication Issue Ownership HG E 1.2
International Affairs International Organization HG E 33.1
International Affairs International Relations Theory HG E 33.3
European Studies The Political (Integration) Effects of Euroscepticism HG E 33.5
European Studies Between Russia and the EU: Membership Discourses and Practices in the Shared Neighborhood HG E 41
Development and Environment Environmental Policy: Public Opinion and Public Support HG F 26.3
Federalism and Territorial Politics Panel II: Federalism and Inequality HG G 26.1
Peace and Security R4D Thematic Module: Social Conflicts in Fragile States HG G 26.3
Session 4, Friday 13:30-15:00
Group Panel Room
Political Theory Contemporary Issues in Political Theory HG D 1.1
International Political Sociology Panel II: Varieties of Qualitative Methods in International Relations HG D 1.2
Comparative Politics Politics, Media and Class Voting HG D 3.2
Comparative Politics How international Organizations shape Domestic Politics HG D 5.2
Comparative Politics Policy Change through Challenger Parties in Western Democracies: Myth or Reality? HD D 7.1
Political Economy and Social Policy Organized Interests, Parties, and Mass Politics - Who Influences Policy (& When)? HG D 7.2
Political Behaviour and Communication Participation and Turnout HG E 1.1
Political Behaviour and Communication Rights and Attitudes of and towards Immigrants HG E 1.2
Political Economy and Social Policy The Origins of the Welfare State HG E 33.1
International Affairs Trade and Cooperation HG E 33.3
Federalism and Territorial Politics Migration, Minorities & Local Politics HG E 33.5
European Studies EU Governance across Policy Areas HG E 41
Public Policy Organized Civil Society and Policy Processes in the Post-Soviet Space HG F 26.1
Development and Environment International Climate Policy under Pressure: New Roles of Traditional Players, Emerging Powers, and Private Actors in the Climate Change Regime Complex HG F 26.3
Development and Environment Participatory Energy Transition (Part 1) HG G 26.3
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Session 5, Friday 15:30-17:00
Group
Panel Room
Political Theory Freiheit und Geschichte. Zur historischen Phänomenologie des Westens HG D 1.1
International Political Sociology Panel III: Varieties of Qualitative Methods in International Relations HG D 1.2
Comparative Politics Migration Politics and Policy HG D 3.2
Comparative Politics New Perspectives on Firms in the Political Economy HG D 7.1
Political Economy and Social Policy Inequality Perceptions and Redistribution Preferences HD D 7.1
Political Behaviour and Communication Use of Social Media and New Technologies in Elections HG D 7.2
Political Theory Demokratischer und autoritärer Konstitutionalismus – wie exklusiv ist die westliche Verfassungstradition? HG E 1.1
Federalism and Territorial Politics The Regional Turn in Immigrant Integration Policies. Subnational Comparative Evidence from Around the Globe HG E 1.2
Political Economy and Social Policy New Challenges of Welfare States in (Il)Liberal Times: How Policy Ambiguity Promotes Third-Sector Engagement in Policy Implementation HG E 33.3
European Studies Moving beyond ‘Traditional’ Actors in the Study of European Politics HG E 33.5
Public Policy Regulation and Governance HG E 41
Development and Environment Environment and Development: Individuals and Policy Preferences HG F 26.1
Peace and Security Militias/Rebels HG F 26.3
Development and Environment Participatory Energy Transition (Part 2) HG G 26.1
HG G 26.3
Session 6, Saturday 08:30-10:00
Group Panel Room
International Political Sociology The Challenge of Security Technology: Theory, Method, Practice (1/2) HG D 1.1
Political Economy and Social Policy Individual Level Preferences over Economic Policy in Times of Crisis HG D 1.2
Comparative Politics Parties and Party Position HG D 3.2
Comparative Politics The Dynamics of Coalition Politics HD D 7.1
Political Behaviour and Communication (New) Forms of Citizen’s Participation in Democracies under Pressure HG E 1.1
Political Behaviour and Communication Vertrauen - Währung stabiler Demokratien? HG E 1.2
International Affairs Complicating Securitization: Inconsistencies and Contradictions in Securitization Processes HG E 33.3
Gender and Politics Women, Gender Equality and Gender Policy - East and West HG E 33.5
European Studies Policy-Making in the European Union HG E 41
Public Policy Policy Processes HG F 26.1
Development and Environment Sustainable Development HG F 26.3
Empirical Methods Harking, P-Hacking, Publication Bias: Die Replikationskrise in den Politikwissenschaften (II) HG G 26.1
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Session 7, Saturday 10:30-12:00
Group Panel Room
International Political Sociology The Challenge of Security Technology: Theory, Method, Practice (2/2) HG D 1.1
Political Economy and Social Policy The Politics of Collective Skill Formation in Austria, Germany and Switzerland HG D 1.2
Comparative Politics Populist Radical Right Challengers in a Changing Political Space HG D 3.2
Comparative Politics Multiparty Governments – Formation and Delegation HG D 5.2
Comparative Politics Direct Democratic Institutions HD D 7.1
Development and Environment International Organizations and International Regulation HG D 7.2
Political Behaviour and Communication Einstellungen zur liberalen westlichen Ordnung und deren Institutionen HG E 1.1
Political Behaviour and Communication Political Consumerism: How to Study Citizens' Political Engagements as Consumers? HG E 1.2
International Affairs Global Governance and the ‘End of the West’ HG E 33.1
International Affairs International Political Economy HG E 33.3
Peace and Security Terrorism and Peace Processes HG E 33.5
European Studies Crises of the EU by Disintegrative Institutional Arrangements? HG E 41
Public Policy Politics and Policy HG F 26.1
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3 Plenary
Session 1 Thursday, 17h00 – 19h00 HG F 30
The End of the West? Dr. Karen Donfried, Director, German Marshall Fund of the US, Washington
Prof. Dr. Manfred Elsig, WTI Bern Prof. Dr. Thomas Risse, FU Berlin
Session 2 Friday, 17h15 – 18h45 HG F 30
'A few quotes and some funerals' - wie gesichert ist unser gesichertes Wissen über den Populismus?
Prof. Dr. Philip Manow
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4 Young Scholars Forum The Young Scholar’s Forum of Swiss Political Science Association 2019 is a platform where we address topics and issues which are of particular relevance to (prospective) PhD students and postdoctoral researchers. In the previous year the Young Scholar’s Forum focused on discussing chances and challenges that PhD students and Postdocs face when they decide to leave academia and find a job in the private or public sector. We thus offered information about interesting alternatives to academic pathways and provided practical tips to find one’s dream-job. At the 2019 young scholars` forum we will be addressing questions that are relevant for both scholars who wish to enter/stay in academia or leave it. In fact, we will be focusing on strategies about publicizing research findings for individuals who wish their research to be contributing to a broader public discussion. Event 1: Why should I do a PhD in Political Science? The first event aims at presenting the PhD in political science to master students who wish to pursue a PhD and to early PhD students who would like to benefit from the experiences of more advanced PhD students. In particular, the objective of this roundtable is to discuss the different modalities (funding, SNF grants etc.) of doing a PhD and their implications on the daily work. Moreover, we will be addressing questions such as: “how to choose your supervisor”, “what to pay attention to if you wish to pursue an academic career”, “if and when to plan an exchange abroad”, and many other questions. More broadly, this event will be a unique opportunity to share experiences and to respond to practical questions of the PhD in political science.
Guests: Prof. Nathalie Giger (University of Geneva), Dr. Petra Holtrup (Managing Director and Doctoral Rrogramme Manager, University of Zurich), Ari Ray (PhD Student, University of Zurich), Dr. David Weisstanner (PostDoc, University of Oxford)
Organization: Dr. Nadja Mosimann (Universities of Geneva and Zurich) Moderation: Anna-Lena Nadler
Event 2: Making your research visible (also) for non-specialized audiences This year we would like to address a topic that is of increasing importance for PhD students and Postdocs, namely, sharing research findings with a broader (non-specialized) audience and how to make an impact on public debates. To this aim we invite guests, both scholars who regularly share their research findings with the public, and experts, who work in the field of knowledge transmission, to discuss about the opportunities and pitfalls of engaging in public communication. We will be addressing questions such as “which kinds of outlets/opportunities are available for communicating with non-academic audiences”, “what kind of strategy should be chosen to diffuse research findings”, as well as share some practical tips about how to best write such pieces or giving interviews to media representatives.
