Ingenieurwesen und Architektur

Showing page of 65 results, sorted by

Race, Aesthetics, and Shelter: Toward a Postcolonial Historical Taxonomy of Buildings

Authors Ivan Gaskell
Year 2019
Journal Name JOURNAL OF AESTHETICS AND ART CRITICISM
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1 Journal Article

Einwanderungsland? Germany’s Asylum Dilemma in Policy and Design

Authors Silvia Danielak
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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2 Journal Article

COINCIDENCES AND DIVERGENCES: ARCHITECTURE AND ARTISTIC INSTALLATIONS

Authors Gonzalo Enrique Bernal-Rivas
Year 2020
Journal Name COLMENA-REVISTA DE LA UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DEL ESTADO DE MEXICO
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3 Journal Article

Housing crisis after natural disaster: the aftermath of the November 1980 southern Italian earthquake

Authors David Alexander, D Alexander
Year 1984
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 5
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4 Journal Article

Architekturen des Asyls: Aneignungsprozesse in Flüchtlingsunterkünften

Principal investigator Philipp Misselwitz (Principal Investigator)
Description
Auf Basis architektur- und sozialwissenschaftlicher Methoden untersucht das Forschungsprojekt die physisch-materiellen und symbolischen Aneignungsprozesse von geflüchteten Menschen an unterschiedlichen Asylorten. Damit rückt es das handlungsrelevante Raumwissen in einer hochmobilen Ausnahmesituation (Flucht) in den Mittelpunkt. Empirisch ist die Studie so angelegt, dass syrische Geflüchtete vergleichend in Deutschland (Berlin) und Jordanien (Zataari) untersucht werden.
Year 2018
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5 Project

Planning a Christian campus in Quasi-colonial China: Lingnan University, Guangzhou, 1904-1931

Authors Yinrui Xie, Paul Walker
Year 2021
Journal Name PLANNING PERSPECTIVES
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6 Journal Article

Explaining the Role of Nazi Architecture in the Architecture of Iranian State Buildings (First Pahlavi Era, period of 1933-1941)

Authors Morteza Mirzahosseini, Hossein Soltanzadeh
Year 2021
Journal Name BAGH-E NAZAR
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7 Journal Article

Re-scripting Riyadh's historical downtown as a global destination: a sustainable model?

Authors Anna Klingmann
Year 2021
Journal Name JOURNAL OF PLACE MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT
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8 Journal Article

Housing Programs for the Poor in Addis Ababa: Urban Commons as a Bridge between Spatial and Social

Authors Marianna Charitonidou
Year 2021
Journal Name JOURNAL OF URBAN HISTORY
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9 Journal Article

Segregation by Design: Race, Architecture, and the Enclosure of the Atlanta Apartment

Authors Matthew Gordon Lasner
Year 2020
Journal Name JOURNAL OF URBAN HISTORY
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10 Journal Article

The Village Chambers of Baskoy in Erzincan-Cayirli

Authors Funda Naldan
Year 2020
Journal Name MILLI FOLKLOR
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12 Journal Article

The Value of Public Spaces for Sustainable Cities In the Context of Urbanization and Urban Development

Authors Uyesi Nihal Arda Akyildiz
Year 2020
Journal Name MILLI FOLKLOR
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13 Journal Article

FOREIGN NATIONALS IN YEKATERINBURG: AT THE DAWN OF THE CITY'S SOCIAL ORGANISATION

Authors Dmitry Redin
Year 2020
Journal Name QUAESTIO ROSSICA
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15 Journal Article

Construing Scandinavia: A semiotic account of intercultural exchange in theme park design

Authors Gunnar Sandin
Year 2020
Journal Name SEMIOTICA
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16 Journal Article

EURASIAN LATIN ARCHIVE

Authors Emmanuela Carbe
Year 2020
Journal Name ITINERARIA
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17 Journal Article

INFLUENCE OF THE ARCHITECTURE OF ORTHODOX, MUSLIM AND LAMAIST CHURCHES ON EACH OTHER IN THE TERRITORY OF THE SOUTHERN URALS

Authors Elena Ponomarenko
Year 2020
Journal Name ZHURNAL FRONTIRNYKH ISSLEDOVANII-JOURNAL OF FRONTIER STUDIES
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18 Journal Article

‘Assisted’ Migration and the Marshall Plan: the Italian Case

Authors Donatella Strangio
Year 2020
Journal Name Journal of Migration History
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19 Journal Article

