16.01.2013 Views

Publications - MPIfG

Publications - MPIfG

Publications - MPIfG

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

MAX-PLANCK-INSTITUT FÜR GESELLSCHAFTSFORSCHUNG<br />

MAX PLANCK INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF SOCIETIES<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002


<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Published by<br />

Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung, Köln<br />

Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne<br />

Paulstrasse 3<br />

50676 Köln<br />

Germany<br />

Tel. +49 (0) 221 2767-0<br />

Fax +49 (0) 221 2767-555<br />

info@mpi-fg-koeln.mpg.de<br />

Contact: Christel Schommertz<br />

Compiled by<br />

Editorial and Public Relations Unit at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>:<br />

Astrid Dünkelmann, Cynthia Lehmann,<br />

Thomas Pott, Christel Schommertz<br />

Photos and graphics by Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies<br />

except pages 14, 110: Klaus Siebahn; 17: Jürgen Seidel; 19: Volker Leib;<br />

42: Renate Schmitz; 96: Carola Willbrand; 124: Max Planck Society<br />

Typeset by: Jeanette Störtte, Cologne<br />

Printed by: Moeker Merkur, Cologne<br />

Cologne, June 2003<br />

On the cover: detail from “Unter Wasser I” by Gereon Heil, Heinsberg. Acrylic on canvas,<br />

130x115 cm, 1998. The painting was presented at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>’s first art exhibit in 1999. The<br />

annual exhibit is an occasion for the institute to open its doors to neighbors, friends and the<br />

general public. In 1999–2002, the institute hosted Gereon Heil, Carola Willbrand, Rune<br />

Mields and Ute Bartel, all artists who live and work in the Rhineland.


Contents<br />

The Years 1999–2002 3<br />

Highlights 5<br />

Research Projects Completed 5<br />

Research Professorship 6<br />

University Appointments 7<br />

Habilitationen 7<br />

Doctoral Degrees 7<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Fellowships 8<br />

Society of Friends and Former Associates 8<br />

Directors Honored 8<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects 10<br />

The Research Program 10<br />

The Development of the Main Research Areas 14<br />

Multilevel Problem Solving in European Public Policy 14<br />

Regime Competition and Integration in Political Economy 16<br />

Science, Technology and Systems of Innovation 19<br />

Completed Projects 1999–2002 20<br />

Multilevel Problem Solving in European Public Policy 20<br />

Regime Competition and Integration in Political Economy 30<br />

Science, Technology and Systems of Innovation 41<br />

Theories and Methods 46<br />

Research Cooperation 47<br />

Cooperation and Communication within the Institute 47<br />

Cooperation with Other Research Institutes 49<br />

Projects with Guest Status at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> 50<br />

Projects Conducted in Cooperation with Researchers outside the <strong>MPIfG</strong> 52<br />

Visiting Researchers at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> 53<br />

Outside Research and Study Visits by <strong>MPIfG</strong> Researchers 58


Graduate Training and Teaching 60<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Doctoral Program 60<br />

Relations to Universities 61<br />

Additional Activities 62<br />

Doctoral Candidates 1999–2002 63<br />

Doctoral and Postdoctoral Degrees 64<br />

Teaching 66<br />

<strong>Publications</strong> 73<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Publication Series 73<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Books 73<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Papers 74<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Papers 75<br />

Berichte über Forschung am <strong>MPIfG</strong> 76<br />

Further <strong>Publications</strong> by <strong>MPIfG</strong> Researchers 77<br />

Relations to the Scientific Community and the Public 93<br />

The Institute in the Scientific Community 93<br />

Conferences at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> 93<br />

Lectures and Conference Participation 96<br />

Guest Lectures at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> 96<br />

Committee Memberships and Editorships 101<br />

Prizes and Honors 104<br />

Public Relations 106<br />

Research Staff 109<br />

Management and Budget 113<br />

Management 113<br />

Service Units 117<br />

Service Units and Student Assistants, Spring 2001 117<br />

Administration and Personnel Development 118<br />

Library 118<br />

Computing Services 120<br />

Editorial and Public Relations Unit 120<br />

Facts and Figures 122


The Years 1999–2002<br />

The years covered by this report were an enormously productive period for all of<br />

us at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>. No fewer than twenty-three books appeared in print, and as this<br />

report documents, they were accompanied by a wealth of research papers and<br />

journal articles written by <strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers and their visitors. Eighteen of these<br />

visitors stayed with us in 2002 alone, at the end of which year our regular staff<br />

consisted of 54 people, 24 of them senior and 14 junior<br />

researchers, most of the latter being doctoral students.<br />

Major projects were completed, others were<br />

started, some of them highly publicly visible, and as<br />

many as 34 conferences were held on our new premises<br />

at Paulstrasse 3 to present results or coordinate<br />

joint research with collaborators, many from other<br />

countries.<br />

Change is the normal state of affairs at a cuttingedge<br />

research institute, and this is certainly true at the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong>. Since the end of the 1990s, our work became<br />

increasingly focused on questions of political economy<br />

in a world of internationalizing nation-states, and<br />

on the remaining capacities of national political systems<br />

in an international economy and society. We are<br />

more confident than ever that our institutionalist<br />

approach has a lot to contribute to the progress of the<br />

social sciences, and we look forward to developing it<br />

further in coming years. Our doctoral program has<br />

expanded, and the number of visitors from all over<br />

the world increased. Also, we have become more<br />

adept at using the Internet to distribute our results,<br />

and now reach more readers than we ever did. We are<br />

also about to change our way of reporting on our<br />

3


4<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

activities, to make better use of changing communications technologies. Among<br />

other things this means that the present report will be the last of its kind.<br />

The <strong>MPIfG</strong> is a profoundly international institution, with contacts almost<br />

everywhere in Europe, the United States and beyond. But we are also firmly rooted<br />

in our local environment, which to us is no contradiction. As the institute has<br />

grown, so have its relations with the University of Cologne. We also have excellent<br />

connections with the Land of North Rhine-Westphalia and the City of Cologne,<br />

whose support has made it possible to create an <strong>MPIfG</strong> doctoral fellowship for<br />

students at the local university.<br />

Many good things happened to us during the last four years. Our Fachbeirat,<br />

which evaluates our work, regularly gave us high marks. Renate Mayntz, our<br />

founding director emerita, still contributes to the intellectual life of the institute as<br />

she always has. Our technical staff is the envy of our visitors. Prizes were won,<br />

grants and academic degrees received, and every year now we organize a small art<br />

exhibition featuring a local artist. This being Cologne, we also cannot fail to celebrate<br />

together whenever the season so demands. We look forward to more good<br />

years to come.<br />

Wolfgang Streeck<br />

Managing Director


Highlights<br />

Research Projects Completed<br />

Five major research projects were completed during the reporting period.<br />

Adjustment of National Employment and Social Policy Systems to the Internationalized<br />

Economy was directed jointly by Fritz W. Scharpf and Vivien A. Schmidt of<br />

Boston University from 1997–2000. It involved several doctoral candidates at the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong>, Prof. Anton Hemerijck (presently at the University of Leiden, Netherlands)<br />

as a visiting researcher at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>, and many scholars from Europe and<br />

the United States. The project was made possible by grants from the Volkswagen<br />

Foundation and the Fritz Thyssen Foundation. The results were published by<br />

Oxford University Press in two edited volumes (Fritz W. Scharpf and Vivien A.<br />

Schmidt, eds., Welfare and Work in the Open Economy, Volume I: From Vulnerability<br />

to Competitiveness, Volume II: Diverse Responses to Common Challenges, Oxford:<br />

Oxford University Press, 2000).<br />

Germany and Japan: The Future of Nationally Embedded Capitalism in a Global<br />

Economy started in 1996 and was completed in late 2001 when the second book<br />

manuscript went to the publisher. The project was directed by Wolfgang Streeck<br />

and Kozo Yamamura of the University of Washington–Seattle and brought together<br />

a group of leading scholars from Europe, the United States and Japan. It also<br />

included one doctoral and one postdoctoral project at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>. The project was<br />

financed by a grant from the Tamaki Foundation. Its results are published in two<br />

volumes, both at Cornell University Press: Wolfgang Streeck and Kozo Yamamura,<br />

eds., The Origins of Nonliberal Capitalism: Germany and Japan in Comparison,<br />

2001, and Kozo Yamamura and Wolfgang Streeck, eds., The End of Diversity?<br />

Prospects for German and Japanese Capitalism, 2003.<br />

Another collaborative international project was Varieties of Welfare Capitalism<br />

in Europe, North America, and Japan, directed by Bernhard Ebbinghaus and Philip<br />

Manow from 1998–2000. The results have been published in an edited volume:<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus and Philip Manow, eds., Comparing Welfare Capitalism.<br />

Social Policy and Political Economy in Europe, Japan and the USA, London: Routledge,<br />

2001.<br />

The Governance of Local Economies: An International Comparison was jointly<br />

produced, from 1997 to 2002, by Helmut Voelzkow (who upon conclusion of the<br />

project moved on to a professorship at the University of Osnabrück) and the<br />

Institute’s External Member, Colin Crouch, together with Carlo Trigilia from the<br />

University of Florence and Patrick Le Galès from CEVIFOP in Paris. The group<br />

investigated the governance of European local economies in a four-country com-<br />

The Years 1999–2002<br />

5


6<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

parison, looking in particular at the mechanical engineering sector. The study<br />

focused on the institutional infrastructure of local economies, on the programs<br />

and funds supporting firms and networks between firms, and on the economic<br />

and social impact of effective or ineffective regional institutions. Its underlying<br />

assumption was that the competitiveness of a firm, especially of a small or medium-sized<br />

one, is as much a result of collective as of individual properties and<br />

activities. Two volumes were published at Oxford University Press reporting the<br />

results. Colin Crouch, Patrick Le Galès, Carlo Trigilia, and Helmut Voelzkow<br />

(eds.), Changing Governance of Local Economies in Europe. Oxford: Oxford University<br />

Press 2003; Colin Crouch, Patrick Le Galès, Carlo Trigilia, and Helmut<br />

Voelzkow (eds.), Local Production Systems in Europe: Rise or Demise? Oxford:<br />

Oxford University Press, 2001.<br />

Finally, Wolfgang Streeck and Anke Hassel, together with four doctoral students,<br />

explored The Impact of Internationalization on the German System of Industrial<br />

