790 research outputs found

    Arbeitslosigkeit, Depressivität und Kontrolle : eine Studie mit Wiederholungsmessung

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    Frese M. Arbeitslosigkeit, Depressivität und Kontrolle : eine Studie mit Wiederholungsmessung. Bielefelder Arbeiten zur Sozialpsychologie, 29. Bielefeld: Univ. Bielefeld, Fak. für Soziologie; 1978

    Supplementary Material 1 - Supplemental material for Contagion of Entrepreneurial Passion: Effects on Employee Outcomes

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    Supplemental material, Supplementary Material 1, for Contagion of Entrepreneurial Passion: Effects on Employee Outcomes by Sylvia Hubner, Matthias Baum and Michael Frese in Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice</p

    Coping strategies in work and illness : a pilot study

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    Frese M. Coping strategies in work and illness : a pilot study. Bielefelder Arbeiten zur Sozialpsychologie, 36. Bielefeld: Univ. Bielefeld, Fakultät für Soziologie; 1978

    How to Nail Down a Cloud:CJEU’s Construction of Jurisprudential Authority From A Network Perspectiv

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    In Chapter 3, How to Nail Down a Cloud: CJEU’s Construction of Jurisprudential Authority from a Network Perspective, Amalie Frese addresses the central question of how the CJEU engages with its own past cases in its reasoning. The chapter focuses on how to identify the most legally authoritative precedents in the CJEU non-discrimination jurisprudence, which implies analyzing a large corpus of judgments. Frese shows empirically how the corpus of CJEU judgments, created over the past sixty years, assigns different degrees of authority to each case according to how the court uses them. Using this empirical example, Frese shows that a network approach to the study of precedent provides a highly useful method, which has the specific advantage of shifting the viewpoint of which cases are authoritative, moving from the traditional legal scholarly to the CJEU’s own perspective, by tracing the references and citations to past references that the court itself is making in its judgments. In departing from traditional theories of what precedent is and how it can be binding, this chapter operationalizes the concept of precedent as, initially, a mathematical authority. By mapping all the references and citations between cases, it shows how the court itself creates legal ‘authorities’ in its jurisprudence as it cites some cases very frequently while others are much less cited. By highlighting how the network approach provides useful tools for understanding the CJEU’s reasoning and decision-making practices, the chapter also shows how this approach can refine and supplement, rather than substitute, EU law doctrinal analyses

    Beattieellus jurassicus Oberprieler, Ashman, Frese & Ślipiński, 2016, sp. n.

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    Beattieellus jurassicus sp. n. (Figs. 9–12) Description. Body length ca. 4.7 mm, width ca. 1.55 mm; head dimensions not measurable; pronotum length 1.0 mm, maximum width (at posterolateral angles) 1.55 mm; elytra length 3.3 mm (based on complete right elytron visible in counterpart), width ca. 0.85 mm; abdomen length 1.7 mm, maximum width 1.55 mm. Head indistinct, only dorsal outline visible, approximately 0.4 times as broad as pronotum at posterolateral angles. Pronotum slightly evenly convex, surface apparently smooth. Elytra flat, intervals not raised. Metaventrite smooth, apparently finely shagreened. Femora and tibiae with smooth surfaces. Abdominal ventrites also smooth, apparently glabrous. Other characters as in generic description. Material examined (1 specimen). Holotype: part (AM F. 140886; Figs. 9, 11) largely a three-dimensional impression of ventral body surface but with white cuticular remains of head, prothorax, mesothoracic sclerites and hindlegs and with black remains of displaced right elytron; counterpart (AM F. 140887; Fig. 10) the threedimensional white remains of ventral body parts except head, prothorax and hindlegs, and impression of displaced right elytron with black cuticular remains; Talbragar Fish Bed (Upper Jurassic: Kimmeridgian-Tithonian, 151 ±4 Ma), Gulgong, N.S.W., Australia, January 2013, coll. R. G. Beattie. Deposited in the Australian Museum, Sydney. Name derivation. The specific name is a Latinised adjective derived from the name of the Jurassic period and stratigraphic system, which in turn are named after the Jura Mountains in Western Europe. Remarks. The single specimen is only moderately compressed, preserving largely three-dimensional proportions. The part preserves the cuticular remains of the head, prothorax, right elytron and left middle and hindlegs and an imprint of the meso- and metathorax and abdomen, whereas the counterpart contains the cuticula of the meso- and metaventrites and the abdominal ventrites. The undersides of head and prothorax remain embedded in the rock beneath the part. The right elytron is dislodged and placed at an angle to the body, and the left elytron is missing. The apparent click apparatus between prosternum and mesoventrite is rather well preserved, as is the shape of the metacoxae (complete with coxal plate) and the left hindleg.Published as part of Oberprieler, Rolf G., Ashman, Lauren G., Frese, Michael & Ślipiński, Adam, 2016, The first elateroid beetles (Coleoptera: Polyphaga: Elateroidea) from the Upper Jurassic of Australia, pp. 177-191 in Zootaxa 4147 (2) on pages 182-185, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4147.2.5, http://zenodo.org/record/26062

    The first elateroid beetles (Coleoptera: Polyphaga: Elateroidea) from the Upper Jurassic of Australia

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    Oberprieler, Rolf G., Ashman, Lauren G., Frese, Michael, Ślipiński, Adam (2016): The first elateroid beetles (Coleoptera: Polyphaga: Elateroidea) from the Upper Jurassic of Australia. Zootaxa 4147 (2): 177-191, DOI: http://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4147.2.
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