Building a Mental Hospital in Apartheid South Africa

Authors J Louw
Year 2019
Journal Name HISTORY OF PSYCHOLOGY
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20 Journal Article

Humans and Animals in a Refugee Camp: Baquba, Iraq, 1918-20

Authors Benjamin Thomas White
Year 2019
Journal Name JOURNAL OF REFUGEE STUDIES
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21 Journal Article

Constructing Cityscapes: Locality, Materiality and Territoriality on the Urban Construction Site in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Northwest China

Authors Madlen Kobi
Year 2019
Journal Name International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
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22 Journal Article

Contribution from France, Promotion of the Expression of a Vietnamese National Style in the First School of Fine Arts of Indochina

Authors Pierre Paliard
Year 2019
Journal Name OPEN LIBRARY OF HUMANITIES
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23 Journal Article

TOURISM AND GENTRIFICATION IN MEXICAN HERITAGE CITIES: SOCIAL EXCLUSION THROUGH URBAN AND ARCHITECTURAL TRANSFORMATION IN WORLD HERITAGE SITES

Authors David Navarrete
Year 2018
Journal Name ANAIS BRASILEIROS DE ESTUDOS TURISTICOS-ABET
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24 Journal Article

ETHNIC TRADITION AS A STYLISTIC CATEGORY IN THE REGIONAL DESIGN

Authors Tatiana Poydina
Year 2018
Journal Name VESTNIK TOMSKOGO GOSUDARSTVENNOGO UNIVERSITETA-KULTUROLOGIYA I ISKUSSTVOVEDENIE-TOMSK STATE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF CULTURAL STUDIES AND ART HISTORY
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25 Journal Article

Post-traumatic urbanism: Repressing Manshiya and Wadi Salib

Authors Gabriel Schwake
Year 2018
Journal Name Cities
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27 Journal Article

Urbanization in China's South-western Borderlands. The case of Jinghong, Xiguangbanna

Description
This interdisciplinary research project aims to study urbanization in China’s non-metropolitan and non-industrial ethnic-diverse border regions under post-socialism. Literature on urbanization in China focuses mainly on traditional large metropolitan or industrial cities in the center with Han majority population, and examines either the structural or the subjective features of urban development. The complex dynamics of urbanization and power relations in the new cities in the periphery remain understudied. The project fills this knowledge gap, by exploring how urbanization intersects with tourism growth and in-migration and affects ethnic relations in Jinghong, a fast-growing city in China’s south-western borderlands. In Jinghong, the Han, China’s ethnic majority, have become the city’s drivers of urban and economic development, competing over land, resources and political power with long-term Dai/Tai minority ethnic residents. Unconventionally drawing on methods of Anthropology, Urban Planning, Architecture, Urban Geography, and Sociology, this pioneering project aims at producing a theoretically and empirically innovative analysis that combines structural, socio-economic, and political examination with an investigation of subjective and experiential aspects of urbanization, highlighting conflicts, mindsets, and prejudices in the day-to-day urban interactions between Han majority and ethnic minority citizens and the state. I expect that the development of this project will profoundly impact my career. Thanks to training provided by the Department of Architecture, Design and Urban Planning, at the University of Sassari, Italy’s utmost interdisciplinary institution of Architecture and Urban Planning, I will acquire new skills and build fruitful relations with European institutions and scholars. The training, network and publications of the project’s outcome will allow me to increase my possibilities of obtaining an ERC Grant.
Year 2018
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28 Project

The Political Transformation of the Space and Architecture in Nicosia between the Republic of Cyprus and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus: 1963-1983

Authors Huriye Gurdalli, Umut Koldas
Year 2017
Journal Name TARIH KULTUR VE SANAT ARASTIRMALARI DERGISI-JOURNAL OF HISTORY CULTURE AND ART RESEARCH
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29 Journal Article

Colonialism, postcolonialism and science fiction comics in the Southern Cone

Authors Henri-Simon Blanc-Hoang
Year 2017
Journal Name STUDIES IN COMICS
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30 Journal Article

THE PROSPECT OF RESETTLEMENT IN THE MUSEUM "TALTSY"

Authors Vladimir V. Tikhonov
Year 2017
Journal Name VESTNIK TOMSKOGO GOSUDARSTVENNOGO UNIVERSITETA-KULTUROLOGIYA I ISKUSSTVOVEDENIE-TOMSK STATE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF CULTURAL STUDIES AND ART HISTORY
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31 Journal Article

History Past Memory Space Body Image: Artists' Performative Interventions in the Refugee Houses on Alexandras Avenue, Athens