Relations. Four dissertations were written, drawing to a large extent on a<br />

common database on the hundred largest German companies. In particular, the<br />

research looked at the unfolding relationship between shareholder value and codetermination;<br />

at the impact of new capital markets on the investment behavior<br />

of firms, as affected by co-determination; at the introduction of contingent compensation<br />

in the context of internationalization and shareholder value; and at the<br />

rise of company-level bargaining on employment, investment and flexibility, and<br />

its impact on industry-level bargaining. Additional work on the changing allocation<br />

of the value-added of large firms was carried out by Anke Hassel and Jürgen<br />

Beyer, with a grant from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. The project started<br />

in early 1999 and came to a conclusion in 2002 with the publication of several<br />

books and research papers.<br />

Research Professorship<br />

On October 1, 1999, Dr. Gerda Falkner was appointed to a five-year associate research<br />

professorship at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>. The appointment was made possible by a special<br />

program of the Max Planck Society. During her time at the Institute Dr.<br />

Falkner was on leave of absence from the Faculty of Social and Economic Sciences<br />

at the University of Vienna. At the MPI she supervised three doctoral candidates<br />

in the context of a major research project comparing the implementation of social<br />

policy directives in the member states of the European Community. The project is<br />

about to come to a close in the summer of 2003.<br />

Gerda Falkner


University Appointments<br />

Dr. Helmut Voelzkow, who had been with the <strong>MPIfG</strong> since 1996, was appointed to<br />

a professorship in sociology at the University of Osnabrück beginning in October<br />

2002. In July of the same year, Dr. Philipp Genschel, who had started at the <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

as a doctoral student, was appointed a professor of political science at the new<br />

International University Bremen. Dr. Bernhard Kittel and Bastiaan van Apeldoorn,<br />

both postdocs at the Institute, moved on to junior university appointments,<br />

the former to the University of Bremen and the latter to the Free University<br />

of Amsterdam.<br />

Habilitationen<br />

During the period of reporting, three <strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers received their second<br />

degree, the Habilitation, and with it the title of Privatdozent, all in political science:<br />

Philipp Genschel at the University of Konstanz, with a thesis on Steuerharmonisierung<br />

und Steuerwettbewerb in Europa: Die Steuerpolitik der Europäischen<br />

Union, Susanne Lütz at the FernUniversität Hagen (Der Staat und die Globalisierung<br />

von Finanzmärkten: Regulative Politik in Deutschland, Großbritannien und<br />

den USA), and Philip Manow, also at Konstanz (Social Protection, Capitalist Production:<br />

The Bismarckian Welfare State and the German Political Economy from the<br />

1880s to the 1990s). At the time of writing, three more Habilitationsschriften are<br />

under review at different universities, and one is about to be completed within a<br />

few months.<br />

Doctoral Degrees<br />

No fewer than eleven doctoral students received their degrees in 1999–2002, all at<br />

different universities and with excellent marks. Ten of them started working on<br />

their dissertations after January 1999. Average time of completion for doctoral<br />

dissertations at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> is now at 37 months. Four of our doctoral students<br />

continued after graduation as members of the <strong>MPIfG</strong> research staff.<br />

The Years 1999–2002<br />

7


8<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Pavel Ovseiko<br />

Gergana Atanassova<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Fellowships<br />

Since 2001, the <strong>MPIfG</strong> has been offering two fellowships a year to researchers from<br />

Eastern and Central Europe. The first recipients were Gergana Atanassova from<br />

Bulgaria and Pavel Ovseiko from Belarus. Award holders in 2003/04 will be Sabina<br />

Avdagic from Bosnia-Herzegovina and Michal Wenzel from Poland.<br />

Moreover, in cooperation with the Council for European Studies in New York,<br />

the <strong>MPIfG</strong> is offering two doctoral fellowships a year for graduate students at<br />

American universities writing their dissertations on European subjects. Awards<br />

are made by a selection committee consisting of Profs. Suzanne Berger (MIT),<br />

Gary Marks (University of North Carolina) and Wolfgang Streeck. In the first<br />

round, fellowships were given to Helen Callaghan (Northwestern University) and<br />

Abraham Newman (University of California-Berkeley).<br />

Society of Friends and Former Associates<br />

In 2002, after lengthy preparations, the Verein der Freunde und Ehemaligen des<br />

Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung (Association of Friends and<br />

Former Associates of the <strong>MPIfG</strong>) was founded and entered onto the official register.<br />

Its executive board includes Wolfgang Streeck and Jürgen Lautwein, both at<br />

the <strong>MPIfG</strong>, as well as Profs. Edgar Grande (Technische Universität München),<br />

Uwe Schimank (FernUniversität Hagen) and Volker Schneider (Universität Konstanz).<br />

A membership campaign was conducted and a first general meeting is set<br />

for November, 2003. The association can collect tax-deductable charitable contributions<br />

in support of the work of the <strong>MPIfG</strong>.<br />

Directors Honored<br />

The Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science for 2000, one of the most important<br />

prizes in the social sciences, was presented to Fritz W. Scharpf on September 30,<br />

2000, “for having analyzed key concepts of political science with theoretical clarity<br />

and empirical thoroughness during an era of transnational change.” It was the<br />

first time the $50,000 prize, awarded annually by the Johan Skytte Foundation of<br />

the University of Uppsala, was given to a scholar from Europe.<br />

Moreover, on November 7, 2002, Prof. Scharpf received the Schader Prize at a<br />

ceremony in the Orangerie in Darmstadt. The 15,000 Euro prize is awarded by the


Schader Foundation to social scientists who have made a contribution to the practical<br />

solution of social problems. It is the largest German social science award. In<br />

1999 it had been given to Prof. Renate Mayntz, founding director of the <strong>MPIfG</strong>.<br />

In November 2000, Wolfgang Streeck was awarded the degree of Doctor of<br />

Science honoris causa by the University of Birmingham, England, in a ceremony<br />

marking the university’s hundreth anniversary at the British Embassy in Berlin.<br />

The honorary degree was awarded to Streeck for his “distinctive contribution to a<br />

better understanding of German politics and society in Great Britain and … [for]<br />

the great value of his research work in comparative social science and politics.”<br />

In April 2002, Renate Mayntz and Fritz W. Scharpf were elected Foreign Honorary<br />

Members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In October of the<br />

same year, Renate Mayntz was among the first three scholars to receive an honorary<br />

doctorate from the European University Institute in Florence.<br />

The Years 1999–2002<br />

In September 2000 Fritz W.<br />

Scharpf was awarded the<br />

Skytte Prize – Photos of the<br />

Johan Skytte Banquet 2000<br />

9


10 Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

The Research Program<br />

The general theme of research at the institute is the conditions under which modern<br />

societies may be able to solve problems through collective action. The research<br />

program of the period from 1986–1995 focused on historically and internationally<br />

comparative studies of the interaction between political-administrative<br />

intervention and societal self-organization in selected sectors “close to the state” –<br />

namely in health care systems, organized research systems and large technical<br />

infrastructure systems, with a special emphasis on telecommunications. In the<br />

new program, the subjects of empirical research have changed in response to the<br />

growing importance of market interaction and international competition even in<br />

sectors that were formerly protected and tightly controlled by the authority of the<br />

nation state. In telecommunications, for instance, privatization and deregulation<br />

have progressed widely. The same holds true for other sectors traditionally close<br />

to the state, such as air and rail transportation, road hauling, the electronic media<br />

and energy supply. Similarly, the influence of government policy on industrial<br />

research has declined. Looking back at the last decade, we find a growing importance<br />

of market coordination in almost all functional sectors. This can be attributed<br />

in part to changes in political ideologies and perceptions of reality. But it is<br />

also a response to actual constraints presented by European integration, economic<br />

globalization and international regime competition, which have tended to make<br />

“market-correcting” national systems of regulation appear to be liabilities for<br />

international competitiveness.<br />

Real-world changes like these require a historically grounded definition of the<br />

questions guiding the institute’s second program period. While we continue to be


interested in the problem-solving capacity of modern societies, we look at it within<br />

the context of historical conditions which<br />

– limit the effectiveness of merely national solutions,<br />

– increase the importance of public and private transnational and supranational<br />

governance, and<br />

– increase the importance of interaction effects between national systems of<br />

governance.<br />

Against this background, the research program emphasizes three types of studies:<br />

1. International and intersectoral comparisons of the<br />

functioning of national systems of governance and<br />

their response to changed external conditions. In internationally<br />

comparative studies, we try to find<br />

out whether national systems that used to be different<br />

from one another are in the process of converging<br />

into a uniform (or, at least, more uniform)<br />

pattern, or whether exogenously induced change<br />

leads to new, but still nationally different (and in<br />

this sense “path dependent”) institutional configurations.<br />

Are these configurations functional equivalents<br />

with no effect on international competitiveness?<br />

Or are they assets, or liabilities? Intersectoral<br />

comparisons focus on the differences between sectors<br />

exposed to international competition and sectors<br />

that continue to be “protected,” as well as on<br />

the interactions between these sectors.<br />

New <strong>MPIfG</strong> building at<br />

Paulstrasse 3, Cologne<br />

In each dimension we analyze whether, how and to what extent different<br />

functions and structures of governance may be affected by external change. For<br />

example, one may hypothesize that today’s transformation of national regimes<br />

weakens primarily their redistributive and market-correcting capacities. There<br />

are also signs that more intense international competition has a particularly<br />

negative effect on the performance of sectoral self-organization. This might<br />

increase the relative importance of state regulation, albeit at a generally reduced<br />

level of intervention and within the limits drawn by international regime<br />

competition.<br />

2. The operation, performance and democratic legitimacy of transnational and<br />

supranational governance systems, with a special emphasis on the European<br />

Union. Even though they are reducing national capacities to act, such systems<br />

are also supposed to perform governance functions the national level can no<br />

longer handle effectively. Here, too, we can build on work from our first program<br />

period.<br />

Problems of interest intermediation are of particular interest at this level. As<br />

long as the “democratic deficit” of transnational institutions impedes progress<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

11


12<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

towards majority decision-making, the problem-solving capacity of such institutions<br />

will tend to be limited to matters on which a broad consensus can be<br />

reached among participating states. Moreover, nationally influential non-state<br />

actors – and the interests they represent – will differ greatly in their capacity to<br />

organize and act at the transnational level. What we can expect, therefore, is a<br />

characteristic selectivity of interest intermediation in transnational regimes<br />

that may differ greatly from the distribution of influence in national governance<br />

systems.<br />

3. The interplay between the institutions of multilevel governance systems. There is<br />

no reason to think that functions which are affected by economic competition<br />

at the national level will necessarily be performed at the European or international<br />

level, and vice versa. Instead, there is a possibility of competence gaps or<br />

competence conflicts, or of the immobilism of interlevel “joint decision traps.”<br />

But it is also possible that a productive complementarity of competencies will<br />

develop that serves to increase the overall problem-solving capacity of multilevel<br />

governance. Which of these possibilities will prevail may well depend on the<br />

instruments applied. One of our main theoretical concerns is to develop<br />

methods for analyzing the compatibility and incompatibility of different types<br />

of regulation.<br />

The emergence of transnational multilevel policy-making affects not only states<br />

but also systems of self-regulation in (civil) society. Differences in the capacity of<br />

interest groups to organize and act on the transnational level have an impact on<br />

the bias of transnational governance systems – which, in turn, may affect the<br />

structure and operation of national systems. Generally, multilevel governance creates<br />

new opportunities for actors to choose among arenas and levels of action.<br />

Internationalization enables governments and nationally organized interest<br />

groups to use their influence on international decisions for domestic purposes. In<br />

allowing them to delegate to higher levels problems that they are unwilling or<br />

unable to solve, it also facilitates blame avoidance by shifting responsibility for difficult<br />

issues to international or supranational decision-makers.<br />

The institute’s research program attempts to clarify the conditions shaping the<br />

complex intertwining of public and private domestic policy, foreign policy and<br />

international relations. Empirical and theoretical projects are to contribute to a<br />

better understanding of the consequences for the problem-solving capacity of<br />

modern societies, for the mediation of interests, and for democratic legitimacy.