Guests: Karin Frei (Journalist, karinfrei.ch), Prof. Alexandre Afonso (University of Leiden), Dr. Sara Bütikofer (Researcher, University of Zurich and Editor of DeFacto), Prof. Georg Lutz (University of Lausanne and director of FORS)
Organization: Dr. Nadja Mosimann (Universities of Geneva and Zurich) Moderation: Clau Dermont
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5 Panels and Workshop Sessions
5.1. Comparative Politics Working Group
Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen [email protected] Jonas Pontusson [email protected] Daniel Bischof [email protected] Lucas Leemann [email protected]
SESSION 1A Thursday, 14h00 – 15h30 Panel Populism, Constitutions and Mainstream Parties Chair Veronika Ohlinger Discussant Lusina Badalyan Room HG D 3.2
Joerg Baudner Personalistic Party Leadership, Polarization and the Rise of Ropulism
Michael Hein Can Liberal Constitutional Orders Protect Themselves by means of Constitutional Entrenchment Clauses? A Study on Constitutional Review in Europe (1945–2016)
SESSION 1B Thursday, 14h00 – 15h30 Panel Konfigurationen von Demokratie/ Configurations of Democracy Chair Norma Osterberg-Kaufmann and Reinhard Heinisch Discussant Toralf Stark and Christoph Mohamad-Klotzbach Room HG D 5.2
Norma Osterberg-Kaufmann Toralf Stark C. Mohamad-Klotzbach
Configurations of Democracy
Dannica Fleuß Alexander Weiß
Different Differences – Inter-individuelle und transkulturelle Unterschiede zwischen Demokratieverständnissen und ihre Implikationen für die empirische Demokratieforschung
Simon Bein Kollektive Identitäten als Determinanten unterschiedlicher demokratischer Wertvorstellungen
Carsten Wegscheider
Substantial Democracy. Determinants of Substantial Understandings of Democracy
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SESSION 2A Friday, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel Comparative History and Revolution Chair Sarah Engler Discussant Lukas Rudolph Room HG D 3.2
Edina Szöcsik Nation versus Class: The Electoral Mobilization of Social Identities in Imperial Austria
Lukas Haffert Prussia, Political Catholicism and the Success of the Alternative für Deutschland in 2017
Tobias Rommel Daniel Bischof
The Economic Costs of Revolution
SESSION 2B Friday, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel Democratization, Electoral Reforms and Political Strategies Chair André Walter Discussant Lucas Leemann and André Walter Room HG D 5.2
Valentin Schröder Philip Manow
The Longue Durée of Democratization – Germany 1867-1967
Thomas Ehrhard Cédric Passard
The Politics of the Uninominal Electoral System Choice during the Third Republic. Electoral Interests in an Uncertain Context of Democratization
Per Fredrik Andersson
Left-wing Tax Strategy Depends on the Electoral System
Patrick Emmenegger André Walter
When Dominant Parties Adopt PR. The Mysterious Case of Belgium
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SESSION 2C Friday, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel Issues of Representation in Contemporary Democracies Chair Lea Kaftan Discussant Roman Senninger Room HG D 7.1
Stefanie Bailer Tamaki Ohmura
Youth Parties: Representing the Young or Replicating the Old?
Garret Binding
Multidimensional Representational (In)Congruence in Europe
SESSION 3 Friday, 10h30 – 12h00 Panel Voter-Party Linkages Chair Edina Szöcsik Discussant Michael Hein Room HG D 3.2
Resul Umit
Unfulfilled Winning Expectations Decrease Voter Satisfaction with Democracy
Sarah Engler David Weisstanner
Inequality, Status Decline, and Voting for the Radical Right
Oliver Huwyler Tomas Turner-Zwinkels Stefanie Bailer
From Vote-Seeking to Personal Benefit Seeking: The Replacement of Public by Private Sector Interest Group Ties across the Parliamentary Career
Marcel Lewandowsky Dissatisfaction with Democracy and Candidacy for Political Parties
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SESSION 4 A Friday, 13h30 – 15h00 Panel Politics, Media and Class Voting Chair Tobias Rommel Discussant Stefanie Bailer Room HG D 3.2 Samuel David Mueller Marius Saeltzer
Making a Splash in a Puddle - Incentives for Candidates to Polarize on Twitter
Anna Adendorf Talk Dirty to me: Coalition Signals in Press Releases
Matthias Enggist Who Prioritizes Welfare Entitlements for Immigrants?
SESSION 4 B Friday, 13h30 – 15h00 Panel How International Organizations Shape Domestic Politics Chair Anna Fruhstorfer Discussant Joerg Baudner Room HG D 5.2 Veronika Ohliger
What Motivates Them? National Representatives Transnational Parliamentary Assemblies
Roman Senninger
Authority Transfer and EU Politicization Revisited
Lusine Badalyan The Politics of (Non) Compliance: When Do Eastern Partnership Countries Comply with ECtHR Judgments and Why?
SESSION 4 C Friday, 13h30 – 15h00 Panel Policy Change through Challenger Parties in Western
Democracies: Myth or Reality? Chair Andreas Wimmel Discussant Tarik Abou-Chadi Room HG D 7.1 Maurits J. Meijers Christopher J. Williams
When Copycats Go Astray: An Individual-Level Study of the Electoral Effects of Responding to Niche Parties
Julia Schulte-Cloos
Is Europe to Blame? The Historical Persistence of Anti-European Sentiments
Daniel Bischof Markus Wagner
How Extreme Party Entrance Legitimizes Extreme Behavior: The Case of the German AfD
Philip Rathgeb
The Economic and Social Policy Impact of the Populist Radical Right in Austria
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SESSION 5 B
Friday, 15h30 – 17h00
Panel New Perspectives on Firms in the Political Economy Chair Michael Schwan Discussant Lisa Lechner Room HG D 7.1
Michael Schwan Putting the Hammer Down? The Effect of Labor in the Financialization of non-financial Corporations
Lukas Linsi The Discourse of Competitiveness and the dis-embedding of National Economies
Melissa Newham Common Ownership and Market Entry: Evidence from the Pharmaceutical Industry
SESSION 5 A
Friday, 15h30 – 17h00
Panel Migration Politics and Policy Chair Lukas Haffert Discussant Lukas Rudolph Room HG D 3.2
Lukas Rudolph
Europe's Refugee Crisis, Intergroup Contact and Asylum Attitudes
Samuel Schmid
Building Walls – Denying Passports – Performing Closure: The Increasingly Convergent Logic of Immigration and Citizenship Policies in Austria from 1980-2018
Anna-Lena Nadler Eva Fernandez
Immigration Integration Regimes and Welfare Chauvinism: How Citizenship Models Affect Support for Immigrants' Access to Social Benefits among Immigrants and Natives
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SESSION 6 A
Saturday, 08h30 – 10h00
Panel Parties and Party Position Chair Marcel Lewandowski Discussant Martin Elff Room HG D 3.2
Anna-Sophie Heinze
Der Umgang mit der 'Alternative für Deutschland' in Landesparlamenten
Lea Kaftan
Political Power, Conflict and Parties' Preferences for Democracy. How German Parties Have Used Different Conceptualisations of Democracy to Compete Over Political Power after 1945
Oke Bahnsen
A House Divided Against Itself Cannot Stand: The Effect of the Separation of Pre-Electoral Coalitions on Government Stability
Andreas Wimmel Parteipositionen zur Vertiefung der Wirtschafts- und Währungsunion im 19. Deutschen Bundestag
SESSION 6 B Saturday, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel The Dynamics of Coalition Politics Chair Stefan Müller Discussant Mariken Van der Velden Room HG D 7.1
Heike Klüver Hanna Bäck
Explaining the Outcome of Coalition Negotiations: Policy Payoffs in Coalition Governments
Carolina Plescia Mariken Van der Velden Stefan Müller
Who’s Willing to Compromise? Investigating Party Rhetoric on Compromise and Voters’ Response
Thomas Gschwend Indridi H. Indridason Lukas F. Stoetzer
Pre-Electoral Coalition Strategies in Multiparty Systems
Michael Imre Wolfgang C. Müller Thomas M. Meyerand Alejandro Ecker
If you’re Happy and You Know it, Clap Your Hands: Coalition Mood in European Parliamentary Democracies
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SESSION 7 A
Saturday, 10h30 – 12h00
Panel Populist Radical Right Challengers in a Changing Political Space
Chair Denise Traber Discussant Nathalie Giger Room HG D 3.2
Heike Klüver Jae-Jae Spoon
Position Blurring and Vote Switching: Explaining Support for Anti-Immigration Parties in Europe
Tarik Abou-Chadi Thomas Kurer
Economic Risks within Households and Voting for the Radical Right
Davide Morisi Markus Wagner
Closer to the Elites? How Emotions and Information Influence Populist Attitudes
Marc Helbling Sebastian Jungkunz
Social Divides in the Age of Globalization
SESSION 7 B
Saturday, 10h30 – 12h00
Panel Multiparty Governments – Formation and Delegation Chair Alejandro Ecker Discussant Martin Gross Room HG D 5.2
Patricia Calca Legislative Scrutiny in Coalition Governments: The Portuguese Case
Svenja Krauss Katrin Praprotnik Maria Thürk
Extra-Coalitional Policy Bargaining: Investing the Power of Committee Chairs
Alejandro Ecker Thomas M. Meyer
Qualitative Portfolio Allocation in European Multiparty Governments
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SESSION 7 C
Saturday, 10h30 – 12h00
Panel Direct Democratic Institutions Chair Lucas Leemann and Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen Discussant Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen and Lucas Leemann Room HG D 7.1
Patrick Emmenegger Income Tax, Indirect Revenue and Political Institutions: Direct Democracy and the Creation of the Early Tax State
Pascal Sciarini Campaign Spending and the Outcome of direct democratic votes
Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen Subnational Direct Democracy
Arndt Leininger Unequal Participation: Direct Democracy's Unresolved Dilemma?