Authors Eva Fotiadi
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of Modern Greek Studies
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32 Journal Article

Semiotics Content of the Fields affecting on Graffiti and Decorations of Zand Era with an Emphasis on Folk Art Themes

Authors Taban Ghanbari, Hossain Sultanzadeh, Mohammad Reza Nasir Salami
Year 2017
Journal Name BAGH-E NAZAR
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33 Journal Article

The Bethel Colony: Intersections of Culture and Built Form in a Bible Communist Utopia

Authors Janet R. White
Year 2017
Journal Name UTOPIAN STUDIES
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35 Journal Article

Industry, Trade and Architecture. Germans in the Industrialization of Colombia

Authors Alexandra Toro O, Armando Munoz, Luis Augusto Nino, ...
Year 2016
Journal Name QUAESTIONES DISPUTATAE
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36 Journal Article

National Socialism in Vienna. Seize of Power, Consolidation, and Radicalisation, 1938/39

Authors Gerhard Botz
Year 2016
Journal Name HISTORICAL SOCIAL RESEARCH-HISTORISCHE SOZIALFORSCHUNG
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37 Journal Article

The 1971 Pan-American Games and the Search for Colombian Modernities

Authors David M. K. Sheinin
Year 2016
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF SPORT
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38 Journal Article

Rereading Art and Politics in International Expos (Case Study: Crystal Palace Exhibition, London, Great Britain, 1851)

Authors Fahimeh Zarezadeh, Seyed Mostafa Mokhtabad, Zahra Rahbarnia
Year 2015
Journal Name BAGH-E NAZAR
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40 Journal Article

CULTURAL LANDSCAPE AS OBJECT OF HERITAGE: APPROACHES TO STUDYING AND PRESERVATION PROBLEMS IN THE OPEN-AIR MUSEUMS

Authors Elena N. Mastenitsa
Year 2015
Journal Name VESTNIK TOMSKOGO GOSUDARSTVENNOGO UNIVERSITETA-KULTUROLOGIYA I ISKUSSTVOVEDENIE-TOMSK STATE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF CULTURAL STUDIES AND ART HISTORY
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41 Journal Article

Remote Sanitation – New sustainable sanitation solution for remote areas

Description
Low quality sanitation is a huge global, growing environmental and health problem with large costs to society. Poor hygiene and waste treatment results in lower productivity, spreading of diseases and pollution. There is a lack of efficient and green solutions addressing specific sanitation needs in remote areas such as: refugee and military camps, remote industrial and household sites. The awareness of the problem is increasing and authorities have begun to act within this area - e.g. the United Nations Environment Programme has stated that “every dollar invested in safe water and sanitation has a pay back of US$3 to US $34 depending on the region and the technology deployed”. Aalborg Rørteknik ApS (ART) have invented a new sanitation solution, applicable in remote areas without access to sewage infrastructure. This turnkey system solution, consisting of 3 main modules (hygiene unit, waste water treatment, sludge handling), has superior advantages to alternative solutions by being e.g. mobile, reusable, hygienic, environmentally friendly and affordable. In addition, ART will include services such as camp architecture, installation and maintenance, ensuring maxmized efficiency of the solution. Red Cross have been an important contributor in the project and also led the way to market introduction targetting aidworker base camps. The unique selling points of the new solution are estimated to secure a market share of 15% within 5 years, resulting in an enhanced profitability and significant growth for ART. In this phase 1 study, ART will perform a demonstration exercice, as well as conduct extended market studies to develop an appropriate IP strategy, in preparation of a phase 2 project. The outcome of this stage, will be a feasibility report and business plan. This project and requested financial support, will address an innovative and sustainable solution, with clear benefits for users, with consequent impacts in the environment and the society as a whole.
Year 2015
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42 Project

A Symbolic Landscape for Suburbia: Baltimore Chizuk Amuno's "Hebrew Culture Garden"

Authors Jeremy Kargon
Year 2014
Journal Name JOURNAL OF URBAN HISTORY
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43 Journal Article

Ciudad Jardin Lomas del Palomar: deriving ecocity design lessons from a garden city

Authors Eden Gallanter
Year 2012
Journal Name PLANNING PERSPECTIVES
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44 Journal Article

Who Plans (Not) to Study Abroad? An Examination of U.S. Student Intent

Authors April H. Stroud
Year 2010
Journal Name Journal of Studies in International Education
Citations (WoS) 50
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45 Journal Article

Some Problems of and Futures for Urban Sociology: Toward a Sociology of Settlements