<strong>MPIfG</strong> Research Projects | 2001<br />

Science, Technology and Systems of Innovation<br />

Regime Competition and Integration in Political Economy<br />

Multilevel Problem Solving in European Public Policy<br />

Science–Society Interface of Max Planck Institutes<br />

Governance of Local Economies<br />

Local Economies: Mechanical Engineering Sector<br />

National Systems of Innovation and Globalization<br />

Reconfiguration through Venture Capital<br />

Industrial Relations<br />

Welfare State Adjustment<br />

Financial Policy and the Labor Market<br />

Adjusting National Tax Policy to Economic<br />

Internationalization<br />

Stabilizing Economic Output in a Monetary Union<br />

Pension Reform Politics<br />

Internet<br />

Internationalization and Industrial Relations<br />

Shareholder Value and Codetermination<br />

Contingent Compensation and Collective Bargaining<br />

Company-Level Employment Pacts<br />

Capital Markets, Codetermination and Investment<br />

Social Pacts and National Wage Bargaining in Europe<br />

Internet Governance<br />

Global Networks and Local Values<br />

Transformation of Intermediaries<br />

European Integration<br />

Welfare State<br />

Welfare States and Industrial Relations<br />

Industrial Relations, Welfare States and the Economy<br />

The German “Alliance for Employment”<br />

Migration as a Problem of Transnational Social Policy<br />

Theories and Methods<br />

“New Governance” and Social Europe<br />

EC Social Policy Directives<br />

in Southern and Francophone Europe<br />

EC Social Policy Directives and Social Partners<br />

Policy Misfit and the Implementation<br />

of EC Social Policy Directives<br />

How Intergovernmental Are Intergovernmental<br />

Conferences?<br />

Organized Interests<br />

Europeanization of Organized Interests<br />

Europeanization of Organized Interests: Auto and Retail<br />

Visualization of Social Structures<br />

Economic Transition in Bulgaria<br />

Theoretical Potential of Macro-Social Analysis<br />

Multilevel Regulatory Policy<br />

Aggregation of Business Interests<br />

The Organizational History of UNICE<br />

Problem-Solving Effectiveness<br />

of Multilevel Governing in Europe<br />

Globalization and Financial Market Regulation<br />

Corporate Governance<br />

Tax Policy of the EU<br />

Implementing the Single European Market<br />

Internationalization and Net Value Added<br />

European Corporate Governance<br />

Pharmaceuticals Regulation<br />

Environmental Protection and Product Standardization<br />

Implementation of European Structural Fund Programs<br />

in North Rhine-Westphalia<br />

Germany and Japan<br />

Regulation of Genetically Modified Foodstuffs<br />

Germany and Japan<br />

Organizing the Firm<br />

Rise of East Asia


14<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Eric Seils, Fritz W. Scharpf,<br />

Steffen Ganghof, Anton<br />

Hemerijck<br />

The Development of the Main Research Areas<br />

Multilevel Problem Solving in European Public Policy<br />

Projects in this cluster, which was<br />

directed by Fritz W. Scharpf, were concerned<br />

with the problem solving capacity<br />

of public policy at national and<br />

European levels in a period of growing<br />

economic and institutional integration.<br />

The first group of four dissertation<br />

projects pursued specific research<br />

questions that had been identified in a<br />

large-scale comparative study, led by<br />

Fritz Scharpf and Vivien Schmidt (Boston<br />

University), of the adjustment of<br />

twelve welfare states to changes in their international economic environment.<br />

Martin Schludi analyzed the politics of pension reform in five countries with earnings-related<br />

and pay-as-you-go public pension systems which, under the double<br />

pressure of demographic changes and international competition, were forced to<br />

contain the rise of expenditures and contributions. Focusing on the exceptional<br />

employment performance of the Netherlands, Eric Seils’ dissertation shifts the<br />

emphasis from the usual “corporatist” explanation to the causal effect of budget<br />

consolidation and shows how this policy was facilitated by specific characteristics<br />

of the Dutch political system and budgetary procedures. Steffen Ganghof’s comparative<br />

analysis of the tax performance of seven countries succeeds in demonstrating<br />

that, contrary to frequent claims in the literature, both party-political<br />

preferences and international tax competition have clearly identifiable effects on<br />

national tax policy. Henrik Enderlein’s dissertation, finally, compares the monetary<br />

and fiscal policies which EMU member states had pursued before joining the<br />

Monetary Union in order to identify the causes of the difficulties they are facing<br />

now and to explore potential solutions to these problems of macro-economic<br />

management. All of these dissertation projects were successfully completed in<br />

2001 and 2002.<br />

The next group of closely coordinated dissertation projects, supervised by Gerda<br />

Falkner, is studying the implementation in all EU member states of seven social<br />

policy directives adopted in the 1990s. In all countries, the focus is, first, on the


political processes through which these directives were transformed into national<br />

law and, second, on the institutional structures and processes through which these<br />

directives are implemented, and their implementation is monitored. Finally, the<br />

projects are also examining the difficult question of whether and to what extent<br />

these directives are actually changing existing practices in all of the member states.<br />

In answering these questions, Miriam Hartlapp, Simone Leiber and Oliver Treib<br />

jointly collected literature, quantitative data and interview data on the basis of a<br />

common research design in all member states. Moreover, while their individual<br />

dissertations have focused on specific issues that were selected for an in-depth<br />

examination on the basis of theoretical criteria, all three authors are now collaborating<br />

with Gerda Falkner on a synthetic study that will present the findings of the<br />

overall project from a comparative perspective. Oliver Treib’s dissertation was successfully<br />

completed in 2002, whereas the other two and the synthetic volume are<br />

expected to come to completion in 2003. In the same period, Gerda Falkner also<br />

completed her work on decision processes within the European Union, with a specific<br />

focus on the processes of Treaty revision through Intergovernmental Conferences.<br />

A third group included projects by senior researchers that were more loosely coordinated,<br />

but still directly related to the overall theme of the cluster.<br />

The habilitation project of Susanne Lütz had as its core a comparative study of<br />

recent changes in the national regimes regulating the operation of banks and securities<br />

markets in Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States. It combined<br />

a theoretical analysis of the problems to which regulation is supposed to<br />

respond with a historical analysis of the evolution of different national regulatory<br />

regimes, and it confronted both with recent changes in the economics and the<br />

technology of internationalized capital markets in order to define the specific<br />

challenges that regulatory reforms needed to address. The project was completed<br />

in 2001 and has led, in the meantime, to a successful habilitation and a monograph<br />

published by Campus.<br />

In another habilitation project, Philipp Genschel explained the limited success<br />

and predominant failure of efforts at tax harmonization in the European Union.<br />

Analyzing the problems and options of international tax harmonization within a<br />

longer historical perspective, the project is able to show that the dominant concern<br />

of harmonization efforts in the EC and the EU was to remove double taxation<br />

and other obstacles to the free movement of goods, services and capital.<br />

While double taxation was in fact eliminated, further Commission initiatives were<br />

blocked by national governments defending their fiscal autonomy. In the field of<br />

capital taxes, this half-way solution implies opportunities for international tax<br />

avoidance and tax evasion, and hence incentives for international tax competition,<br />

that are considered a major problem in most member states. Again, the project<br />

and the habilitation were successfully completed, the book was published by<br />

Campus, and Philipp Genschel was appointed to a professorship at the International<br />

University Bremen.<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

15


16<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

The third habilitation project by Susanne Schmidt focuses on national responses<br />

to “negative integration” in two industries – road haulage and insurance. The<br />

study starts from the observation of remarkable differences in the degree to which<br />

Germany and France have actually deregulated these previously protected sectors,<br />

and it notes that the much more radical German response was neither required by<br />

European law nor compelled by a significant increase of foreign competition in<br />

the national markets. The search for convincing explanations is thus bound to<br />

shed new light on the existing literature on the interaction between changes in the<br />

international political economy and domestic policy choices. Even though<br />

Susanne Schmidt has given birth to two baby boys during the course of the project,<br />

completion is expected during 2003.<br />

Lastly, there are three projects examining substantive and institutional changes<br />

in the multi-level regulation of marketable products. Jürgen Feick’s study of pharmaceutical<br />

regulation reconstructed the historical evolution of national licensing<br />

systems in response to particular catastrophes as well as subsequent efforts at<br />

international coordination and European harmonization that were driven by the<br />

interests of large, export-oriented pharmaceutical firms. In explaining the difficulties<br />

encountered here, he focuses on the interplay between specific coordination<br />

techniques, substantive policy interests, and the institutional self-interest of<br />

national licensing organizations. This project was completed in 2002. A related<br />

project, jointly designed by Susanne Lütz and William D. Coleman (McMaster<br />

University), is studying European and national regulations of genetically modified<br />

foodstuffs. The specific focus is on problems of democratic legitimacy and<br />

accountability that are bound to arise when issues that are politically salient in<br />

several member states must be dealt with in the comitology procedures that are<br />

characteristic of multi-level European regulation. This project was still ongoing at<br />

the time when Susanne Lütz left the institute to take up a temporary position at<br />

the FernUniversität Hagen. Helmut Voelzkow also completed the project, undertaken<br />

jointly with Volker Eichener (Ruhr-Universität Bochum), on the integration of<br />

environmental standards into the European harmonization of product regulations.<br />

