The German Institute of Development and Sustainability (IDOS) publishes four independent publication series. IDOS researchers publish their current research results in Discussion Papers, Policy Briefs and Studies. Visiting scholars and cooperation partners also have the opportunity to publish their research results in one of the IDOS series. Publications from the series Analysen und Stellungnahmen, Briefing Paper and Two-Pager / Zweiseiter, which will be discontinued in 2022, will continue to be available online. The fourth publication series is for opinion pieces: The Current Column regularly comments on the latest developments and issues in international development policy.
IDOS researchers also regularly publish their research results in peer-reviewed and non-peer-reviewed German and international journals and publication series of other research institutes and institutions as well as with renowned book publishers. In addition, they use blogs and online platforms of partner institutions to communicate the Institute's research and advisory activities to an interested public.
Found 9409 results in 7 milliseconds.
Displaying results 1321 to 1330 of 9409.
Erforth, Benedikt (2021)
The Current Column, 08 February 2021
Success or failure of a digital strategy will play out on the global stage, the EU’s strategy towards digital leadership must be decidedly outward-looking.
Fiedler Charlotte / Christopher Rohles (2021)
Discussion Paper, 7/2021
This paper brings together 39 academic studies on how armed conflict affects social cohesion. Reviewing the literature shows that conflict mostly harms social cohesion. However, this review also points toward several important caveats as well as blind-spots of the current literature.
Ten years after the Tunisian Revolution, democratic politics are in flux. Despite regular rounds of free and fair elections, persistent political infighting, entrenched structural inequalities and widespread perceptions of corruption have posed real challenges to meaningful and popular democracy.
There is a need for greater transparency of the United Nation’s (UN) development work at the country level. Existing transparency arrangements in many cases fall short of creating a practically meaningful degree of transparency at the level of projects.
With inequality reduction now being officially and broadly recognised as a key development objective, simple, economical and quick methodologies to assess focus on this area are needed. The methodology presented herein allows to roughly assess potential impacts on inequality in such a fashion.
Marschall, Paul / Christoph Strupat (2021)
The Current Column, 01 February 2021
To get a large proportion of the global population vaccinated against COVID-19, global solidarity between states in the global North and global South and between societal actors worldwide is necessary.
Brad, Alina / Riccarda Flemmer / Jonas Hein (2022)
In der Politikwissenschaft ist inzwischen anerkannt, dass die Organisation politischer und sozialer Prozesse nicht mehr nur im Rahmen nationalstaatlicher Politik stattfindet. Politische Arenen liegen zunehmend jenseits des Nationalstaates, auf supra-, internationaler und regionaler Ebene und werden von politischen Akteur*innen erschlossen. Diese räumlichen Veränderungsprozesse sind auch Gegenstand von Mehrebenen-Analysen bzw. von multi-level governance in der Politikwissenschaft, insbesondere mit Blick auf das Zusammenwirken verschiedener Ebenen im Mehrebenensystem der EU. Auch die kritische raumtheoretische scale-Debatte bezieht sich auf räumliche Veränderungsprozesse, richtet hierbei das Interesse allerdings insbesondere auf die soziale Produktion von Maßstabsebenen.
Urgently needed climate policies have not been yet sufficiently implemented due to their perceived negative social outcomes and their low public acceptability. Recent evidence from developing countries shows that climate and social goals are not mutually exclusive with appropriate policy mixes.