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5.2. International Affairs Working Group
Stephanie Hofmann [email protected] Lena Schaffer [email protected] Anita Gohdes [email protected]
SESSION 1 A Thursday, 14:00 – 15:30 Panel Innovation in Research on International and Regional
Organizations Chair Nina Reiners Discussant Nina Reiners Room HG E 33.1
Stephanie Hofmann Yoram Haftel
Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations
Tobias Lenz Discovering Cooperation: A Contractual Approach to Institutional Change in Regional International Organizations
Anja Jetschke Sören Münch
Converging in Different Ways: Development and Change of Models within Regional Organizations Treaties over Time
Diana Panke Comparative Regionalism meets Classical Integration Theory
SESSION 1 B Thursday, 14:00 – 15:30 Panel The Parliamentary Organization of International Relations Chair Michael Giesen and Jofre Rocabert Discussant Thomas Winzen Room HG E 33.3
Michael Giesen Legislative Communities? Patterns of Parliamentary Organiziation of International Relations
Jofre Rocabert Thomas Winzen
Citizen-Centered or State-Centered? The Representational Design of International Parliamentary Institutions
Jana Lipps
Circumventing Government. Why Parliamentarians Attend International Parliamentary Institutions
Thomas Malang Friends with Benefits? The Global Pattern of Parliamentary Diplomacy
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SESSION 1 C Thursday, 14:00 – 15:30 Panel Roundtable zu Michael Zürns “A Theory of Global Governance:
Authority, Legitimacy & Contestation" Chair Lisbeth Zimmermann Discussant Tanja A. Börzel Room HG D 7.1
Anna Leander
Frank Nullmeier
Michael Zürn
SESSION 2 B Friday, 08:30 – 10:00 Panel Geopolitics and Rising Powers Chair Tobias Rommel and Anita Gohdes Discussant Tobias Rommel and Anita Gohdes Room HG E 33.3
Andreas Grimmel China’s Belt and Road Initiative: A Challenge of the “West”?
Christian Wirth Transforming Normative Orders: The Rise of ‘Indo-Pacific’ Geopolitics and the Law of the Sea
Chieh-chi HSIEH Japan and the American Liberal Order: A Domestic Explanation of Japan’s Active Engagements in Fostering Asian Monetary Regionalism
Michael Giesen Organizing Human Rights: The Design of International Organizations and its Effects on Human Rights Policies
SESSION 2 C Friday, 08:30 – 10:00 Panel Normative Change in International Institutions Chair Julian Eckl Discussant Omar Serrano Room HG E 33.5
Eugénia da Conceição-Heldt Henning Schmidtke
Democracy in Decline? How Rising Authoritarianism limits Democratic Control Over International Institutions
Lisbeth Zimmermann, Nicole Deitelhoff, Antonio Arcudi, Max Lesch
International Norms Under Pressure: Comparing the Effects of Contestation
Julian Eckl, Simon Herr, Clara Weinhardt
What Does the Rise of the BICs Mean for International Norms of Differentiation?
Miriam Prys Emerging Powers and Multi-Scalar "Responsibility" in Climate Governance
Chris Höhne No Crisis of the Liberal Global Climate Change Order in the Global South: How India and Indonesia have Glocalized Climate Change Norms
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SESSION 2 D
Friday, 08:30 – 10:00
Panel Rising Powers and the Western-centered Liberal International Order: Influence and Challenges
Chair Stephanie Hofmann Discussant Martin Binder Room HG G 26.3
Martin Binder With “Frenemies” Like These: Rising Power Voting Behavior in the UN General Assembly
Anja Jetschke The Devil Is in the Detail: The Positions of the BRICS Countries Towards UN Security Council Reform and the Responsibility to Protect
Tom Long Latin America in the Creation of the Post-WWII International Order
Damian Raess Chinese Aid Flows and UN General Assembly Voting Alignment
SESSION 3 A Friday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel Panel I: Varieties of Qualitative Methods in International
Relations Chair Gabi Schlag Discussant Annabelle Littoz-Monnet Room HG D 1.2
Julian Eckl The Long-Term Ethnographic Study of International Organizations and Their Environment: Insights on the Role of Time and Space from a Project on Global Health Governance
Rahel Kunz Qualitative Methodology Challenging IR: Towards a Richer Pluri-Discipline?
Stephanie Perazzone The ‘Ordinary’ in IR
Nina Reiners Building Theory with Process-Tracing
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SESSION 3 B
Friday, 10:30 – 12:00
Panel International Organization Chair Loriana Crasnic Discussant Loriana Crasnic and James Hollway Room HG E 33.1
Julia Hagen A commitment is a Commitment is a Commitment? States Constraining und Customizing Commitments to the International Criminal Court
Diana Panke The Deliberative Design of International Organizations
Roland Benedikter Mirjam Gruber
Risk and Opportunity: The Impact of Trumps Disengagement from the International Community on the UNESCO
Pawel Frankowski Mechanisms of Compliance in EU FTAs
James Hollway Stephanie Hofmann Cédric Dupont
Measuring the Topology of Complexity: Dominance and Overlap
SESSION 3 C Friday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel International Relations Theory Chair Stephanie Hofmann Discussant Stephanie Hofmann Room HG E 33.3
Aleksandra Spalińska International Liberal Regime Between the “Old Law” and “New Law” in Context of Grotian Tradition
Manali Kumar A Theory of Prudent Judgment for Foreign Policy Decision-Making
Smita Singh The Art and Politics of the Global Security Regime: Actors, Dicsourses and Practices
25
SESSION 4 Friday, 13:30 – 15:00 Panel Trade and Cooperation Chair Lisa Lechner Discussant Lukas Linsi Room HG E 33.3
Lisa Lechner Globalization and Voluntary Compliance with Non-Trade Issues in Preferential Trade Agreements
Thomas Sattler Tanja Schweinberger
Trade as a Foreign Policy Issue: A Bilateral Micro Perspective
Bernd Schlipphak Andreas Dür
Limits to Elite Cueing: Information, Party Preferences, and Trade Policy Attitudes
Manfred Elsig Sebastian Klotz
Big Data and Trade Agreements
SESSION 6 A Saturday, 08:30 – 10:00 Panel Complicating Securitization: Inconsistencies and
Contradictions in Securitization Processes Chair Stephanie Hofmann Discussant Dirk Nabers Room HG E 33.3
Thomas Plötzle Overcoming the Contradictions of Securitisation: Violence and the Politics of Scale
Zimmermann Hubert Ambiguity and the Securitization of Military Intervention
Frank A. Stengel The Precarious Production of the “Out of Area Consensus”: Linking New Threats to Extraordinary Means in Post-Unification German Security Discourse
Sophie Hegemann Inconsistencies in the Copenhagen School’s Securitization model: Beyond speech-acts - analyzing counter-terrorist security measures in France, Belgium, Germany
26
SESSION 7 A Saturday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel Global Governance and the ‘End of the West’ Chair Stephanie Hofmann Discussant Julian Eckl Room HG E 33.1
Tanja A. Börzel Michael Zürn
The Liberal Script and Contestations of Orders Beyond the Nation State
Loriana Crasnic Tabea Palmtag
International Organization Decay
Matthias Hofferberth Daniel Lambach
“It’s the End of the World as We Know It”: World Politics in a Post-Governance World
Felix S. Bethke, Tobias Debiel, Annika E. Poppe, Jan Schablitzki, Jonas Wolff
The Dusk of Western Democracy Promotion: How Liberal Notions of Global Governance Are Being Eroded
SESSION 7 B Saturday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel International Political Economy Chair Lena Schaffer Discussant Lena Schaffer Room HG E 33.3
Tina Freyburg Lisa Garbe Véronique Wavre
Not Every Company Is the Same: Ownership of Internet Infrastructure and the Likelihood of Shutdowns
Tobias Rommel Tim Büthe
International Cooperation and the Regulation of Market Competition
Liam Beiser-McGrath Protection From Others’ Fates: How Crises in Other Countries Lead to the Spread of Foreign Reserve Accumulation
27
5.3. European Studies Working Group
Tina Freyburg [email protected] Dominik Schraff [email protected]
SESSION 1
Thursday, 14:00 – 15:30
Panel Political Participation and Voting in Europe Chair Dominik Schraff Discussant Jeremias Stadlmair and Dominik Schraff Room HG E 41 Philipp Lutz
Loved and Fear: Citizens’ Attitudinal Ambivalence Towards Free Movement in the EU
Dominik Schraff Does Low Turnout Benefit the Eurosceptic Radical Right? Klaus Armingeon Philipp Lutz
Voting Against all Odds
Britta Breser
Against Nationalist Ideals? The Inclusion and Exclusion of Individual Citizens in Transnational Participation Procedures at EU Level
Jeremias Stadlmair Electoral Exclusion and Turnout in Vienna: A Contagion Effect? SESSION 2 Friday, 08:30 – 10:00 Panel Loosing Appeal, Forfeiting Power? Shifting Dynamics in the
EU's Neighborhood Relations Chair Véronique Wavre Discussant Swen Hutter and Véronique Wavre Room HG E 33.5
Frank Schimmelfennig
Reconstructing Europe’s Borders: Patterns of Change in European Membership Discourses
Alper Baysan From Enthusiasm to Aversion? Mapping Frames and Discourses on Turkey 's EU Membership in Turkish Parliamentary Debates (2004-2017)
Marie-Eve Bélanger Never Mind the Gap: Convergence of Domestic and European Discourses About Enlargement
Judith Rohde-Liebenau Lukas Graf
European Governance of Training and Employment: Linking Cross-Border Networks and Local Experiments
28
SESSION 3A
Friday, 10:30 – 12:00
Panel The Political (Integration) Effects of Euroscepticism Chair Philipp Lutz Discussant Thomas Winzen and Philipp Lutz Room HG E 33.5 Georg Menz British Immigration Policy after Brexit: Dilemmas of the Center-Right Georg Plattner Gerda Falkner
EU Policies in Times of Populist Radical Right Euroscepticism: Which Future?