In 2002, Voelzkow left the institute to become a professor at the University<br />

of Osnabrück.<br />

Regime Competition and Integration in Political Economy<br />

Projects in this cluster, which was directed by Wolfgang Streeck, were concerned<br />

with the historical evolution of national social and economic institutions under<br />

the impact of internationalization, both of markets and of regimes of governance.<br />

A set of projects on Germany and Japan was completed before the end of 2002.<br />

Two major books, one on the historical origins of nationally embedded non-liberal<br />

capitalism in Germany and Japan and another on the future prospects of the


German and the Japanese “systems,” edited by Wolfgang Streeck and Kozo<br />

Yamamura, were published by Cornell University Press. Gregory Jackson’s study on<br />

German and Japanese corporate governance, “Organizing the Firm,” issued in a<br />

dissertation submitted to Columbia University in 2001. Philip Manow’s work on<br />

pension systems in the two countries has resulted in several articles and book<br />

chapters. Patrick Ziltener’s postdoctoral project with the title “The Rise of East Asia<br />

as a Regional Integration Process” linked up with some of the themes of the Germany-Japan<br />

projects while also relating to the research at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> on European<br />

integration.<br />

A project of a novel kind was that on the impact of internationalization on<br />

industrial relations in Germany. Under the direction of Wolfgang Streeck and Anke<br />

Hassel, four doctoral students worked on closely related aspects of a common<br />

theme, using a largely identical database. Subjects were the transformation of<br />

industrial relations in large German companies, especially the unfolding relationship<br />

between shareholder value and co-determination; the impact of new capital<br />

markets on the investment behavior of firms, as affected by co-determination; the<br />

introduction of contingent compensation in the context of internationalization<br />

and shareholder value; and the rise of company-level bargaining on employment,<br />

investment and flexibility and its impact on industry-level bargaining. This project,<br />

too, was completed before the end of the reporting period; several books and<br />

articles are about to appear at the time of writing.<br />

Parallel to her work on the large<br />

firms project, Anke Hassel has been<br />

working on a Habilitation thesis involving<br />

comparative analysis of wagesetting<br />

under the impact of European<br />

Monetary Union. The thesis was submitted<br />

to the University of Bochum in<br />

early 2003. Closely related to Hassel’s<br />

theme is a new study by Wolfgang<br />

Streeck and Christine Trampusch on<br />

the German “Alliance for Jobs,” which<br />

explores long-term changes in the relationship<br />

between the state and organized<br />

business and labor in Germany. One of the central issues of this study is the<br />

intersection between industrial relations and social policy, a subject that was<br />

explored in an edited volume completed by Bernhard Ebbinghaus and Philip<br />

Manow in 2001. Ebbinghaus’ Habilitation thesis on the comparative political<br />

economy of early retirement, submitted to the University of Cologne in 2002, continued<br />

to pursue this theme. The same subject also figured prominently in the<br />

2003 Special Issue of West European Politics on Germany edited jointly by<br />

Wolfgang Streeck and Herbert Kitschelt (Duke University).<br />

Stimulated in part by Jackson’s work on German and Japanese large firms, as<br />

well as by the focus of the multiple dissertation project on the one hundred lar-<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

Doctoral project on the<br />

impact of internationalization<br />

on industrial relations in<br />

Germany: Antje Kurdelbusch,<br />

Jürgen Beyer, Anke Hassel,<br />

Martin Höpner, Britta Rehder,<br />

Wolfgang Streeck, Rainer<br />

Zugehör<br />

17


18<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

gest German firms, a lasting interest arose at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> in the sociology and politics<br />

of corporate governance. Anke Hassel and Jürgen Beyer carried out a DFG-financed<br />

project on the distribution of net value added in large German firms, which<br />

pursued a theoretical idea proposed by the Dutch economist, Henk de Jong. Martin<br />

Höpner and Rainer Zugehör, of the German industrial relations project, cooperated<br />

closely with others interested in corporate governance, which for a time included<br />

Bastiaan van Apeldoorn with his postdoctoral work on the changing control<br />

structures of large European companies – a project that came to an end when van<br />

Apeldoorn was offered and took a position at the Free University of Amsterdam.<br />

Another contributor to the subject was Michel Goyer with his postdoctoral work<br />

comparing recent changes in corporate governance arrangements in large French<br />

and German companies. Also to be mentioned is Gregory Jackson’s project with<br />

Andrew Gamble and others, mainly of the University of Sheffield, on the “public<br />

interest” in corporate governance in Britain and Germany, which was funded by<br />

the Anglo-German Foundation for the Study of Industrial Society; this project,<br />

too, has meanwhile been completed. In the future Höpner will maintain a focus<br />

on corporate governance, working with former colleagues like Greg Jackson who<br />

is now based in Tokyo as well as with postdoctoral fellows and doctoral students.<br />

The cluster included and includes a number of projects on organized interests<br />

in Europe, in particular on the way in which European integration affects the articulation<br />

of interests at national level and through national associations. The<br />

results of the project on the Europeanization of Organized Interests, carried out<br />

in cooperation with Jelle Visser in Amsterdam and Volker Schneider in Konstanz,<br />

will be published in an edited volume entitled “Governing Interests: Business<br />

Associations Facing Internationalization.” A doctoral dissertation, by Jörg Teuber,<br />

looks at the Europeanization of interest representation in the automobile and the<br />

retail industries of several European countries, and in particular at the way in<br />

which national interest associations link up with supranational associations and<br />

public agencies. Andreas Broscheid’s postdoctoral project tries to model the business<br />

interests within associations. Two completed projects, Werner Eichhorst’s<br />

study on the Posted Workers Directive and Ute Hartenberger-Knaak’s research on<br />

the Social Dialogue, were doctoral dissertations that, among other things, investigated<br />

the interplay between national and European organized interests on specific<br />

issues, showing how European institutions often and increasingly serve as<br />

extended playing fields or observation posts for national interests. This is also the<br />

context of the study by Franciszek Draus on employer associations in Eastern and<br />

Central Europe, which was conducted in cooperation with the European Trade<br />

Union Institute (ETUI) in Brussels.<br />

Recently two projects with a more theoretical outlook have been added to the<br />

cluster. One, organized by Wolfgang Streeck with Kathleen Thelen of Northwestern<br />

University, explores the dynamics of institutional change in contemporary political<br />

economies. The other, in which Streeck and Höpner collaborate with Robert<br />

Boyer and Bruno Amable (CEPREMAP, Paris) and with Colin Crouch (European<br />

University Institute, Florence), investigates the meaning of “complementarity” be-


tween institutions, in particular economic institutions in advanced capitalist societies.<br />

Both projects take up issues and questions that arose within previous research,<br />

for example on the impact of internationalization on German labor relations.<br />

Science, Technology and Systems of Innovation<br />

Responsibility for this group of projects is shared between<br />

the directors. The group included a number of<br />

projects and covered a range of subjects that were carried<br />

over from the first research program, in particular<br />

relating to the development and governance of<br />

large technological systems (großtechnische Systeme)<br />

and to the operation of science as a social system.<br />

Other projects focussed on the influence of national<br />

and local institutional settings on the capacity to<br />

innovate and on the societal impact of technical<br />

innovations, in particular the Internet.<br />

A research project conducted by Renate Mayntz on<br />

the interface of science and society at Max Planck<br />

Institutes was undertaken in response to a request of<br />

the President of the Max Planck Society. It examined how the social environment<br />

of institutes affects the choice of research topics and thus, in the aggregate, the<br />

direction of scientific development. The work of Helmut Voelzkow and others on<br />

the governance of innovation in local economies was carried out in close cooperation<br />

with the External Member of the <strong>MPIfG</strong>, Colin Crouch, of the European<br />

University Institute in Florence. Analyzing specialized clusters of small and<br />

medium-sized enterprises in Britain, France, Germany and Italy, the study showed<br />

the diversity of the forms and effects of the integration of small firms into local<br />

production systems. A spin-off from this larger project was Ulrich Glassmann’s<br />

study on the institutional infrastructure of the mechanical engineering sector in<br />

Baden-Württemberg and Emilia-Romagna, which will result in a doctoral dissertation.<br />

The <strong>MPIfG</strong> is also strongly represented in the rapidly growing field of research<br />

on the Internet. Raymund Werle finished a project on its evolution and development.<br />

The comparative study identifies institutional factors that explain the success<br />

of the Internet, which has developed from a research and education network<br />

into a commercially viable global network while similar European networks failed.<br />

With its global expansion, the mode of coordinating and controlling the network<br />

has changed. In his dissertation project – finished at the end of 2002 and<br />

supervised by Raymund Werle – Volker Leib looked at the emergence of a private<br />

organization called ICANN. First devoted merely to technical coordination,<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

Volker Leib Raymund Werle<br />

19


20<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Problem-Solving Effectiveness of Multilevel<br />

Governing in Europe<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

In this book project, the conceptual framework that was presented<br />

in the <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 01/4 will be developed<br />

further, and it will be fleshed out or corrected through secondary<br />

analyses of empirical research on multilevel European<br />

policy making. Original empirical research will focus on the<br />

problem-solving effectiveness of the new mode of “open coordination.”<br />

Project duration: July 2001 to December 2002.<br />

ICANN has become involved in economic and political issues, confronting the<br />

organization with problems of representation, legitimacy and democratic control<br />

for which it appeared to be ill-equipped. Moreover, as a member of the steering<br />

committee Raymund Werle was involved in a collaborative project on “Global Networks<br />

and Local Values,” which explored the potential impacts of the Internet on<br />

social values in Germany and the United States and developed guidelines for<br />

governments on how to cope with the resulting policy issues. The project brought<br />

together lawyers, economists, social scientists and IT experts from the United<br />

States and Germany. It was coordinated by the Computer Science and Telecommunications<br />

Board (CSTB) of the U.S. National Research Council (NRC) and<br />

the German Max Planck Project Group on Common Goods (Bonn). The steering<br />

committee’s final report was published by the NRC at the end of 2001. In 2002 a<br />

German version was published.<br />

Finally, Werle was a member of the project group “Trade, Investment and Competition<br />

Policies in the Global Economy: The Case of the International Telecommunications<br />