Authors Herbert J. Gans
Year 2009
Journal Name City & Community
Citations (WoS) 14
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46 Journal Article

Land Commodification: New Land Development and Politics in China since the Late 1990s

Authors JIANG XU, ANTHONY YEH, FULONG WU
Year 2009
Journal Name International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
Citations (WoS) 92
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47 Journal Article

City profile: Valencia

Authors David L. Prytherch, DL Prytherch, JVB Maiques, ...
Year 2009
Journal Name Cities
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48 Journal Article

ScaleWorks – Parallel File System Support for Rapid Prototyping of Scalable Applications

Description
This project conducts research on parallel file system support for scalable applications. The scientific objective is to enable the rapid design and implementation of scalable applications over emerging cost-effective server, network and storage hardware through the use of novel support from an extensible parallel file system. The proposed architecture, ScaleWorks, is designed to address key challenges in the implementation of efficient scalable applications, in accordance with technological and cost-efficiency trends. The project plan includes includes career development and knowledge-transfer activities that will assist the migration of the applicant from the United States, where he has been until recently employed at the IBM T. J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, NY, to the European space. The project will also carry out educational activities that advance the concepts of scalable applications, parallel file systems, and network storage systems in computer and information science, and broader impact activities that will apply innovative distributed network and storage infrastructures to address the computing needs of sensitive sectors, including security, education, and healthcare.
Year 2009
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49 Project

Transitory Sites: Mapping Dubai's ‘Forgotten’ Urban Spaces

Authors YASSER ELSHESHTAWY
Year 2008
Journal Name International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
Citations (WoS) 37
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50 Journal Article

Better living: Toward a cultural history of a business slogan

Authors Andrew M. Shanken
Year 2006
Journal Name ENTERPRISE & SOCIETY
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51 Journal Article

The right to an urban history: The Gaza Master Plan, 1975–1982

Authors Fatina Abreek-Zubiedat, Alona Nitzan-Shiftan
Year 2020
Journal Name Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
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56 Journal Article

Political, Practical and Architectural Notions of the Concept of the Right to the City in Neighbourhood Regeneration

Authors Katja Maununaho
Year 2016
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
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57 Journal Article

Political power beyond the State: problematics of government

Authors Nikolas Rose, Peter Miller
Year 2010
Journal Name The British Journal of Sociology
Citations (WoS) 139
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58 Journal Article

Superdiversity and City Branding: Rotterdam in Perspective

Authors Jasper Eshuis, Warda Belabas
Book Title Coming to Terms with Superdiversity
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59 Book Chapter

Laboratory Rotterdam. Logics of Exceptionalism in the Governing of Urban Populations

Authors Willem Schinkel, Friso van Houdt
Book Title Coming to Terms with Superdiversity
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60 Book Chapter

The Happy Home: Ageing, Migration, and Housing in Relation to Older Migrants’ Subjective Wellbeing

Authors Micheline Phlix, Ann Petermans, An-Sofie Smetcoren, ...
Year 2022
Journal Name International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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61 Journal Article

Night spaces: migration, culture and IntegraTion in Europe

Principal investigator Manuela Bojadzijev (Principal Investigator), Sara Brandellero (Principal Investigator), Ben Campkin (Principal Investigator), Derek Pardue (Principal Investigator), Ailbhe Kenny (Principal Investigator)
Description
" This transdisciplinary collaboration focuses on eight European cities, to understand the key question of how night spaces are dynamically produced, imagined, experienced and narrated by migrant communities in Europe. It considers material, symbolic and virtual public spaces associated with and created by migrant communities in night-time urban settings, which are understood as being important sites of crisis and regeneration, memory and heritage, community solidarity and growth. Authorities have historically wrestled with the issue of night-time control, and the hours after dark are often still perceived as harbouring threats to public order and potential criminality. However, the current policy attention to night-time urban economies, exemplified by the creation of the office of Night Mayor (Amsterdam, 2014) and Night Czar (London, 2016), illustrates the increasing interest in the potentialities of the urban night. Harnessing this growing interest, NITE’s transdisciplinary, humanities-led research will contribute with otherwise overlooked evidence on the production, experience and narration of migrant night-spaces, adding to the timeliness of its approach. The project covers night spaces in cities in the Netherlands, Ireland, UK, Germany, Denmark and Portugal, considered intersectionally within the context of migration with questions of race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, class, and age. NITE considers how migrants’ experiences in public spaces at night and the stories that emerge from them can productively inform current and future debates, policies and practices. Thus, it contends that night-time culture (expressed through e.g. music, film, digital platforms, performance) opens up new opportunities and spaces of belonging and intercultural understanding. Through a programme of community co-designed cultural events and activities, and close engagement with policy-makers, NITE aims to contribute to policy approaches to night-time economies, releasing the potential night spaces offer in creating more inclusive cities. With migration a defining characteristic of contemporary urban life, key and often polarizing in current policy, political and public debates in Europe, NITE aims to support community wellbeing and better integration at local, national and transnational levels. The Leiden team will research migrant night cultures in Amsterdam and Rotterdam. UCL will focus on LGBT+ migrant communities and night spaces in London. The Leuphana team (in conjunction with Humbolt University) will study migrant bike couriers at night within Berlin’s smart economy. Aarhus will undertake comparative research on migrant youth and questions of belonging, surveillance and policing with Lisbon. The Limerick team will study African migrants’ community music making in Cork and Galway."
Year 2019
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62 Project

