2,232 research outputs found

    Lucerna lucens : Aletophili eines catholischen Priesters Schreiben an Aretophilum, seinen lieben Freund und Mit-Capitularen

    No full text
    [Moritz Anton Kappeler unter Mithilfe von Johann Jakob Scheuchzer und Anton Leodegar Keller

    [Lieber Bruder Expräsident Moritz Werner].

    No full text
    Handwritten and signed letter on Hermann Cohen-Loge letterhead from Jakob Nussbaum to ex-president of the lodge Moritz Werner, with greetings from the lodge members for Rosh Hashanah.Painter, 1873-1936.The original German-language inventory is available in the folderProcessed for digitizatio

    Kosciusko [music] /

    No full text
    For voice and piano.; Cover title.; "Introduced & sung by Miss Nella Webb."; Cover carries portraits of Nella Webb (by Rudolph Buchner), Charles Vaude and Moritz Lutzen.; Words printed as text on p. [4].; "During Moritz Lutzen's visit to Australia he offered a prize for the best lyric, by an Australian author to be set to music by himself. The prize was awarded to Charles Vaude, for his lyric 'Kosciusko,' and Miss Nella Webb produced this song with instantaneous success."--P. [4].; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-an8393500; 1913, by Victor J. Draper, Sydney.; NLA's NL copy from the collection of Keith Watson. ANL

    Coalitions in the news: How saliency and tone in news coverage influence voters’ preferences and expectations about coalitions

    No full text
    Past research has shown that media coverage during election campaigns influences citizen preferences and expectations about parties and political candidates. Very little is known, however, about the effect of media coverage on post-electoral coalition preferences and expectations. This is surprising, given that speculations about post-electoral coalition building are an essential part of election campaigns in all multiparty systems. This paper investigates the consequences that coalitions' media saliency and tone have on voter preferences and expectations about these potential coalitions. Using media and panel data from the 2013 German and Austrian election campaigns, we find that media coverage has substantial effects on voter perceptions although the effects differ in strength between the two countries. These findings have important implications for our understanding of media effects, voter expectations and campaign strategies

    Supporting_Material_RandR2 - ‘Not my government!’ The role of norms and populist attitudes on voter preferences for government formation after the election

    No full text
    Supporting_Material_RandR2 for ‘Not my government!’ The role of norms and populist attitudes on voter preferences for government formation after the election by Carolina Plescia, and Jakob-Moritz Eberl in Party Politics</p

    ‘Not my government!’ The role of norms and populist attitudes on voter preferences for government formation after the election

    No full text
    Processes of coalition government formation have recently become subject to increasing delay across Europe. There also appears to be a concurrent surge in the success of ‘populist’ challengers, who tend to reject key features intrinsic to pluralism such as elite bargaining and compromise. Against this background, this article investigates for the first time citizen preferences for which party should get the mandate to form the government and which parties should definitely be excluded from government formation. We focus specifically on the effect that political knowledge and populist attitudes have on citizen preferences for government formation. We find that both political knowledge and populist attitudes are essential in explaining voters’ willingness or unwillingness to accept the fundamental prerequisite of coalition bargaining and political compromise. These findings have important implications for our understanding of citizens’ attitudes and political representation

    [Stammbuch Jakob Bührlein] / Jacobus Bürlein

    No full text
    [STAMMBUCH JAKOB BÜHRLEIN] / JACOBUS BÜRLEIN [Stammbuch Jakob Bührlein] / Jacobus Bürlein ( - ) Cover ( - ) Beschreibung / Vermerk des Eigners ([0]-[1]) Register über sämtliche hierin befindliche Nahmen. ([2]-[3]) Kress von Kressenstein, Jobst Christoph; Blatt 1 (1) Ludwell, Wilhelm; Blatt 2 (2) Rittershausen, Nicolaus; Blatt 4 (4) Dürr, Johann Conrad; Blatt 4a (4a) Weinmann, Johann; Blatt 5 (5) Francius, Johann; Blatt 6 (6) Hönn, Paul; Blatt 7 (7) Cregel, Ernst; Blatt 8 (8) Walther, Georg Christoph; Blatt 9 (9) Fabricius, Johann Georg; Blatt 10 (10) Hoffmann, Moritz; Blatt 11 (11) Hainlin, Sebastian; Blatt 12 (12) Freher, Paul; Blatt 13 (13) Nicolai, Christoph; Blatt 14a (14a) Sparke, Petrus; Blatt 14b (14b) Hilling, Gregor; Blatt 15 (15) Volckamer, Johann Georg; Blatt 16 (16) Röder, Johann; Blatt 17 (17) Reinhard, Lukas Friedrich; Blatt 18 (18) Trew, Abdias; Blatt 19 (19) Felwinger, Johann Paul; Blatt 20 (20) König, Georg Matthias; Blatt 21 (21) Schwäger, Johann Leonhard; Blatt 22 (22) Wright, Robert; Blatt 23 (23) Reu, Johann Elias; Blatt 24 (24) Spoerl, Samuel; Blatt 25 (25) Kress von Kressenstein, Ferdinand Sigmund; Blatt 26a (26a) Güldenkreutz, Charles; Blatt 26b (26b) Vogeley, Jacob; Blatt 27 (27) Hön, Georg Christoph; Blatt 28 (28) Scheller, Johann Christoph; Blatt 29 (29) Hildebrand, Albrecht; Blatt 30 (30) Ruprecht, Tobias Gabriel; Blatt 31 (31) Seyppel, Johann Jakob; Blatt 33 (33) Müller, Justus Jakob; Blatt 33v (33v - Zwischenblatt) Lüther, Johann Matthäus; Blatt 34r; 1. Eintrag (33v - Zwischenblatt) Riedner, Johann Ulrich; Blatt 34r, 2. Eintrag (34) Langermann, Christian; Blatt 35v (35v - 36a) Biester, Peter; Blatt 36a, r (35v - 36a) Schröder, Bernhard; Blatt 36a, v (36av - 36b) Zollikofer, Maximilian Honoré; Blatt 36b (36av - 36b) Rand, Samuel; Blatt 38 (38) Dürr, Michael; Blatt 39 (39

    Was Austria’s presidential election really a vote against populism?

    No full text
    Austria’s presidential election on 4 December saw a surprisingly large victory for Alexander Van der Bellen over Norbert Hofer, the candidate of the populist right-wing FPÖ. However, as Eva Zeglovits, Hubert Sickinger and Jakob-Moritz Eberl write, the level of support received by Hofer suggests the FPÖ could nevertheless be well placed to win the next federal elections

    supplemental_material - ‘The enemy within’: Campaign attention and motivated reasoning in voter perceptions of intra-party conflict

    No full text
    supplemental_material for ‘The enemy within’: Campaign attention and motivated reasoning in voter perceptions of intra-party conflict by Carolina Plescia, Sylvia Kritzinger and Jakob-Moritz Eberl in Party Politics</p

    Political knowledge and populist attitudes influence voter preferences for government formation

    No full text
    Government formation in multiparty systems requires election losers to concede victory to the winners and, more often than not, winners to compromise to form a coalition government. Why will some voters concede victory to the winning party but others won’t? And what influences their openness to other parties during coalition talks? Looking at evidence from Austria, a multiparty system at the heart of Europe, Carolina Plescia and Jakob-Moritz Eberl find that, even after controlling for party preferences and ideology, political knowledge and populist attitudes are essential in explaining voters’ willingness or unwillingness to accept these fundamental prerequisites of coalition bargaining and political compromise
    corecore