Regime,” which was coordinated by the Hamburger Weltwirtschaftsarchiv<br />

(HWWA) and the Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI) in Rome. He contributed<br />

a study of the role of technical standards and standardization organizations<br />

in the emerging free trade regime in telecommunications.<br />

Completed Projects 1999–2002<br />

Multilevel Problem Solving in European Public Policy<br />

Completed Projects<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

European Governance: Common Concerns vs. The Challenge of<br />

Diversity. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 01/6. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 2001<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

What Have We Learned? Problem-Solving Capacity of the<br />

Multilevel European Polity. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 01/4.<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

2001. Online:


Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Was man von einer europäischen Verfassung erwarten und<br />

nicht erwarten sollte. In: Blätter für deutsche und internationale<br />

Politik, Januar 2003, 49–59<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Legitimate Diversity: The New Challenge of European Integration.<br />

In: Staats- und Europawissenschaften, Vol. 1, Heft 1,<br />

32–60 (2003)<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Regieren im europäischen Mehrebenensystem: Ansätze zu<br />

einer Theorie. In: Leviathan, Vol. 30, No. 1, 65–92 (2002)<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

The European Social Model: Coping with the Challenges of<br />

Diversity. In: Journal of Common Market Studies, Vol. 40, No.<br />

4, 645–670 (2002)<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Globalization and the Welfare State: Constraints, Challenges,<br />

and Vulnerabilities. In: Roland Sigg, Christina Behrendt<br />

(eds.), Social Security in the Global Village. New Brunswick:<br />

Transaction, 2002, 85–116<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Democratic Legitimacy under Conditions of Regulatory<br />

Competition: Why Europe Differs from the United States. In:<br />

Kalypso Nicolaidis, Robert Howse (eds.), The Federal Vision:<br />

Legitimacy and Levels of Governance in the United States and<br />

the European Union. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001,<br />

355–374<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Notes Toward a Theory of Multilevel Governing in Europe.<br />

In: Scandinavian Political Studies, Vol. 24, No. 1, 1–26 (2001)<br />

Pension Reform Politics in International<br />

Comparison<br />

Martin Schludi<br />

National pension schemes are facing substantial pressure to<br />

adapt to international competition and demographic change,<br />

especially in countries where the public/private pension mix<br />

is dominated by a publicly financed, pay-as-you-go system<br />

(so-called Bismarck systems). This study analyzes the conditions<br />

under which pension systems in such countries can<br />

become more fiscally stable and efficient, especially by<br />

expanding the role of private and fully-funded pension plans.<br />

Thus far, there has been little systematic, comparative empirical<br />

research on the scope and effectiveness of such reform.<br />

This doctoral project aims to close this gap and to examine<br />

the economic, institutional and political factors which have<br />

favored, hampered or even prevented the development of<br />

effective pension policies. It departs from a hypothesis that<br />

the political feasibility of such reforms heavily depends on the<br />

government’s ability to orchestrate a reform consensus either<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

Martin Schludi Jürgen Feick<br />

with the parliamentary opposition or with the trade unions.<br />

Project duration: January 2000 to December 2002.<br />

Martin Schludi<br />

The Reform of Bismarckian Pension Systems: A Comparison of<br />

Pension Politics in Austria, France, Germany, Italy and Sweden.<br />

Doctoral thesis. Humboldt-Universität Berlin, Faculty of Arts<br />

III. December 2002<br />

Martin Schludi<br />

The Politics of Pensions in European Social Insurance Countries.<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 01/11. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 2001, 49 pp.<br />

The Regulation of Pharmaceutical Products<br />

in Europe<br />

Jürgen Feick<br />

In the early sixties the European Commission started discussions<br />

about market entry regulation for pharmaceuticals parallel<br />

to and in interdependence with similar national efforts.<br />

The Commission tried to avoid divergent national policies<br />

which would hinder the establishment of the Single Market.<br />

In a first phase legal harmonization was supposed to, but in<br />

fact did not assure mutual recognition of the Member State<br />

authorities’ regulatory decisions. In a second phase, more<br />

detailed harmonization directives have been introduced<br />

alongside procedural cooperation measures. These further<br />

attempts proved inadequate, too, resulting eventually in the<br />

institutionalization of a European Evaluation Agency and the<br />

introduction of a centralized European procedure – albeit<br />

limited to innovative pharmaceuticals. Today, three distinctive<br />

procedures exist within the EC: the centralized procedure<br />

dominated by European regulators; the decentralized procedure,<br />

which is nationally dominated but potentially subject to<br />

strong EC influence; and purely national market entries. This<br />

project analyzes the transnationalization of pharmaceutical<br />

21


22<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

regulation; the interest structures, interaction logics, conflict<br />

potentials and developmental trajectories embedded in the<br />

existing regimes; and their effectiveness in terms of the substantive<br />

goals and the institutional capacities of European<br />

governing. Project duration: June 2001 to December 2002.<br />

Jürgen Feick<br />

Regulatory Europeanization, National Autonomy and Regulatory<br />

Effectiveness: Marketing Authorization for Pharmaceuticals.<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 02/6. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 2002, 55 pp.<br />

Jürgen Feick<br />

Wissen, Expertise und regulative Politik – das Beispiel der<br />

Arzneimittelkontrolle. In: Uwe Schimank, Raymund Werle<br />

(eds.), Gesellschaftliche Komplexität und kollektive Handlungsfähigkeit.<br />

Frankfurt a.M.: Campus, 2000, 208–238.<br />

Jürgen Feick<br />

Arzneimittelzulassung: Nationale Regulierung, internationale<br />

Harmonisierung und europäische Integration. In: Roland<br />

Czada, Susanne Lütz (eds.), Die politische Konstitution von<br />

Märkten. Wiesbaden: Westdeutscher Verlag, 2000, 228–248<br />

Adjusting National Tax Policy to Economic<br />

Internationalization<br />

Steffen Ganghof<br />

Increasing economic internationalization puts pressure on<br />

national tax systems. Yet political scientists know relatively<br />

little about the political economy of domestic tax policy<br />

adjustment. Existing studies have focused either on tax policy<br />

coordination at the international level or on aggregate changes<br />

in national tax systems, i.e. changes in the overall tax burden<br />

or the relative shares of capital and labor taxes. This doctoral<br />

project takes a closer look at policy adjustment in the<br />

area of income taxation in advanced OECD countries since<br />

the 1980s. It distinguishes and characterizes different sources<br />

of competitive pressures and the corresponding policy responses.<br />

It analyzes the linkages between different options for<br />

policy adjustment, the new or increasingly severe trade-offs<br />

between different goals of national tax policy, and the impact<br />

of political and institutional factors on government’s decisions<br />

(and non-decisions) for particular paths of policy<br />

adjustment. The study combines three types of methods: statistical<br />

analysis of tax policies in advanced OECD countries,<br />

qualitative (“matched”) comparisons of the economics and<br />

politics of adjustment in seven OECD countries (Australia,<br />

Denmark, Finland, Germany, New Zealand, Norway and<br />

Sweden), and in-depth analysis and narrative of the political<br />

economy of adjustment in Germany. Project duration: August<br />

1999 to October 2002.<br />

Steffen Ganghof<br />

Parties, Power and Progressivity: On the Political Economy of<br />

Income Taxation in Open States. Doctoral thesis. University of<br />

Bremen, Department of Social Sciences. January 2003.<br />

Philipp Genschel and Steffen Ganghof<br />

Steffen Ganghof<br />

Global Markets, National Tax Systems, and Domestic Politics:<br />

Rebalancing Efficiency and Equity in Open States’ Income Taxation.<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 01/9. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 2001<br />

Steffen Ganghof<br />

Adjusting National Tax Policy to Economic Internationalization:<br />

Strategies and Outcomes. In: Fritz W. Scharpf, Vivien<br />

A. Schmidt (eds.), Welfare and Work in the Open Economy. Vol.<br />

II: Diverse Responses to Common Challenges. Oxford: Oxford<br />

University Press, 2000, 597–645<br />

Steffen Ganghof<br />

Steuerwettbewerb und Vetospieler: Stimmt die These der blockierten<br />

Anpassung? In: Politische Vierteljahresschrift, Vol. 40,<br />

No. 3, 458–472 (1999)<br />

Democratic Politics in International Multilevel<br />

Governance Systems: The Regulation of<br />

Genetically Modified Plants and Food<br />

Susanne Lütz and William D. Coleman (McMaster University,<br />

Hamilton/Ontario)<br />

In an increasing number of policy domains, key policy decisions<br />

are no longer being made at the national level, but in<br />

supranational or intergovernmental organizations operating<br />

at a global level. Political scientists have only just begun to<br />

assess the implications of this shift of decision-making authority<br />

from national to multilevel systems for domestic processes<br />

of policy making and for patterns of interest intermediation.<br />

This research gap is especially significant because the<br />

migration of decision-making away from national governing<br />

systems also weakens traditional channels of democratic legitimation.<br />

Drawing specifically on the case of the regulation of<br />

genetically modified foods, the project looks at how decision-


making processes and the strategies of interest intermediation<br />

have changed in the past ten years. The key changes will be<br />

analyzed and their implications for democratic politics will be<br />

assessed. This two-year comparative study focuses on developments<br />

in Germany, the United Kingdom, the United States<br />

and Canada. It is supported by the Max Planck Society, the<br />

Bennigsen-Foerder Prize of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia,<br />

and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research<br />

Council of Canada. Project duration: March 2000 to September<br />

2002.<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Interests, Institutions and the Politics of Regulation: Agricultural<br />

Biotechnology in the United States and the European<br />

Union (unpublished manuscript)<br />

Financial Policy and the Labor Market in the<br />

Netherlands<br />

Eric Seils<br />

After the first oil crisis many countries suffered from rapidly<br />

increasing public spending, high deficits, and soaring unemployment.<br />

The Netherlands, however, stands out as one of the<br />

few countries that have regained full employment and balanced<br />

budgets in the post-Keynesian era. To what extent can<br />

this be attributed to conscious policy decisions? What role<br />

have actor constellations and budget institutions played?<br />

These questions are the focus of this doctoral project. In 1983<br />

the government shifted to supply-side financial policy involving<br />

a reduction of public outlays, the deficit, and the tax<br />

wedge in order to combat unemployment. Successive governments<br />

incorporated budget institutions into their coalition<br />

agreements which helped them to overcome the problem of<br />

fiscal illusion and to achieve expenditure restraint. Finally, it<br />

can be shown that the tax wedge had a significant impact on<br />

the development of unemployment in the period between<br />

1973 and 2001. The dissertation aims to make a contribution<br />

to the theory of budget institutions. Methodologically, the<br />

study draws on diachronic comparisons as well as “process<br />

tracing.” Project duration: August 1999 to July 2002.<br />

Eric Seils<br />

Finanzpolitik und Arbeitsmarkt in den Niederlanden: Haushaltsinstitutionen,<br />