Smartphone-basierte Analyse von Migrationstrends zur Identifikation von Schleuserrouten

Principal investigator André Calero Valdez (Principal Investigator)
Description
Das deutsch-österreichische Kooperationsprojekt Smar­tIdentifikation wird ein System entwickeln, um Daten aus mitgeführten Dokumenten und Smartphones aus­zuwerten. Mithilfe dieser Daten sollen die Identität von Personen sowie die von ihnen getätigten Angaben über­prüft werden. Dazu werden die für eine Alterserkennung auf dem Smartphone gespeicherten Bilder herangezo­gen. Weiterhin wird versucht, Schleuserrouten mittels Analysen aus den erhobenen Daten zu identifizieren. Da­bei sollen auch alternative Kommunikationsplattformen zur Entdeckung der Schleuser analysiert werden. Parallel zu den technischen Entwicklungen werden die recht­lichen und ethischen Rahmenbedingungen für einen akzeptierten und rechtskonformen Einsatz des Systems im Projekt erforscht und in die technische Realisierung überführt. nnovationen und Perspektiven Das System wird es ermöglichen, bei mobilen Kontrol­len die Aussagen der Migrantinnen und Migranten zu überprüfen und ihre Mitnahme zu Polizeiwachen auf ein Minimum zu reduzieren. Weiterhin wird die Verfolgung von Schleuserkriminalität durch die gewonnenen Daten über Routen und Chats unterstützt. Zum Nachweis der Einsatztauglichkeit werden Feldtests durchgeführt.
Year 2018
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63 Project