Thomas Winzen The Unity and Differentiation of European Integration: A Post-Functional Institutionalist Account
Ariadna Ripoll-Servent, Lara Panning
Euroscepticism in Interinstitutional Negotiations: Comparing Role Perceptions of Eurosceptic and Non-Eurosceptic Actors
SESSION 3B Friday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel Between Russia and the EU: Membership Discourses and
Practices in the Shared Neighborhood Chair Marie-Eve Bélanger Discussant Frank Schimmelfennig and Marie-Eve Bélanger Room HG E 41 Esther Ademmer Linkages and Regime (In)stability: Evidence from Russia, the EU,
and the Post-Soviet Space
Julia Langbein The Political Effects of Transnational Market Integration on Post-
Soviet Limited Access Orders
Liudmila Mikalayeva Russia and Europe’s Borders: Evolution of Parliamentary Discourse between 2004 and 2017
Vera Axyonova, Andrea Gawrich, Denis Cenusa
International Engagement and Domestic Change in the EU’s Eastern Neighbourhood: Deconstructing Anti- Discrimination Reforms in Moldova
29
SESSION 4 Friday, 13:30 – 15:00 Panel EU Governance across Policy Areas Chair Henning Deters Discussant Ariadna Ripoll-Servent and Henning Deters Room HG E 41 Philipp Thaler Governance through Real-Time Compliance: The Supranationalization
of European External Energy Policy
Véronique Wavre The ‘Efficient Policy Adoption’. Telecommunications Policies in Jordan and Morocco
Martina Fürrutter The Violation of Core Political Norms and Determinants of EU Sanctioning
SESSION 5 Friday, 15:30 – 17:00 Panel Moving beyond ‘Traditional’ Actors in the Study of European Politics Chair Annabelle Littoz-Monnet Discussant Philipp Thaler and Annabelle Littoz-Monnet Room HG E 41 Eva Ruffing European Agencies Independence and Influence in Comparison –
Towards a More Comprehensive Picture
Martin Gross Does Anyone Care? Explaining the Variation in Sub-National Parties’ Emphasis of European Issues and EU Cohesion Policy
Johanna Caroline Günther
The Traces of Judicialization: What its Judgments Tell Us About the European Court of Human Rights’ Impact on European Asylum Policies
30
SESSION 6 Saturday, 08:30 – 10:00 Panel Policy-making in the European Union Chair Tina Freyburg Discussant David Willumsen and Tina Freyburg Room HG E 41
Roman Senninger Meet the Critics – Using Text Analysis to Understand Quality Checks of Commission Proposals
Henning Deters, Gerda Falkner
Remapping the European Agenda-Setting Landscape in Hard Times
David Willumsen Policy Preferences and Voting Unity in the European Parliament
SESSION 7 Saturday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel Crises of the EU by Disintegrative Institutional Arrangements? Chair Anna Wenz-Temming Discussant Jared Sonnicksen Room HG E 41 Brigitte Pircher Karl Loxbo
Goodbye Consensus Culture: The Gradual Rise of Oppositional Voting in the Council of the EU
Anna Wenz-Temning Financial Structures of the EU as Causes for the European Crisis
31
5.4. Peace and Security Policy Working Group
Dominik Balthasar [email protected] Myriam Dunn Cavelty [email protected]
SESSION 3 Friday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel R4D Thematic Module: Social Conflicts in Fragile States Chair Heidrun Bohnet Discussant Elisabeth Prügl Room HG E 33.1
Fabien Cottier Simon Hug
Perceptions of Political and Economic Inequalities among Youth in Africa
Sandra Penic Transmission of Complex Conflict Memories and Dealing with the Past in Conflict-Torn Societies
Piia Branfors Women's Political Participation and Gender Equality in Indonesia: A Comparative Case Study of Armed Conflicts in Aceh and Maluku
Seraina Ruegger Sandra Penic Christelle Rigual
Discriminated ethnic groups, overlooked gender dynamics and unaddressed troubled pasts: how various forms of inequality fuel violence
SESSION 5
Friday, 15:30 – 17:00
Panel Militias / Rebels Chair Dominik Balthasar Discussant Govinda Clayton Room HG G 26.1
Corinne Bara Chasing Shadows: Peacekeeping, Militias, and Violence Displacement
Guy Schvitz Dangerous Precedents? Border Changes, Spillover and New Territorial Disputes
Melanie Sauter Under the Roof of Rebels: Civilian Targeting After Territorial Takeover in Sierra Leone
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SESSION 7 Saturday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel Terrorism and Peace Processes Chair Enzo Nussio Discussant Elizabeth Mesok Room HG E 33.5
Raphaël Leduc Returning Foreign Fighters are not a Threat: Why Amnesty Should be Given to Foreign Fighters returning from Syria and Iraq
Enzo Nussio Near and Far Consequences of Terrorism on Political Attitudes
Daniel Finnbogason Blocking Peace Through Blacklisting? Exploring the Effect of Terrorist Designation on Peace Processes
Allard Duursma Local Peacemaking and Political Peacekeeping: Evidence from Darfur
33
5.5. Public Policy Working Group
Stéphane Nahrath [email protected] Frédéric Varone [email protected] Géraldine Pflieger [email protected] Karin Ingold [email protected] Martino Maggetti [email protected]
SESSION 1 Thursday, 14:00 – 15:30 Panel Policy Instruments and Sustainable Economy Trade-Offs in
Forests Chair Tobias Schulz and Eva Lieberherr Discussant Tamaki Ohmura Room HG F 26.1
Tobias Schulz ‘Sustainable Economy Trade-Offs’ in and with the Forest as a Governance Challenge: Conceptual Foundation
Stefan Gobs, Andy Selter Establishment of Mountainbike Trails in the Municipal Forest of Freiburg i. Br.