Koalitionsverträge und die Beschäftigungswirkung<br />

von Abgaben. Doctoral thesis. FernUniversität Hagen,<br />

Department of Education, Social Sciences and Humanities,<br />

August 2002<br />

Tax Competition and Tax Harmonization in<br />

Europe: The Tax Policy of the European Union<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

The globalization of markets makes it increasingly easy for<br />

taxpayers to evade high national taxes on mobile assets by<br />

moving the tax base abroad. Competition for mobile taxpay-<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

ers leads governments to lower taxes. This results in revenue<br />

losses, expenditure cutbacks, and higher taxes on less mobile<br />

taxpayers. Yet, in contrast to other policy areas where states<br />

have established international regimes to help coordinate<br />

their national policies, multilateral cooperation to stop tax<br />

competition has proven to be extremely difficult. Even in the<br />

EU, where the economic integration is deeper and the record<br />

of successful cooperation better than anywhere else in the<br />

world, attempts to regulate tax competition collectively have<br />

mostly failed. The study analyzes the causes of and possible<br />

remedies for tax competition in the EU by examining three<br />

tax areas offering widely differing degrees of tax base mobility:<br />

value-added taxes, business taxes, and interest taxes.<br />

Project duration: September 1996 to March 2002.<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

Tax Competition in the Single Market: A Policy Constraint for<br />

the European Welfare State. In: Michael Dauderstädt, Lothar<br />

Witte (eds.), Work and Welfare in the Enlarging Euroland.<br />

Bonn: Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 2002, 75–98<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

Steuerwettbewerb und Steuerharmonisierung in der Europäischen<br />

Union. Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung<br />

Köln, Bd. 44. Frankfurt a.M.: Campus,<br />

2002<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

Globalization, Tax Competition and the Welfare State. In:<br />

Politics & Society, Vol. 30, No. 2, 244–274 (2002)<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

Steuerharmonisierung und Steuerwettbewerb in Europa: Die<br />

Steuerpolitik der Europäischen Union. Habilitation thesis.<br />

University of Konstanz, Department of Politics and Management,<br />

April 2001, 291 pp.<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

Der Wohlfahrtsstaat im Steuerwettbewerb. In: Zeitschrift für<br />

Internationale Beziehungen, Vol. 7, No. 2, 267-296 (2000)<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

Grenzen der Problemlösungsfähigkeit der EU: Steuerharmonisierung<br />

und Währungsintegration im Vergleich. In: Edgar<br />

Grande, Markus Jachtenfuchs (eds.), Wie problemlösungsfähig<br />

ist die EU? Regieren im europäischen Mehrebenensystem. Baden-Baden:<br />

Nomos, 2000, 191–207<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

Markt und Staat in Europa. In: Politische Vierteljahresschrift,<br />

Vol. 39, No. 1, 55-79 (1998)<br />

Philipp Genschel, Thomas Plümper<br />

Wettbewerb und Kooperation in der internationalen Finanzmarktregulierung.<br />

In: Andreas Busch, Thomas Plümper<br />

(eds.), Nationaler Staat und internationale Wirtschaft. Anmerkungen<br />

zum Thema Globalisierung. Baden-Baden: Nomos,<br />

1999, 251–275<br />

Philipp Genschel, Thomas Plümper<br />

Regulatory Competition and International Co-operation. In:<br />

Journal of European Public Policy, Vol. 4, No. 4, 626–642<br />

(1997)<br />

23


24<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Vivek H. Dehejia, Philipp Genschel<br />

Tax Competition in the European Union. In: Politics &<br />

Society, Vol. 27, No. 3, 403–430 (1999)<br />

How Intergovernmental Are Intergovernmental<br />

Conferences? (Conference Project)<br />

Gerda Falkner with Philip Budden (London), Thomas<br />

Christiansen (University of Aberystwyth, UK), Knud Erik<br />

Jorgensen (University of Aarhus, DK), Ulf Sverdrup (ARENA,<br />

Oslo)<br />

Intergovernmental Conferences are the arena in which<br />

reforms of the basic Treaties of the European Union and the<br />

European Communities are negotiated. The common understanding,<br />

particularly in intergovernmentalist integration<br />

theory, has been that only the governments of the member<br />

states are relevant actors at that level of EU decision-making.<br />

EU constitutional reform has, however, become an almost<br />

permanent feature of political life since the 1990s (and yet<br />

another Intergovernmental Conference is forthcoming in<br />

2004). There are indicators that this increases the role of<br />

actors besides the national governments. For example, the EC<br />

institutions (notably the European Commission and the<br />

European Parliament) and some Euro-level interest groups<br />

may actually be more influential than hitherto expected. If<br />

and how so, remains to be established. The project aims to<br />

contribute to this debate on the basis of comparative work on<br />

a number of different Intergovernmental Conferences and/or<br />

actor categories involved in them. A number of authors who<br />

have already been working individually on Intergovernmental<br />

Conferences will meet and work together on a special issue of<br />

the Journal of European Public Policy (JEPP) focusing on<br />

aspects which endanger the EU’s problem-solving potential<br />

(such as the joint-decision trap due to unanimity requirements<br />

in European Council meetings) and factors which may<br />

facilitate EU reform (such as positive cooperation effects from<br />

long-term processes of joint policy-making in day-to-day<br />

practice). Project duration: January 2000 to February 2002.<br />

Gerda Falkner (ed.)<br />

EU Treaty Reform Beyond Diplomacy and Bargaining: New<br />

Institutionalist Perspectives. Journal of European Public Policy,<br />

Special Issue, Vol. 9, No. 1 (2002), 146 pp.<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

EU Treaty Reform as a Three-level Process. Introduction. In:<br />

Journal of European Public Policy, Special Issue, Vol. 9, No. 1,<br />

1–11 (2002)<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

How Intergovernmental are Intergovernmental Conferences?<br />

The Maastricht Treaty Reform and the Europeanisation of<br />

Social Policy. In: Journal of European Public Policy, Special<br />

Issue, Vol. 9, No. 1, 98–119 (2002)<br />

Thomas Christiansen, Gerda Falkner, Knud Erik Jorgensen<br />

Theorizing EU Treaty Reform: Beyond Diplomacy and<br />

Bargaining. In: Journal of European Public Policy, Special Issue,<br />

Vol. 9, No. 1, 12–32 (2002)<br />

Stabilizing Economic Output in a Monetary<br />

Union: The Impact of the Economic and<br />

Monetary Union (EMU) on Fiscal Policy and<br />

Wage-Bargaining Institutions<br />

Henrik Enderlein<br />

What happens to domestic economic policymaking when a<br />

country joins a monetary union? As many economists have<br />

pointed out, the absence of a national central bank will<br />

increase pressure on fiscal policy and wage-setting institutions<br />

to stabilize cyclical overreactions. Using this literature as<br />

a starting point and discussing the links between economic<br />

policy institutions and their capacity to be used as cyclical stabilizers,<br />

this dissertation project analyzes the pressure on fiscal<br />

policy and wage-bargaining institutions in every member<br />

state to adjust to Economic and Monetary Union in Europe.<br />

It points out that although the functional need to adjust to<br />

EMU may be similar in all member states, different institutions<br />

in different countries lead to different perceptions of the<br />

policy problem and to different functionally equivalent options<br />

to solve the problem. Estimating and evaluating the role<br />

monetary policy has played during the pre-EMU era, this dissertation<br />

presents hypotheses on how institutional or behavioral<br />

changes may help fill the gap left by the central bank in<br />

each specific national environment. Project duration: September<br />

1999 to November 2001.<br />

Henrik Enderlein<br />

Wirtschaftspolitik in der Währungsunion: Die Auswirkungen<br />

der Europäischen Wirtschafts- und Währungsunion auf die<br />

finanz- und lohnpolitischen Institutionen in den Mitgliedsländern.<br />

Doctoral thesis. University of Bremen, Department of<br />

Business Studies and Economics, 2002<br />

The Implementation of European Structural<br />

Fund Programs in North Rhine-Westphalia<br />

Helmut Voelzkow, Rolf G. Heinze (Ruhr University, Bochum)<br />

and Volker Eichener (Ruhr University, Bochum)<br />

Several subprojects sponsored by the state government of<br />

North Rhine-Westphalia will evaluate the impact of programs<br />

supported by the European Structural Fund in the German<br />

federal state of North Rhine-Westphalia. In its analysis of programs<br />

in North Rhine-Westphalia supported financially by<br />

the European Regional Fund (EFRE), the European Social<br />

Fund (ESF) or the European Agricultural Guarantee and<br />

Guidance Fund (EAGFL), the study will look at the programs’<br />

strategy, their implementation, their impact and their goal<br />

achievement. Research will also focus on intergovernmental<br />

coordination problems that emerge when support programs


are implemented within the context of multilevel European<br />

structural policy. The projects are being conducted jointly<br />

with the Institute for Housing, Real Estate, Urban and Regional<br />

Development (InWIS) at the Ruhr University in Bochum.<br />

Project duration: October 1996 to September 2001.<br />

Andrea Hoppe, Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Angleichung und Differenzierung in der Europäischen Regionalpolitik:<br />

Deutschland und Großbritannien im Vergleich.<br />

In: Ingeborg Tömmel (ed.), Europäische Integration als Prozess<br />

von Angleichung und Differenzierung. Opladen: Leske + Budrich,<br />

2001, 187–210<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Raumordnungs- und Regionalpolitik: Rahmenbedingungen,<br />

Entwicklungen und Perspektiven. In: Everhard Holtmann,<br />

Thomas Ellwein (eds.), 50 Jahre Bundesrepublik Deutschland.<br />

Rahmenbedingungen – Entwicklungen – Perspektiven. PVS-<br />

Sonderheft 30. Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag, 1999, 279–296<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Regieren im Europa der Regionen. Vom Wohlfahrtsstaat zum<br />

Wettbewerbsstaat, vom Makro-Korporatismus zum Meso-<br />

Korporatismus? In: Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landeskunde<br />

und Raumordnung (ed.), Informationen zur Raumentwicklung,<br />

Vol. 9, No. 10, 507–516 (2000)<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Kooperation im Schatten der Hierarchie. Handlungsalternativen<br />

in der Strukturpolitik im deutsch-britischen Vergleich. In:<br />

Akademie für Raumforschung und Landesplanung (ed.),<br />

Kooperation im Prozess des räumlichen Strukturwandels. Wissenschaftliche<br />

Plenarsitzung 1999. Hannover: ARL, 2000,<br />

16–30<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Europäische Regionalpolitik zwischen Brüssel, Bonn und den<br />