Sicherheitskooperationen und Migration

Principal investigator Frank Fiedrich (Principal Investigator)
Description
"Im Jahr 2015 vergrößerte sich der Migrations- und Flüchtlingsstrom nach Europa und vor allem auch nach Deutschland enorm. Die (medial) als „Flüchtlingskrise“ verklärte Hochphase der Flüchtlingsbewegen zwischen Spätsommer 2015 und Frühjahr 2016 stellte sowohl die an der Bewältigung der Lage beteiligten staatlichen Institutionen als auch die gemeinnützigen sowie privaten Organisationen vor große Herausforderungen. So kam es von Kommunen und Ministerien bis hin zu Polizei, Sicherheitsdiensten und Hilfsorganisationen zu stark belastenden und problematischen Situationen – sowohl im Hinblick auf die individuelle Organisation und deren Auslastung als auch bezüglich der Kooperationen zwischen den Organisationen. Wie die Akteure diese Situation wahrnahmen und damit umgingen, wie sie mit anderen kooperierten, welche Erfolge und Misserfolge sich dabei einstellten, was sie daraus gelernt haben und inwiefern die Situation sie nachhaltig verändert hat, ist allerdings noch immer, trotz der Wichtigkeit der Antworten, weitgehend unbehandelt geblieben. Es ist nachvollziehbarerweise davon auszugehen, dass in besonders fordernden Situationen wie bei Krisen, Katastrophen o.ä. keine personellen Ressourcen zur Verfügung stehen, um etwaige Management- und Handlungsansätze sowie Kooperationsstrategien zu dokumentieren und so für spätere, ähnliche Situationen reproduzier- und vermittelbar zu machen. Daher verwundert es nicht, dass besonders in diversen Erstaufnahmeeinrichtungen (EAE) diese Arbeitsprozesse, organisationsübergreifende und innerorganisatorische Vorgänge und Mechanismen aufgrund der damaligen fordernden Situationen nicht dokumentiert und aufbereitet werden konnten. Entsprechende Szenarien (Skandale wie auch Positivbeispiele) verweisen darauf, wie unterschiedlich Kooperationen von Polizei, Hilfsorganisationen, Kommunen etc. verliefen. Vor diesem Hintergrund konzentriert sich das vorliegende Projektvorhaben auf Sicherheitskooperationen und umgesetzte Maßnahmen der o.a. Akteure rund um EAE. Die fehlende Aufbereitung der Situation stellt für alle Akteure insofern ein Problem dar, als dass bei zukünftigen ähnlichen akuten Herausforderungen kein Rückgriff auf bewährte Ansätze und Maßnahmen möglich ist, die eine schnelle Problembewältigung erlauben würden. Im schlimmsten Fall „vergessen“ die Organisationen und Institutionen, wie gehandelt wurde und welche Handlungen sich bewährt bzw. nicht bewährt haben und jene wiederholen in diesem Fall sogar möglicherweise die aufgetretenen Fehler. Aufgrund der begrenzten Ressourcen und der breit dokumentierten Aus- und Belastungssituation besteht aber insbesondere auf Seiten der o.a. Akteure (Kommunen, Hilfsorganisationen, Polizei und private Sicherheit) ein großes Interesse daran, die im Rahmen der zurückliegenden Ereignisse umgesetzten Maßnahmen gemeinsam mit den anderen beteiligten Akteuren zu reflektieren, zu evaluieren und in Form von erfahrungsfundierten Kooperationsstrategien für eine reibungslosere und geordnetere Problembewältigung in der Zukunft bereitzustellen. Hier ist ein großer Forschungsbedarf erkennbar, dem sich der Projektverbund „Sicherheitskooperationen und Migration (SiKoMi)“ annimmt. PROJEKTZIELE UND VORGEHENSWEISE Das Forschungsvorhaben SiKoMi zielt darauf ab, die Kooperationen und Maßnahmen, die in und rund um die Erstaufnahmeeinrichtungen (EAE) während der „Flüchtlingskrise“ umgesetzt wurden, detailliert zu untersuchen. Dies erfolgt über ein Mixed-Method Untersuchungsdesign (Arbeitspakete (AP) 1 und 2). Dadurch ist es möglich, ein bislang kaum erforschtes Phänomen zunächst explorativ mittels mindestens vier Tiefenfallstudien (in Berlin, Osnabrück und Trier) zu ergründen und darauf aufbauend eine bundesweite Fragebogenerhebung durchzuführen, um Träger und Betreiber von EAE zu Kooperationen, Maßnahmen sowie Erfahrungen zu befragen (AP 2). Alle Ergebnisse werden praxisgerecht aufbereitet (AP 3) und in digitalen Qualifizierungsreihen sowie einem interorganisationalen Wissensmanagement den Endanwendern zugänglich gemacht (AP 4 und 5). Dadurch sollen sich diese auf zukünftige ähnliche Herausforderungen besser vorbereiten können."
Year 2018
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64 Project

Echtzeit-Lagebild für effizientes Migrationsmanagement zur Gewährleistung humanitärer Sicherheit

Principal investigator Manfred Bogen (Principal Investigator ), Bernd Resch (Principal Investigator )
Description
Das deutsch-österreichische Kooperationsprojekt HUMAN+ wird ein integratives Echtzeit-Lagebild für die Flüchtlingsbewegungen entwickeln. Dies erfolgt auf Basis von sozialen Netzwerken und Fernerkundungsda­ten, um eine Vorhersage der Migration sowie die Bewäl­tigung akuter Lagen zu ermöglichen. Weiterhin werden standardisierte Schnittstellen für einen automatisierten Informationsaustausch aller beteiligten Organisationen erarbeitet. Eine essenzielle Rolle spielen dabei sowohl die ethischen, soziologischen und rechtlichen Rahmenbe­dingungen als auch die Integrierbarkeit in vorhandene Lösungen und Prozessketten. Daher ist eine enge Einbin­dung gesellschaftswissenschaftlicher Forscherinnen und Forscher sowie Anwenderinnen und Anwender vorge­sehen. Innovationen und Perspektiven Durch das System wird es möglich, Migrationsbewegun­gen frühzeitig zu erkennen, die Einsatzkräfte über die Landesgrenzen hinaus auf die zu erwartenden Situati­onen vorzubereiten und gleichzeitig die Migrantinnen und Migranten bestmöglich und human zu versorgen.
Year 2018
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65 Project
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