David Troxler, Astrid Zabel Sustainable Economy Related Forest Clearances in Switzerland
Leonard Creutzburg Tamaki Ohmura Eva Lieberherr
Trade-offs and Policy Mixes in a Sustainable Economy: The Case of the Swiss Forest Sector
SESSION 2 Friday, 08:30 – 10:00 Panel Die Umstrittenheit von Expertenwissen: Das politisch-
administrative System unter Druck Chair Yvonne Hegele and Fritz Sager Discussant Eva Ruffing Room HG F 26.1
Steffen Eckhard Vytautas Jankauskas
Evidence is Power: The Role of Evaluation in International Organization Policy Making
Jan Pollex Kathrin Loer
Alles anders durch Behavioural Insights? Verhaltenswissenschaftliche Expertise in der Politikgestaltung
Eva Barlösius Eva Ruffing Yvonne Hegele
‚Contested Knowledge‘ im politischen Prozess. Herausforderungen für die Entscheidungsfindung und -durchsetzung
34
SESSION 3 Friday, 10:30 – 12:30 Panel Landscape, Environment and Climate Policy Chair Karin Ingold and Martino Maggetti Discussant Karin Ingold and Martino Maggetti Room HG D 1.1
Maarit Ströbele Mapping Landscape Policy: Actors in Swiss Landscape Policy
Laurence Brandenberger Ruth Brandenberger Anik Glaus
'Good' and 'Bad' Instruments: Evaluating Actors' Policy Preferences in Swiss Flood Risk Management
Marlene Kammerer Same, Same But Different? A Discourse Perspective on the Climate Policy-Agenda in Switzerland Before and After the Paris Agreement
Katrin Pakizer Eva Lieberherr
Let’s Go Modular: Governance Conditions for Implementing Alternative Water Systems
35
SESSION 4 Friday, 13:30 – 15:00 Panel Organized Civil Society and Policy Processes in the Post-
Soviet Space Chair Vera Axyonova and Aron Buzogany Discussant Andrea Gawrich Room HG F 26.1
Vera Axyonova Think Tanks and Foreign Policy Formation in Post-Soviet ‘New Democracies’
Katharina Bluhm, Stanislav Klimovich, Sabine Kropp, Ulla Pape
How Business Associations Shape Policy-Making in Russia
Aron Buzogany Knowledge-Production, Civil Society and External Support. The Case of Environmental Policy-Making in Eastern Partnership Countries
Clara Moder Joachim Pranzl Tobias Spöri
Civil Society Capture? Populist Modification of Civil Society as an Indicator for Autocratization
SESSION 5 Friday, 15:30 – 17:00 Panel Regulation and Governance Chair Frédéric Varone Discussant See below Room HG F 26.1
Yannis Papadopoulos Martino Maggetti
What Influences the Perceptions of Accountability by Swiss Agencies? (Discussants: Cécile Riche and Manuel Fischer)
Felix Hörisch, Jale Tosun, Julian Ehrhardt, William Maloney
Varieties of Capitalism and Labour Market Opportunities for the Youth: A Comparison of Attitudes on Skill Formation (Discussant: Fritz Sager)
36
SESSION 6
Saturday, 08:30 – 10:00
Panel Policy Processes Chair Stéphane Nahrath Discussant See below Room HG F 26.1
Steven Eichenberger Assessing Interest Groups' Representativeness and Its Effect on Access to the Decision-Making Process (Discussant: Nicolas Schmid)
Daniela Eberli Central and Limited: The Role of Evidence in Parliamentary Decision-Making on Educational Policy in the Swiss Cantons (Discussant: Markus Hinterleitner and Stefan Wittwer)
Helge Staff Swimming With the Streams. Exploring Temporal Determinants of Policy Processes (Discussant: Felix Hörisch)
Cécile Riche Manuel Fischer
Learning in Networks: The Influence of Trustworthiness on the Acquisition of Knowledge (Discussant: Nora von Ingersleben-Seip)
SESSION 7 Saturday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel Politics and Policy Chair Martino Maggetti Discussant See below Room HG F 26.1
Nicolas Schmid Sequencing Voluntary and Mandatory Governance: The Case of Energy Efficiency in Buildings in Switzerland (Discussant: Stéphane Nahrath)
Markus Hinterleitner Stefan Wittwer
Political Conflict and Politicized Policy Practice (Discussant: Steven Eichenberger)
Felix Hörisch Die Asylpolitik der deutschen Bundesländer unter dem Druck der Flüchtlingskrise (Discussant: Katrin Pakizer)
Nora von Ingersleben-Seip Fostering Competition in Markets With Data Network Effects: The Case for an Industrial Data Strategy Based on Authorized Sharing (Discussant: Eva Lieberherr)
37
5.6. Political Behaviour and Communication Working Group
Regula Hänggli [email protected] Anke Daniela Tresch [email protected]
SESSION 1 A Thursday, 14:00 – 15:30 Panel Political Preferences, Attitudes, and Decisions Chair Anke Tresch Discussant Alex Trachsel and Simon Stückelberger Room HG F 26.3
Regula Hänggli The Origin of Dialogue in the News Media
Alexandra Feddersen Citizens’ Reactions to Party Press Releases
Céline Colombo, Silja Häusermann, Simon Bornschier, Delia Zollinger
Social Identities and Partisan Preferences in Switzerland
Garret Binding Does the Use of Direct Democracy Change Preferences?
SESSION 1 B Thursday, 14:00 – 15:30 Panel Voting Behaviour Chair Benjamin Höhne Discussant Reto Wüest and Daniel Bischof Room HG E 33.5
Lukas F. Stoetzer Korinne Lindemann
Candidate Valence and Party Vote
Judith Spirig "You Don't Enter the Media Business to Get Rich": Does a Change in the Political Orientation of a Newspaper Affect Voting Behavior in Immigration Referenda?
Martin Elff Stimmensplitting: Strategie oder Indifferenz?
Lea Portmann Are Candidates with a Migration Background Discriminated Against in Elections Because Voters do not Recognize them as Full Citizens?
Thorsten Faas Nicole Loew
Voting Behaviour for Populist Parties in Germany
38
SESSION 2 A
Friday, 08:30 – 10:00
Panel Political Strategies (and its Effects) Chair Steffen Wamsler Discussant Caroline Dalmus and Luzia Helfer Room HG E 1.1
Benjamin Höhne Grassroots Democracy Within a Populist Party: How Does it Work – Why Does it Work? Measuring and Evaluating Internal Democracy in the German Right-Wing Populist AfD.
Olga Litvyak Explaining Framing Strategies on the Issues of Migration and the EU-Swiss Relations in Election Campaigns in Switzerland 2011 and 2015
Evgeniya Shtyrkova Image Promotion and Image-Related Party Strategies in the Electoral Competition: Applying the QCA Approach to Party Analysis.
Céline Colombo The Effects of Political Arguments on Voting Decisions
SESSION 2 B Friday, 08:30 – 10:00 Panel Digitalization as a Challenge to Democracy Chair Lea Portmann Discussant Jeanette Hofmann, Steven Livingston and Regula Hänggli Room HG E 1.2
Aline Clauss Reflective Action in the Digital Age
Maximilian Filsinger Kathrin Ackermann Markus Freitag
Surfing to Help? An Empirical Analysis of Internet and Volunteering in 27 European Countries
Regula Hänggli Competent Leadership
Jeanette Hofmann Mediated Democracy in Times of Digitalisation
Steven Livingston The Domestic Origins of Democratic Institutional Vulnerabilities
39
SESSION 3 A
Friday, 10:30 – 12:00
Panel Issue Ownership Chair Anke Tresch Discussant Markus Wagner Room HG E 1.1 Caroline Dalmus Regula Hänggli Laurent Bernhard
Issue Engagement During Election Campaigns: Who Focuses on What and Why?
Adrien Petitpas Pascal Sciarini
The Determinants of Short-Term Volatility in Party Choice: The Role of Single and Cumulative Issue Ownership
Maxime Walder How Do Parties’ Issue Positions Respond to Their Electorates’ Preferences?
SESSION 3 B Friday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel Party Competition and Partisanship Chair Alexandra Feddersen Discussant Denise Traber and Judith Spirig Room HG E 1.2
Theresa Gessler Democratic, But Not Liberal? Party Conflict Around Non-Liberal Conceptions of Democracy
Valentin Schröder Simone Wegmann
The Center and the Fringes: Political Competition and Referenda in the Case of Switzerland, 1978-2018
Nadine Meidert Linking Partisanship and Political Context: The Impact of Party System Characteristics on Individual Party Identification
Alexander Bürgin May Accommodative Strategies Curb the Electoral Success of Right-Wing Populist Parties? Germany and Austria in Comparison
SESSION 4 A
Friday, 13:30 – 15:00
Panel Participation and Turnout Chair Tamaki Ohmura Discussant Clau Dermont and Tomas Turner-Zwinkels Room HG E 1.1
Eroll Kuhn Does Political Threat Mobilize? 287(g) and Voter Registration in North Carolina and Florida
Oliver Dlabac Sources of Democratic Decline in Towns and Cities: Evidence from Swiss Municipal Elections
Dalston Ward The Long-Term Effect of University Education on Political Participation
Reto Wüest Pirmin Bundi
Are Poor People Less Likely to Run for Parliament?