Ländern. In: Hans-Ulrich Derlien, Axel Murswieck (eds.), Der<br />

Politikzyklus zwischen Brüssel und Bonn. Opladen: Leske +<br />

Budrich, 1999, 105–120<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Intergouvernementale Abstimmungsprobleme im deutschen<br />

Implementationsnetzwerk der Europäischen Regionalpolitik.<br />

In: Everhard Holtmann, Ulrich Hilpert (eds.), Regieren und<br />

intergouvernementale Beziehungen. Opladen: Leske + Budrich,<br />

1998, 257–276<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Inszenierter Korporatismus:<br />

Neue Formen strukturpolitischer<br />

Steuerung auf regionaler<br />

Ebene. In: Hans-Joachim<br />

Kujath (ed.), Strategien regionaler<br />

Stabilisierung. Wirtschaftliche<br />

Antworten auf<br />

die Internationalisierung des<br />

Raumes. Berlin: edition sigma,<br />

1998, 215–232<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

Incorporating Aspects of Environmental<br />

Protection into Product Standardization<br />

Helmut Voelzkow and Volker Eichener (Ruhr University,<br />

Bochum)<br />

Since product standards have a strong impact on environmental<br />

protection, the public agencies in Germany involved<br />

in environmental protection (particularly the Federal Ministry<br />

for the Environment and the Federal Environmental<br />

Agency) have appealed for years to the national agencies responsible<br />

for setting technical standards (particularly to DIN,<br />

the German Standards Association) to ensure that environmental<br />

concerns are considered when new product standards<br />

are developed. But as European integration increases, technical<br />

standards are often set at the European level, having been<br />

developed within the framework of a complex multilevel system<br />

of national and European standardization organizations.<br />

This is why the Federal Ministry for the Environment and the<br />

Federal Environmental Agency are trying to adapt procedures<br />

originally conceived to represent environmental concerns at<br />

the national level to policy-making at the European level. The<br />

project analyzes the effectiveness of these efforts. In a second<br />

step, it will describe and assess possible avenues of reform.<br />

The project, which is funded by a grant from the German<br />

Federal Environmental Agency, is being conducted jointly<br />

with the Institute for Housing, Real Estate, Urban and Regional<br />

Development (InWIS) at the Ruhr University in Bochum.<br />

Project duration: October 1998 to June 2001.<br />

Helmut Voelzkow, Bettina Lehwald, Ragna Mund, Ute<br />

Schüwer, Sebastian Groth<br />

Die Einbeziehung von Umweltschutzinteressen in die Produktnormung.<br />

Endbericht einer Untersuchung für das Umweltbundesamt.<br />

Köln 2002<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Die Stärkung von Umweltinteressen in der europäischen<br />

Produktnormung. In: Martin Führ (ed.), Stoffstromsteuerung<br />

durch Produktregulierung. Rechtliche, ökonomische und politische<br />

Fragen. Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2000, 129–142<br />

Dorothea Jansen, Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Umwelt- und sozialverträgliches Wirtschaften im vereinten<br />

Europa: Eine Einführung in die Problemstellung. In: Zeitschrift<br />

für Rechtssoziologie, Vol. 20, No. 2, 191–205 (1999)<br />

The Regulatory State in an Era of Financial<br />

Globalization: The Regulation of Banking and<br />

Securities Markets in Transition<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Regulatory policies that seek to protect consumers by correcting<br />

market failures have gained in importance in an era of<br />

economic globalization. In the field of financial services, for<br />

example, service providers can gain competitive advantages<br />

25


26<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

by accepting higher risks, which will reduce the level of protection<br />

worldwide. At the same time, the capacity of the<br />

nation-state to regulate financial operations seems to be<br />

increasingly restricted by the pressures of competition among<br />

international financial centers. Thus, there is widespread pessimism<br />

that anticipates the level of national regulatory standards<br />

being reduced by international “races to the bottom.” To<br />

test this hypothesis, the project looks at two core sectors of<br />

financial regulation, banking and securities markets. The<br />

focus is on the restructuring of domestic regulatory models,<br />

on the mechanisms of change and on the implications for<br />

national problem-solving capacities. The study considers<br />

developments in the United States, Great Britain and in<br />

Germany. Project duration: March 1994 to April 2001.<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Der Staat und die Globalisierung von Finanzmärkten. Regulative<br />

Politik in Deutschland, Großbritannien und den USA.<br />

Schriftenreihe des Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung,<br />

Bd. 43. Frankfurt a.M.: Campus, 2002, 354 pp. (habilitation<br />

thesis)<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Die politische Architektur von Finanzmärkten. In: Christine<br />

Landfried (ed.), Politik in einer entgrenzten Welt. 21. wissenschaftlicher<br />

Kongress der Deutschen Vereinigung für Politische<br />

Wissenschaft. Kongressband. Cologne: Verlag Wissenschaft<br />

und Politik, 2002, 119–133<br />

Roland Czada, Susanne Lütz, Stefan Mette<br />

Regulative Politik: Zähmungen von Markt und Technik.<br />

Grundwissen Politik, Bd. 28. Opladen: Leske + Budrich, 2002,<br />

250 pp.<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Globalisierung und die Regulierung von Finanzmärkten im<br />

politischen Mehrebenensystem. In: Claus Leggewie, Richard<br />

Münch (eds.), Politik im 21. Jahrhundert. Frankfurt a.M.:<br />

Suhrkamp, 2001, 443–457<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Zwischen Markt und Mehrebenensystem: Der regulative Staat<br />

im Zeichen von Internationalisierung. In: Heidrun Abromeit,<br />

Jörg-Uwe Nieland, Thomas Schierl (eds.), Politik, Medien,<br />

Technik. Festschrift für Heribert Schatz. Wiesbaden: Westdeutscher<br />

Verlag, 2001, 109–121<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

From Managed to Market Capitalism? German Finance in<br />

Transition. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 00/2. Cologne: Max<br />

Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, 2000, 28 pp.<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Die politische Regulierung globaler Finanzrisiken. In: Roland<br />

Czada, Susanne Lütz (eds.), Die politische Konstitution von<br />

Märkten. Wiesbaden: Westdeutscher Verlag, 2000, 250–264<br />

Richard Deeg, Susanne Lütz<br />

Internationalization and Financial Federalism. The United<br />

States and Germany at the Crossroads? In: Comparative<br />

Political Studies, Vol. 33, No. 3, 374–405 (2000)<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

From Managed to Market Capitalism? German Finance in<br />

Transition. In: German Politics, Vol. 9, No. 2, 149–171 (2000)<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Vom koordinierten zum marktorientierten Kapitalismus? Der<br />

deutsche Finanzsektor im Umbruch. In: Roland Czada, Hellmut<br />

Wollmann (eds.), Von der Bonner zur Berliner Republik.<br />

10 Jahre deutsche Einheit. Leviathan-Sonderheft 19. Opladen:<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag, 2000, 651–670<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Globalisierung und die politische Regulierung von Finanzmärkten.<br />

In: Prokla 118, Vol. 31, No. 1. Schwerpunktheft Reregulierung<br />

der Weltwirtschaft, 61–83 (2000)<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Vom koordinierten zum marktorientierten Kapitalismus? Der<br />

deutsche Finanzsektor im Umbruch. Polis-Arbeitspapiere Nr.<br />

44. Hagen: Institut für Politikwissenschaft der FernUniversität<br />

Hagen, 1999, 22 pp.<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Globalisierung und der regulative Umbau des “Modells<br />

Deutschland”: Das Beispiel der Bankenregulierung. In:<br />

Hanns-Georg Brose, Helmut Voelzkow (eds.), Institutioneller<br />

Kontext wirtschaftlichen Handelns und Globalisierung. Marburg:<br />

Metropolis, 1999, 205–233<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Der regulative Staat in Zeiten der Globalisierung. In: Gottfried<br />

Böttger, Klaus Götz, Wolfgang Hesse, Markus Hug<br />

(eds.), Politik und Weltgesellschaft: Globalisierung als Chance.<br />

München/Mering: Rainer Hampp Verlag, 1999, 119–129<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Zwischen “Regime” und “kooperativem Staat” – Bankenregulierung<br />

im internationalen Mehrebenensystem. In: Zeitschrift<br />

für Internationale Beziehungen, Vol. 6, No. 1, 9–41 (1999)<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Finanzmärkte brauchen staatliche Aufsicht. Entwicklungsmuster<br />

nationaler und internationaler Finanzmarktregulierung.<br />

In: E+Z Entwicklung und Zusammenarbeit, Vol. 40, No.<br />

3, 76–79 (1999)<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Wenn Banken sich vergessen: Risikoregulierung im internationalen<br />

Mehrebenensystem. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 98/5. Cologne:<br />

Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, 1998,<br />

32 pp.<br />

Richard Deeg, Susanne Lütz<br />

Internationalization and Financial Federalism: The United<br />

States and Germany at the Crossroads? <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion<br />

Paper 98/7. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of<br />

Societies, 1998, 33 pp.<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

The Revival of the Nation-state? Stock Exchange Regulation<br />

in an Era of Globalized Financial Markets. In: Journal of European<br />

Public Policy, Vol. 5, No. 1, 153–169 (1998)


Susanne Lütz<br />

Bringing the State Back In? Stock Exchange Regulation in an<br />

Era of Internationalized Financial Markets. University of Essex:<br />

Human Capital and Mobility Network, Occasional Paper<br />

No. 27, 1997, 27 pp.<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Von der Selbstverwaltung zur Hierarchie? Börsenregulierung<br />

im Zeichen der Globalisierung von Kapitalmärkten. In: Stefan<br />

Hradil (ed.), Differenz und Integration. Die Zukunft moderner<br />

Gesellschaften. Frankfurt a.M.: Campus, 1997, 740–750<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Die Rückkehr des Nationalstaates? Kapitalmarktregulierung<br />

im Zeichen der Internationalisierung von Finanzmärkten. In:<br />

Politische Vierteljahresschrift, Vol. 38, No. 3, 475–498 (1997)<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

The Revival of the Nation-State? Stock Exchange Regulation in<br />

an Era of Internationalized Financial Markets. <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Discussion Paper 96/9. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 1996, 37 pp.<br />

Adjustment of National Employment and<br />

Social Policy Systems to the Internationalized<br />

Economy<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf and Vivien Schmidt (Boston University) with<br />

