Journal Service - Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
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    1022 research outputs found

    Rechtsprechungsübersicht Zivilrecht

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    Rechtsprechungsübersicht Zivilrecht 1/23

    Neu über Recht und Unrecht nachdenken: Nationalsozialistisches Strafrecht in der juristischen Ausbildung und die Novelle des § 5a DRiG

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    Mit der Novelle des § 5a DRiG ist die Beschäftigung mit dem (Un)Recht des Nationalsozialismus und der SED-Herrschaft zu einem integralen Bestandteil der juristischen (Pflichtfach-)Ausbildung aufgewertet worden. Ziel ist dabei gerade auch, Studentinnen und Studenten zur kritischen Reflexion des Rechts und zum selbstbewussten Eintreten für die »Wertordnung des Grundgesetzes« zu befähigen. In dem Beitrag wird der Frage nachgegangen, durch welche Lehrformate diesem Anforderungsprofil Rechnung getragen werden kann und für eine generelle Aufwertung der Grundlagenfächer in der juristischen Ausbildung plädiert

    Busfahrereinstellung auf Abwegen: Eine Fallbearbeitung im Bürgerlichen Recht für Fortgeschrittene

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    Der Beitrag widmet sich klassischen arbeitsrechtlichen Fragestellungen, wie unter anderem dem Arbeitsvertragsschluss mit sprachunkundigen Arbeitnehmern, der AGB-Kontrolle von Ausschlussfristen sowie der Anfechtung des Arbeitsvertrages. Der dem Beitrag zugrundeliegende Sachverhalt war Gegenstand der Hausarbeit in der Übung im Bürgerlichen Recht für Fortgeschrittene im Anschluss an das Sommersemester 2022 bei Herrn Prof. Dr. Deinert

    “Music as Method” in Marshallese Community-driven Research and Outreach during the COVID-19 Pandemic

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    This essay centers on the sound- and music-based methodologies of the Marshallese Educational Initiative (MEI) in terms of “community-driven research” that began in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic when the virus was taking a massive toll on the community. The MEI is a nonprofit based in Springdale, Arkansas, which is home to the largest diasporic Marshallese community in the continental US. The first part analyzes the MEI’s COVID-19 informational materials on their website from an audiovisual perspective. Although mitigating the day-to-day consequences of COVID-19 took a necessary priority, the MEI educational programmers were determined to examine the long-term consequences of social distancing (as community disenfranchisement) in a transpacific context and the negative media representation of Marshallese regarding COVID-19 cases. Consequently, they came up with a project called “Songs of Our Atolls,” that would facilitate intergenerational communication and combat negative stereotyping. The second part explores the “Songs” project from its inception to grant application to realization through the activism of Marshallese youth musicians (MARK Harmony). Based on interviews and my remote participation, I examine the studio-based outreach to elders through which the band engaged in conversations and intergenerational learning (through songs) in ways that maintained social proximity while keeping physical distance in culturally appropriate ways. The third part offers a critical assessment of potential directions for the “Songs” project, including bidirectional learning, that dovetails with part one of the essay, whereby the band would work on collaborative public service announcements with other youths and elders, which is a method inspired by Youth to Youth in Health (an organization in the Marshall Islands). My conclusion sums up the ethical importance of paying attention to sound and music in terms of communal health and situating these transpacific forms of culturally appropriate information dissemination and intergenerational learning in the broader diaspora

    Access to Waxes – The Collections from the Arab World of the Berlin Phonogramm-Archiv: Between Digitization, "Repatriation," and Online Publication

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    The introduction summarizes the key topics of the themed issue "Access to Waxes – The Collections from the Arab World of the Berlin Phonogramm-Archiv (BPhA)” and its contributions. It discusses the ethical, legal, and technical considerations involved in making these culturally significant but also sensitive recordings from the Arab world accessible to the public, especially in the context of ongoing debates around “decolonization” and cultural restitution

    مساءلة "الوصول إلى أسطوانات الشمع" - بعض الملاحظات عن مجموعات العالم العربي في أرشيف برلين للتسجيل الصوتي

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    تضع هذه الورقة البحثية ورشة "الوصول إلى أسطوانات الشمع" ومنشوراتها ضمن السياق الأوسع للنقاشات الجارية في ميدان علم موسيقى الشعوب والتخصصات المتصلة به حول أخلاقيات وسياسات التسجيلات الصوتية التاريخية والأرشيفات والذاكرة الصوتية والحقوق الثقافية والملكية الفكرية والإعادة الموسيقية والوصول إليها، حيث تتم الإشارة إلى مبادرات منتقاة أطلقتها أهم جمعيتين أكاديميتين تركزان على الدراسة المتعددة التخصصات للموسيقى، وهما المجلس الدولي لتقاليد الموسيقى والرقص ICTMD وجمعية علم موسيقى الشعوب. وتقدم هذه المساهمة أيضا تقييما نقديا لتصنيف ووسم الموسيقى في الأرشيفات (مثل مصطلح الموسيقى العربية/الموسيقى الناطقة باللغة العربية)، كما توضح الحاجة إلى دراسة نقدية للتسجيلات الصوتية التاريخية مثل مجموعات أرشيف برلين للتسجيل الصوتي. ويشمل هذا الأمر التعاون مع المجتمعات الأصلية والهيئات المحلية بما يقود، في الحالة المثلى، إلى تطوير ممارسات بحثية مشتركة وخلق شروط الوصول إلى تراثها الموسيقى وإعادة إحيائه وتعزيزه

    A Response to “Grief became my friend, my work:” Mary Todd Lincoln’s Uneasy Union with Memory in LeAnne Howe’s SAVAGE CONVERSATIONS (2019), by Stefanie Schäfer

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    A Response to “Grief became my friend, my work:” Mary Todd Lincoln’s Uneasy Union with Memory in LeAnne Howe’s Savage Conversations (2019), by Stefanie Schäfe

    Contemplating Women’s Imperial Service: Mabel Bent as Photographer, Travel Writer, and Collector

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    Despite a growing body of literature on women’s roles within the British Empire as settlers, teachers, nurses, missionaries, activists, and ‘adventuresses,’ their contribution to Victorian knowledge production remains underexamined. In particular, the labor of married women has often been subsumed under their husband’s work and, as a result, has largely gone unrecognized. Treating them as emblematic of a shadow archive of married women’s cultural production in the late 19th century, I interrogate Mabel Bent’s diaries, photographs, and ethnographic collecting strategies to show that she exercised epistemic power through the imperial practices of representation and appropriation. I locate her productive and reproductive work within a complex web of service relationships between herself, the British Empire, and her husband, and show that while Bent related ambiguously to her service, she exploited it to defy gender conventions without risking her reputation

    Hallyu Through the Grassroots: Experiences of Kugak in Europe and Beyond

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    no abstract --- JSTOR link to article (restricted access) https://www.jstor.org/stable/2715951

    Gjermund Kollveit and Ritta Rainio (eds.), The Archaeology of Sound, Acoustics and Music: Studies in Honour of Cajsa S. Lund (Publications of the ICTM Study Group on Music Archaeology, Vol. 3). Berlin: Ekho. (2020)

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    no Abstract --- JSTOR link to article (restricted access) https://www.jstor.org/stable/2715952

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