40
SESSION 4 B
Friday, 13:30 – 15:00
Panel Rights and Attitudes of and Towards Immigrants Chair Regula Hänggli Discussant Lukas Stoetzer and Didier Ruedin Room HG E 1.2
Didier Ruedin Immigrant Voting Rights and Representation: Experimental Evidence from Switzerland
Tomasz Siczek 'It's ridiculous!' Muslims' Emotional Responses to Anti-Islam Nationalism in Western Europe
Steffen Wamsler Markus Freitag
Immigration and National Identity. A Comparative Analysis of 22 European Countries
Denise Traber Immigration and Polarization of Political Attitudes in Europe
SESSION 5
Friday, 15:30 – 17:00
Panel Use of Social Media and New Technologies in Elections Chair Caroline Dalmus Discussant Pascal Sciarini and Andrea de Angelis Room HG E 1.1
Petra Bernhardt Karin Liebhart
Memes im österreichischen Bundespräsidentschaftswahlkampf 2016: digitale Kommunikation als Möglichkeit politischer Partizipation
Norbert Tomaszewski Reclaiming the House with Use of Web 2.0 Tools: Democratic Candidates and Social Media during Midterm Elections in 2018
Micha Germann Making Votes Count: Internet Voting and Its Potential to Reduce the Residual Vote Share
Alberto Lopez Ortega Online Political Microtargeting in European Campaigns: A Comparative Study
41
SESSION 6 A
Saturday, 08:30 – 10:00
Panel (New) Forms of Citizen’s Participation in Democracies Under Pressure
Chair Jasmine Lorenzini and Gian-Andrea Monsch Discussant Cécile Péchu and Valentina Holecz Room HG E 1.1
Joost de Moor Gateway or Getaway? A Panel Study into the Link Between Lifestyle Politics and other Forms of Political Participation
Yannis Theocharis Digitally Networked Participation and Participatory Inequality: Evidence from Europe
Gian-Andrea Monsch Florence Passy
Self-selection or synchronization? - How Different Forms of Political Participation Affect Citizen’s Dispositions on Common Good and Politics
Jasmine Lorenzini Comparing Food Activism to Institutional and Protest Politics to Understand Citizens' Democratic Involvements
SESSION 6 B Saturday, 08:30 – 10:00 Panel Vertrauen - Währung stabiler Demokratien? Chair Katrin Praprotnik Discussant Josefina Echavarría Room HG E 1.2
Theres Matthiess Trusting in the Incumbent’s Competence: Mandate Fulfilment and Voting
Daniela Ingruber Vertrauen in die Demokratie oder Krise? – Ein Storytellingprojekt
Reinhold Melcher Der Einfluss politischen Wissens und generalisierten Elitenvertrauens auf Correct Voting
Katrin Praprotnik
Netflix or Participation? Why People Engage with the Democratic Process
42
SESSION 7 A Saturday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel Einstellungen zur liberalen westlichen Ordnung und deren
Institutionen Chair Thomas Meyer and Sigrid Rossteutscher Discussant Evelyn Bytzek Room HG E 1.1
Markus Wagner Thomas Meyer
Who Should Govern? Election Outcomes and Voter Perceptions of Legitimate Prime Ministers
Markus Steinbrecher Gemeinsam oder einsam? Einstellungen zur Gemeinsamen Sicherheits- und Verteidigungspolitik der EU und der militärischen Zusammenarbeit in der NATO
Johann Gründl The Media's Role in Populist Attitude Change: Affective and Cognitive Effects of Populist Messages
Martin Elff Sigrid Rossteutscher
Von De-alignment zu Re-alignment? Die Transformation Socialer Cleavages in Deutschland
SESSION 7 B Saturday, 10:30 – 12:00 Panel Political Consumerism: How to Study Citizens' Political
Engagements as Consumers? Chair Jasmine Lorenzini and Birte Gundelach Discussant Philip Balsiger and Johanna Huber Room HG E 1.2
Jasmine Lorenzini What is Food Activism? A Literature Review and a Typology to Organize the Field
Deborah Kalte Birte Gundelach
Political Motives of Conscious Consumption – Motivational Differences for Boycotts, Buycotts and Lifestyle Politics
Katharina Witterhold Civic Agency and the Routine of Everyday Life: Methodological Challenges for Research at the Intersection of Consumption and Citizenship
Sebastian Koos The Fair Trade Movement and the Rise of Political Consumerism in Affluent Democracies
43
5.7. Political Theory
Working Group Ralph Weber [email protected] Matteo Gianni [email protected] Antoine Chollet [email protected]
SESSION 4 Friday, 13h30 – 15h00 Panel Contemporary Issues in Political Theory Chair Ralph Weber Discussant Ralph Weber Room HG D 1.1 Olivier Ruchet The Communal Alternative: Power, Self-Government, and the
Politics of Communities
Victor Sanchez-Mazas A Division of Labour of Democratic Systems? Disentangling Normative and Functional Dimensions
Jürgen Portschy Political Temporalities: Time, Power and Domination in the Context of Processes of State-Formation and –Transformation
Aurélia Bardon When is Symbolic Religious Establishment Permissible?
SESSION 5 A Friday, 15h30 – 17h00 Panel Freiheit und Geschichte. Zur historischen Phänomenologie des
Westens Chair Harald Bergbauer Discussant Christian Schwaabe Room HG D 1.1 Nicoletta Scotti Muth Die Krise der Erziehung in der liberalen Gesellschaft: Zur Debatte
um die verkannte Rolle der artes liberales innerhalb des Liberalismus
Giuliana Parotto Freiheit und Subjektivität bei Eric Voegelin
Mario Wintersteiger Der Winter des Liberalismus? Die gegenwärtige Lage im Lichte zyklischen Geschichtsdenkens
Matthias Schmid Geschichtliche Freiheit und Imperium Americanum. Die gegenwärtige Lage im Lichte linearen Geschichtsdenkens
44
SESSION 5 B Friday, 15h30 – 17h00 Panel Demokratischer und autoritärer Konstitutionalismus – wie
exklusiv ist die westliche Verfassungstradition? Chair Verena Frick and Anna Fruhstorfer Discussant Oliver W. Lembcke Room HG E 1.2 Stephan Vesco Der westliche Konstitutionalismus unter dem autoritären Bann des
Wirtschaftlichen
Theresa Stawski Staat, Rechtssystem und Regime
Kolja Möller Populistischer Verfassungswandel. Der autoritäre Populismus als Herausforderung für die liberale Demokratie
45
5.8. Gender and Politics Working Group
Lea Sgier [email protected]
SESSION 6 Saturday 08h30 – 10h00 Panel Women, Gender Equality and Gender Policy - East and West Chair Lea Sgier Discussant Lea Sgier Room HG E 33.5 Alan Duggan Finding the Value of Female Candidate Spending - Evidence from
British & Irish Elections
Agnes Blome Descriptive Representation in France and Germany: Turning the Puzzle Upside Down
46
5.9. Political Economy and Social Policy Working Group
Hanna Schwander [email protected] Damian Raess [email protected]
SESSION 1 A Thursday, 14h00 – 15h30 Panel The Political Consequences of Fiscal Austerity Chair Evelyne Hübscher Discussant Lukas Haffert Room HG D7.2 Pascal König Georg Wenzelburger
An Empirical Analysis of the Programmatic Congruence Between Far Left and Far Right Parties and their Supporters in the Aftermath of the Fiscal Crisis
Björn Bremer Social Democratic Austerity and its Discontents in the Context of the Great Recession
Evelyne Hübscher, Thomas Sattler, Markus Wagner
Voter Responses to Fiscal Austerity
SESSION 1 B Thursday, 14h00 – 15h30 Panel Labor Markets and Immigration in Europe Chair Elif Naz Kayran Discussant Moritz Marbach and Alexandre Afonso Room HG G 26.1 Alexandre Afonso More Equality, Less Immigration? Labour Market Institutions and
Migrant Labour in Post-War Europe
Elif Naz Kayran Do National Institutions Shape Immigration Preferences? The Conditioning Effects of Labour Market Institutions on Relative Risk
Moritz Marbach The Electoral Repercussions of Labor-Market Access for Refugees: Evidence from Germany
47
SESSION 2 Friday, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel Economic Insecurity, Political Representation and Non-
Mainstream Parties Chair Hanna Schwander Discussant Arndt Leininger Room HG D7.2 Friederike Luise Kelle Hakan Günaydin
Affording Independence? Economic Crises and Support for Regionalist Parties in Europe
Sven Hillen How Do Left-Authoritarian Voters Decide? Issue Salience, (Mis-)Perceived Party Positions and Left-Right Identification
Denis Cohen Economic Risk, Anti-Immigration Preferences, and Voting for the Radical Right
Hanna Schwander Armin Schäfer
What Good is Voting for? The Interaction between Populist Party Success, Turnout and Inequality
SESSION 3 Friday, 10h30 – 12h00 Panel Priorities and Preferences towards Fiscal Policies and the
Welfare State in the Aftermath of the Great Recession Chair Hanna Schwander Discussant Jonas Pontusson Room HG D7.2 Macarena Ares Economic Opportunities and Welfare Reform Preferences: The
Divide over Investment vs. Consumption Priorities in Western Europe
Ari Ray Fiscal Priorities in Hard Times: Evidence on Interest Group Preference Congruence in the Eurozone Periphery
Björn Bremer Reto Bürgisser
Public Preferences Towards Fiscal Policies: Evidence from a Survey Experiment on Budgetary Priorities and Trade-Offs
Hanna Schwander The Politics of Employment Centered Family Policy: Linking Preferences and Electoral Gains
48
SESSION 4 A Friday, 13h30 – 15h00 Panel Organized Interests, Parties, and Mass Politics -
Who Influences Policy (& When)? Chair Björn Bremer Discussant Ari Ray Room HG D7.2 Elias Naumann The Role of Unions and Public Attitudes in the Introduction of a
Minimum Wage in Germany
Nils Redeker The Politics of German Non-Adjustment in the Eurocrisis - Interest Groups, Voters, and Crisis Politics
Luzia Helfer How Accurate are Politicians' Perceptions of Public Opinion?
Julian Garritzmann A Loud but Noisy Signal? Public Opinion, Parties and Interest Groups in the Politics of Education Reform
SESSION 4 B Friday, 13h30 – 15h00 Panel The Origins of the Welfare State Chair André Walter Discussant Patrick Emmenegger Room HG E 33.1 Cecilia Bruzelius André Walter
Initiating Welfare Competition. The Expansion of Social Assistance Eligibility in the North German Confederation
Lukas Grawe Nikolas Dörr
Mutterschutz und Militär – Ursprünge und Entwicklung einer ungewöhnlichen Beziehung im Deutschen Kaiserreich und der Dritten Französischen Republik
André Walter The Social Origins of Christian Democracy. Rural-Urban Migration and the Rise of the Catholic Workers’ Movement
Herbert Obinger Carina Schmitt
Wehrpflicht, Krieg und die Anfänge des Wohlfahrtsstaates
49
SESSION 5 A Friday, 15h30 – 17h00 Panel Inequality Perceptions and Redistribution Preferences Chair Jonas Pontusson Discussant Paul Marx Room HG D 7.2 Bastian Becker Mind the Income Gaps? Experimental Evidence of Information's
Lasting Effect on Redistributive Preferences
Matthias Fatke Inequality Perceptions, Social Position, and Preferences Conducive to Redistribution
Davy-Kim Lascombes Ursa Bernardic
Is skewed unfair? Influence of the Structure and Levels of Income Inequalities on Redistributive Behaviour
Nadja Mosimann Jonas Pontusson
Heterogeneity in the Effect of Union Membership on Support for Redistribution
SESSION 5 B Friday, 15h30 – 17h00 Panel New Challenges of Welfare States in (Il)liberal Times: How
Policy Ambiguity Promotes Third-Sector Engagement in Policy Implementation
Chair Eva-Maria Euchner Discussant Fritz Sager Room HG E 33.5 Cecilia Bruzelius Welfare Sectors, Non-State Actors and Boundaries of Social
Citizenship in the EU
Irina Ciornei, Ilay Yesil, Michalina Preisner
The Scope of Policy Ambiguity for Moral Issues in France and Belgium
Eva-Maria Euchner, Olivia Mettang, Lisa Riedel
Styles of Morality Policy Implementation in (Il)liberal Times: Churches’ Engagement a Product of Policy Ambiguity and Conflict
Josef Hien Faith Based Welfare Providers and Discrimination: A Novel Methodological Approach to Study Religious-Secular Conflicts
50
SESSION 6 Saturday, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel Individual Level Preferences Over Economic Policy in Times of
Crisis Chair ?? Discussant ?? Room HG D 1.2 Tobias Rommel (with Lukas Haffert and Nils Redeker)
Misremembering Weimar: Experimental Evidence on the Roots of German Stability Culture
Taba Palmtag Loosing Support in Times of Crisis: Heterogeneous Effects of Economic Vulnerability on Government Approval
Jonas Markgraf Borrowing Welfare: Access to Credit and Preferences for Redistribution
SESSION 7 Saturday, 10h30 – 12h00 Panel The Politics of Collective Skill Formation in Austria, Germany
and Switzerland Chair Julian Garritzmann Discussant Julian Garritzmann Room HG D 1.2 Alexandra Strebel Collective Action in a Voluntaristic System: The Generalisability and
Governability of Swiss Organisations of the World of Work
Daniel Unterweger Globalization, Privatization and Collective Goods Provision: The Redefined Role of the State in Austria’s Collective Skill Formation System
Gina Di Maio Anna Wilson
Trajectories of Liberalization in Collective Governance: A Comparative Analysis of Short-Track Apprenticeship Reforms in Denmark, Germany and Switzerland
Lina Seitzl Cooperation without Partners? ICT Training in Collective Skill Formation Systems
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5.10. Empirical Methods Working Group
Alrik Thiem [email protected] Aya Kachi [email protected]
SESSION 1 Thursday, 14h00 – 15h30 Panel Harking, P-Hacking, Publication Bias: Die Replikationskrise in
den Politikwissenschaften (I) Chair Alrik Thiem Discussant Bernd Schlipphak Room HG G 26.3 Alexander Wuttke From Psychology to Political Science: Why 'Most Research Findings
are False'...
Alrik Thiem, Tim Haesebrouck, Lusine Mkrtchyan, David Sanchez
Hidden Sources of Publication Bias in Social Science Research
Jann-Friedrich Hesse Simon Moosdorf
Einfluss der Replikation auf die empirische Sozialwissenschaft
SESSION 2 Friday, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel ROUNDTABLE: Die Replikationskrise in den
Politikwissenschaften: Ursachen, Konsequenzen, Lösungen Moderation Journals Method Sections
Lea Sgier ÖZPW: Marcelo Jenny, PVS: Kai-Uwe Schnapp, SPSR: Thomas Widmer Alrik Thiem (SVPW)
Further Guest Andreas Diekmann Room HG D 1.2
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SESSION 6 Saturday, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel Harking, P-Hacking, Publication Bias: Die Replikationskrise in
den Politikwissenschaften (II) Chair Kai-Uwe Schnapp Discussant Kai-Uwe Schnapp Room HG G 26.1 Andreas Blättler Christoph Leonhardt
Der ‚Framework for Parsing Plenary Protocols‘ (frappp): Über die effiziente Reproduzierbarkeit von Forschungsdaten zu Versionierung und nachhaltigem Qualitätsmanagement
Christoph Deppe The Analytical Capacities of Vector-Based Text Analysis Methods in Political Science
Horst-Alfred Heinrich Lorenz Klumpp
Ergebnisreplikation bei visuellen Daten
Dirk Betz Claudia Biniossek
x-hub Repositorien zur transdisziplinären Nachnutzung experimenteller Forschungsprimärdaten
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5.11. Development and Environment Working Group
Katja Michaelowa [email protected] Vally Koubi [email protected] Liliana Andonova [email protected]
SESSION 2 Friday, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel Whose Future Do We Want and How? Norm and Standard
Development, Contestation, and Implementation in Global Sustainability Politics
Chair Sandra Schwindenhammer Discussants Thomas Hickmann Room HG G 26.3 Helmut Breitmeier, Andrés Checa, Jacob Manderbach, Sandra Schwindenhammer, Magdalena Tanzer
Sustainability at the Crossroads? Norm Contestation in the Global Regime Complex for Food
Lisa Lechner Gabriele Spilker
Voluntary Commitment to Environmental Standards in Preferential Trade Agreements and Regime Spillover
Markus Lederer Standards of Governance in Global Climate Politics: Many Procedures but little Substance?
SESSION 3 Friday, 10h30 – 12h00 Panel Environmental Policy: Public Opinion and Public Support Chair Vally Koubi Discussants Robert Huber, Dennis Kolcava, Lukas Fesenfeld, Micheal Wicki Room HG F 26.3 Lukas Paul Fesenfeld, Michael Wicki, Thomas Bernauer
Public Support for Demand-Sided Climate-Food Policies - Results from a Cross-Country Conjoint Experiment
Michael Wicki Public Support for Transport Policies - Results from a Cross-Country Conjoint Experiment
Robert Huber The Affectedness Gap: Mobility-Profile-Based Differences in the Assessment of Fixed and Behaviour-Based Pricing Policies
Dennis Kolcava, Lukas Rudolph, Thomas Bernauer, Angelica Serrano
Firm Regulation? The Effect of Voluntary Corporate Measures to Protect Employees and the Environment on Public Opinion on Regulation of Multinational Companies
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SESSION 4 A Friday, 13h30 – 15h00 Panel International Climate Policy Under Pressure: New Roles of
Traditional Players, Emerging Powers, and Private Actors in the Climate Change Regime Complex
Chair Katharina Michaelowa and Detlef Sprinz Discussants Detlef Sprinz, Vally Koubi, Katharina Michaelowa Room HG F 26.3 Anthony Patt Florence Metz
Reframing International Climate Governance from Market Failure to Transition: From Kyoto to Paris
Detlef Sprinz How US Withdrawal Might Influence Cooperation under the Paris Climate Agreement
Axel Michaelowa The World Bank’s Rule in International Carbon Finance – Agenda Setter or Regime Follower?
SESSION 4 B Friday, 13h30 – 15h00 Panel Participatory Energy Transition (Part 1) Chair Jörg Radtke Discussant Ortwin Renn Room HG G 26.3 Angela Pohlmann Arwen Colell
Distributing Power
Julia Lena Reinermann, Nicole de Vries, Jan-Hendrik Kamlage
Altering Cultural Landscapes, Opposition and Conflict Within the ’Energiewende’: The potentials of Dialogue Based Participation to Solve Public Conflicts
Henner Busch Mine Islar
“Greening Bullerbyn?” – Energy Governance in the North Between Folkethemmet and Neoliberal Laboratory
Patrick Scherhaufer Aron Buzogány
Civil Disobedience Against Energy Infrastructure. Between Illegal Protests and Legitimate Resistance
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SESSION 5 A Friday, 15h30 – 17h00 Panel Environment and Development: Individuals and Policy
Preferences Chair Katharina Michaelowa Discussants Marlene Kammerer, Victor Araújo, Vally Koubi,
Liam Beiser-McGrath Room HG F 26.3 Lena Schaffer Resul Umit
Origins of Individuals' Energy Policy Preferences
Liam Beiser-McGrath Do Citizens take Policy Cues from Governmental Infighting? Experimental Evidence from Road Space Rationing in New Delhi and Beijing
Victor Araújo Capacity Building as an Electoral Strategy: Evidence from Brazil
SESSION 5 B
Friday, 15h30 – 17h00
Panel Participatory Energy Transition (Part 2) Chair Jörg Radtke Discussant Norbert Kersting Room HG G 26.3 Francesca Cellina, Roberta Castri, José Simão
Lessons from a Mobility Smart City Living Lab Triggering New Governance Practices at the Urban Level
Ulrike Fettke Conflicts About Energy Politics Among Locals
Pia Laborgne, Monika Heyder, Brendan McGill, Joanna Skok
Participatory Mapping in Urban Infrastructure Planning: Presentation of a PPGIS Pilot Application
Dörte Ohlhorst Community Energy - Combining Ecological with Democratic Modernization
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SESSION 6
Saturday, 08h30 – 10h00
Panel Sustainable Development Chair Katharina Michaelowa Discussants Florian Weiler, Martina Zahno, Tim Wegenast Room HG F 26.3 Tim Wegenast Mining, Rural Livelihoods and Food Security: A Disaggregated
Analysis of Latin America and Sub-Saharan Africa
Martina Zahno Clean Cooking Fuel Promotion between Competing Discourses of Sustainable Development
Florian Weiler New and Additional? Comparing Development Aid and Climate Finance
SESSION 7 A
Saturday, 10h30 – 12h00
Panel International Organizations and International Regulation Chair Vally Koubi Discussants Bastian Becker, Benjamin Hofmann, Romy Escher, Valentin
Lang Room HG D 7.2 Valentin Lang Buying Votes and International Organizations: The Dirty-Work
Hypothesis
Marlene Kammerer Nothing is as Bad as it Looks: Comparing Countries’ Cooperation on Climate Change Inside and Outside the UNFCCC Negotiations
Romy Escher Globalisation, Domestic Politics and Climate Policy
Benjamin Hofmann Technological Arguing: How Innovation and Business Practices Shape International Environmental Regulation
Bastian Becker European Colonial Empires and Contemporary Patterns of International Aid
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5.12. Federalism and Territorial Politics Working Group
Oscar Mazzoleni [email protected] Sean Müller [email protected] Oliver Dlabac [email protected]
SESSION 2 Frida, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel Panel I: Federalism and Democracy Chair Natalie Behnke Discussants Sean Mueller Room HG G 26.1 Jared Sonnicksen Coupling between Federalism and Democracy: Good Idea or Best
Practice?
Sabine Kropp Authoritarian Federalism – An Oxymoron?
Sean Mueller Territorial Lobbying: Challenge or Opportunity for Liberal Democracy?
Alexander Arens Decision-Makers or Backbenchers? On the Adaptability of Subnational Legislatures in Intergovernmental Relations
SESSION 3 A Friday, 10h30 – 12h00 Panel Panel II: Federalism and Inequality Chair Sean Mueller Discussants Nathalie Behnke Room HG G 26.1 Verena Wisthaler Wanted and unwanted – Migration in Minority Nations. A
comparison of Stateless Nationalist and Regionalist Parties in the Basque Country, Corsica, South Tyrol, Scotland and Wales
Nathalie Behnke Shared Taxes, Tax Autonomy, and Redistribution Schemes. Considerations on how to Balance Fiscal Solidarity and Autonomy in a Multi-Order State
Johanna Schnabel The Genesis of Conditional Grant Programs in Australia, Canada, and the United States: Do Constituent Units have a Say?
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SESSION 3 B Friday, 10h30 – 12h00 Panel Local Government Cooperation Chair Oliver Dlabac Discussants Tobias Schulz, Philippe Koch, Michael Strebel Room HD D 7.1 Tobias Schulz Coordination of Spatial Planning Between Municipalities: Looking
back to Learn for the Present
Michael A. Strebel Pirmin Bundi
A Policy-Centred Approach to Inter-Municipal Cooperation
Philippe Koch Ross Beveridge
Reimagining the Political Possibility of the Urban: Politics in the Plane of the Everyday
SESSION 4 Friday, 13h30 – 15h00 Panel Migration, Minorities & Local Politics Chair Philippe Koch Discussants David Kaufmann, Edina Szöcsik Room HG E 33.5 David Kaufmann Dominique Strebel
Explaining Urban Immigration and Citizenship Policies Towards Irregular Migrants in Geneva and Zürich
Edina Szöcsik Minority Language Rights, Ethnic Polarization and Turnout
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SESSION 5 Friday, 15h30 – 17h00 Panel The Regional Turn in Immigrant Integration Policies.
Subnational Comparative Evidence from Around the Globe Chair Verena Wisthaler Discussants Anita Manatschal Room HG E 33.3 Anita Manatschal, Verena Wisthaler, Christina Zuber
Regional Models of Immigrant Integration – A Third Way Between Local Pragmatism and Grand National Narratives?
Christina I. Zuber Gerald Schneider
Sixteen Ways of Becoming German? Structural Incentives, Bureaucratic Discretion and Naturalization Rates in the German Länder, 2000 to 2016
Lorenzo Piccoli Multi-Level Political Opportunity Structures: A Multiplicity of Routes to the Enfranchisement of Foreign Residents at the Regional Level
Miriam Haselbacher Astrid Mattes
The Symbolic, the Liberal, the Pragmatic: Investigating Consequences of Clashing Paradigms in National and Regional Migrant Integration Politics
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5.13. International Political Sociology Working Group
Jonas Hagmann [email protected] Rahel Kunz [email protected]
SESSION 2
Friday, 08h30 – 10h00
Panel Tracing and Conceptualising the Contestation of International Norms, Knowledge(s) and Discourses
Chair Rahel Kunz Discussants Jonathan Austin Room HG D 1.1 Alice Baroni Between Resistance and Complicity: Jewish-Israelis Against State
Violence
Bernd Bucher From Norm Erosion to the Politics of Norms
Jan Thiel From Eminence to Evidence? Epistemic Practices and the Politics of Systematic Reviews at the World Health Organization
Janine Elena Bressmer A Reactive Management of Space and Security: Examining the Spatial Dynamics of Delivering Aid
Nicole Helmerich Digitalization and the Reconfiguration of Power in Global Value Chains
SESSION 4 Friday, 13h30 – 15h00 Panel Panel II: Varieties of Qualitative Methods in International
Relations Chair Elisabeth Prügl Discussants Juliette Ganne Room HG D 1.2 Markus Kornprobst Fields, Networks and Communities: From Quantitative to
Qualitative Methods
Annabelle Littoz-Monnet Constructivist Research and the Practical Demand for “Objective Scientific Evidence”
Anna Leander The Afterlife of International Relations: Improving “Impact” through the Recent Developments in Qualitative Research Method
Jonathan Austin The Poverty of Style in IR
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SESSION 5 Friday, 15h30 – 17h00 Panel Panel III: Varieties of Qualitative Methods in International
Relations Chair Markus Kornprobst Discussants Nina Reiners Room HG D 1.2 Elisabeth Prügl Unpacking Gender Talk: Zalewski’s Methodology between Theory
and Politics
Gabi Schlag Visibility as Method - The Techniques of Forensic Oceanography and the Limits of Critique
Juliette Ganne Iconograhpies of International Organizations
Stephanie Hofmann Why Methods Shouldn’t Matter (as much). The Productive Ambiguity of Methodological Eclecticism
SESSION 6 Saturday, 08h30 – 10h00 Panel The Challenge of Security Technology:
Theory, Method, Practice 1 Chair Jonas Hagmann Discussants Anna Leander Room HG D 1.1 Francisco Klauser Drones, Policing and Airspace
Matthias Leese Simon Egbert
Confronting the Machine: Protocol and Power in Predictive Policing
Mark Daniel Jaeger Disassembling Neutrality: Switzerland in the Weaponisation of Global Finance
SESSION 7 Saturday, 10h30 – 12h00 Panel The Challenge of Security Technology:
Theory, Method, Practice 2 Chair Myriam Dunn Cavelty Discussants Jonathan Austin Room HG D 1.1 Anna Leander Sensing Security by Advertising Tracking Devices
Myriam Dunn Cavelty Florian Egloff
Hypersecuritization, Everyday Security Practice and Technification: Tracing Cyber-Securitization Logics in Switzerland
Sophie-Charlotte Fischer Imagining (In)Security: The Role of Images as Proxies in the Regulation of Digital Technologies
Jonas Hagmann Empowering Security Architectures
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6 Conference Dinner The conference dinner takes place on Friday, 19h30 – 11h00 at Restaurant Lake Side, Zurich Registration is needed. Kindly bring your dinner voucher.
Address Bellerivestrasse 170 8008 Zurich Tel. +41 44 385 86 00 Web https://lake-side.ch/
Directions from ETH (journey time approx. 15’) Tram no. 4 from ‘Central’ (towards ‘Tiefenbrunnen’) Stop ‘Fröhlichstrasse’ Walk for 5 Minutes towards lake, see map below
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7 Directions and Maps The conference takes place at ETH Zentrum Campus (HG).
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Address Rämistrasse 101 8092 Zurich Web https://www.ethz.ch/en/campus/access/zentrum.html
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Directions from Zurich Main Station/Bahnhofstrasse (journey time approx.. 6’) Tram no. 6 (towards the Zoo) or tram no. 10 (towards the Airport) Stop ‘ETH/Universitätsspital’
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