Anton Hemerijck (Erasmus University Rotterdam), Steffen<br />

Ganghof, Martin Schludi and Eric Seils<br />

The purpose of the project is to identify challenges to the<br />

employment and social policy performance of advanced welfare<br />

states arising from changes in the international economic<br />

environment after the early 1970s. Based on a comprehensive<br />

set of internationally comparative time series data and a<br />

background document explicating a set of working hypotheses<br />

derived from the literature, the main product of the project<br />

are comparable country studies covering the policy experience<br />

between the early 1970s and the late 1990s of Austria,<br />

Australia, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the<br />

Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden, Switzerland, and the<br />

United Kingdom. In addition, a number of special studies<br />

have examined such issues as the development of female labor<br />

participation, of early retirement, of international tax competition,<br />

and of the liberalization and deregulation of public<br />

services. On the basis of these studies, comparative analyses<br />

have specifically focused on differences in the vulnerability<br />

and the institutional capability of individual welfare states, on<br />

the sequencing of policy responses and their effectiveness,<br />

and on the role of values and discourses in the politics of<br />

adjustment. Participants in the project are colleagues from<br />

nine countries. The overall research design, the working<br />

hypotheses, early drafts and second drafts were discussed at a<br />

series of conferences and smaller workshops in Cologne, at<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

the European University Institute in Florence, and at the Max<br />

Planck Conference Center at Ringberg Castle. The studies<br />

produced by the project were published in two volumes by<br />

Oxford University Press in 2000. Project duration: September<br />

1997 to March 2000.<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf, Vivien A. Schmidt (eds.)<br />

Welfare and Work in the Open Economy. Volume I: From Vulnerability<br />

to Competitiveness. Oxford: Oxford University Press,<br />

2000, 416 pp.<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf, Vivien A. Schmidt (eds.)<br />

Welfare and Work in the Open Economy. Volume II: Diverse<br />

Responses to Common Challenges. Oxford: Oxford University<br />

Press, 2000, 678 pp.<br />

Maurizio Ferrera, Anton Hemerijck, Martin Rhodes<br />

The Future of Social Europe. Recasting Work and Welfare in the<br />

New Economy. Oeiras/Portugal: Celta, 2000, 149 pp.<br />

Maurizio Ferrera, Elisabetta Gualmini<br />

Salvati dall’Europa? Bologna: Società Editrice il Mulino, 1999,<br />

175 pp.<br />

Maurizio Ferrera, Elisabetta Gualmini<br />

Rescue from Without? Italian Social Policies 1970–1999 and the<br />

Challenges of Internationalization. EUI Working Paper, EUF<br />

99/13. Florence: European University Institute, 1999, 58 pp.<br />

Steffen Ganghof<br />

Adjusting National Tax Policy to Economic Internationalization:<br />

Strategies and Outcomes. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 99/6.<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

1999, 52 pp.<br />

Steffen Ganghof<br />

Steuerwettbewerb und Vetospieler: Stimmt die These der blockierten<br />

Anpassung? Politische Vierteljahresschrift, Vol. 40, No.<br />

3, 458–472 (1999)<br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Entrepreneurship Policy in an “Employment Friendly” Welfare<br />

State: The Case of the Netherlands. In: D. Foden, L.<br />

Magnusson (eds.), Entrepreneurship in the European Employment<br />

Strategy. Brussels: European Trade Union Institute,<br />

1999, 98–131<br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Prospects for Inclusive Social Citizenship in an Age of Structural<br />

Inactivity. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 99/1. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 1999. Online: <br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Welfare Without Work? Divergent Experiences of Reform in<br />

Germany and the Netherlands. In: Stein Kuhnle (ed.), Survival<br />

of the European Welfare State. London: Routledge, 2000,<br />

106–127<br />

Philip Manow, Eric Seils<br />

The Employment Crisis of the German Welfare State. West<br />

European Politics, Vol. 23, No. 1, 137–160 (2000)<br />

27


28<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

The Viability of Advanced Welfare States in the International<br />

Economy: Vulnerabilities and Options. Journal of European<br />

Public Policy, Vol. 7, No. 2, 190–228 (2000)<br />

Also published as: <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 99/9. Cologne:<br />

Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung, 1999. Online:<br />

<br />

Vivien A. Schmidt<br />

Democracy and Discourse in an Integrating Europe and a<br />

Globalizing World. European Law Journal, Vol. 6, No. 3,<br />

277–300 (2000)<br />

Vivien A. Schmidt<br />

Democrazia e discorso pubblico: Le nuove sfide. Rivista Italiana<br />

di Scienza Politica, Vol. 29, No. 2, 207–241 (1999)<br />

Vivien A. Schmidt<br />

Discorso politico e legittimazione del cambiamento delle politiche<br />

economiche e sociali in Europa. Europa/Europe, Vol. 9,<br />

No. 1, 113–136 (2000)<br />

Vivien A. Schmidt<br />

The Changing Dynamics of State-Society Relations in the<br />

Fifth Republic. West European Politics, Vol. 22, No. 4, 141–165<br />

(1999)<br />

Vivien A. Schmidt<br />

The Impact of European Integration on National Patterns of<br />

Industrial Policy-Making: The Cases of France, Great Britain,<br />

and Germany. Current Politics and Economics in Europe, Vol.<br />

9, No. 1, 1–18 (1999)<br />

Vivien A. Schmidt<br />

The Politics of Adjustment in France and Britain: When Does<br />

Discourse Matter? Journal of European Public Policy, Vol. 8,<br />

No. 2, 247–264 (2001)<br />

Increasing Employment Opportunities of Low-<br />

Skill Groups<br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Recent changes in technology and trade patterns have led to a<br />

significant decline in the demand for low-skill work in advanced<br />

industrial societies. On both sides of the Atlantic, policy<br />

makers are grappling with the mounting social problem of<br />

how to provide decent standards of living and job opportunities<br />

for those who lack marketable skills, but nevertheless wish<br />

to participate in the formal labor market. In North America,<br />

where wages are comparatively flexible, the fall in the demand<br />

for low-skill work has resulted in a massive surge of “working<br />

poor,” people working below the subsistence level. The European<br />

dilemma, by contrast, is welfare dependent inactivity –<br />

income rather than jobs. The purpose of this study was to<br />

provide systematic comparative information about novel policy<br />

proposals and assess the design, the operation, and the<br />

effectiveness of existing government programs that could<br />

plausibly increase low-skill employment in advanced welfare<br />

states. The study examined the fight against poverty and inactivity<br />

in eight advanced welfare states: Denmark, France, Germany,<br />

Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom,<br />

and the United States. In order to understand the shape, content<br />

and effectiveness of policy choices in these countries, the<br />

investigator focused on the interactive effects between the<br />

institutions of the labor market and the welfare state. Project<br />

duration: 1998–2000.<br />

Anton Hemerijck, Martin Schludi<br />

Sequences of Policy Failures and Effective Policy Responses.<br />

In: Fritz W. Scharpf, Vivien A. Schmidt (eds.), Welfare and<br />

Work in the Open Economy, Vol. I: From Vulnerability to Competitiveness.<br />

Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000, 125–228<br />

Anton Hemerijck, Brigitte Unger, Jelle Visser<br />

How Small Countries Negotiate Change: Twenty-Five Years of<br />

Policy Adjustment in Austria, the Netherlands, and Belgium.<br />

In: Fritz W. Scharpf, Vivien A. Schmidt (eds.), Welfare and<br />

Work in the Open Economy, Vol. II: Diverse Responses to<br />

Common Challenges. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000,<br />

175–263<br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Welfare Without Work? Divergent Experiences of Reform in<br />

Germany and the Netherlands. In: S. Kuhnle (ed.), Survival of<br />

the European Welfare State. London: Routledge, 2000, 106–<br />

127<br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Prospects for Basic Income in an Age of Inactivity? In: R. van<br />

der Veen, L. Groot (eds.), Basic Income on the Agenda: Policy<br />

Objectives and Political Changes. Amsterdam: Amsterdam<br />

University Press, 2000, 137–154<br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Opties voor de arbeidsmarkt en een open economie. In: Percy<br />

B. Lehning (ed.): De beleidsagenda 2000: Strijdpunten op het<br />

breukvlak van twee eeuwen. Bussum: Uitgeverij Coutinho,<br />

2000, 220–234<br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Prospects for Inclusive Social Citizenship in an Age of Structural<br />

Inactivity. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 99/1. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 1999. Online: <br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Entrepreneurship Policy in an “Employment Friendly”<br />

Welfare State: The Case of the Netherlands. In: D. Foden, L.<br />

Magnusson (eds.), Entrepreneurship in the European Employment<br />

Strategy. Brussels: European Trade Union Institute,<br />

1999, 98–131


European Decision-Making and the “Social<br />

Dialogue”<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

In several EU policy areas, there is now close cooperation between<br />

labor, business associations and political institutions.<br />

For social policy, the 1992 Maastricht Treaty formally established<br />

a corporatist decision pattern. The latter’s practical<br />

development and its specific characteristics compared to<br />

national “social partnerships” are the focus of this project<br />

which builds on the habilitation thesis “Towards a Corporatist<br />

Policy Community: EU Social Policy in the 1990s.” Theoretical<br />

as well as practical aspects of social dialogues in the<br />

European multilevel system will be studied. Conceptually, the<br />

project attempts to combine theories on corporatism and<br />

policy networks. Characteristics of “network governance” as<br />

described in the literature are confronted with practical experiences,<br />

notably from EU social policy. Structural adaptations<br />

within the major interest groups of the social dialogue are<br />

also of interest, as are the specific interaction patterns between<br />

them. Finally, the impact of European integration on<br />

national styles of interest intermediation will be assessed.<br />

Project duration: October 1998 to October 2000.<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

EU Social Policy in the 1990s: Towards a Corporatist Policy<br />

Community. (European Public Policy Series.) London: Routledge,<br />

1998<br />

Gerda Falkner, Wolfgang C. Müller (eds.)<br />

Österreich im europäischen Mehrebenensystem: Konsequenzen<br />

der EU-Mitgliedschaft für Politiknetzwerke und Entscheidungsprozesse.<br />

Vienna: Signum, 1998, 250 pp.<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

The Council or the Social Partners? EC Social Policy Between<br />

Diplomacy and Collective Bargaining. Journal of European<br />

Public Policy, Vol. 7, No. 5, 705–724 (2000)<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

How Pervasive are Euro-Politics? Effects of EU Membership<br />

on a New Member State. Journal of Common Market Studies,<br />

Vol. 38, No. 2, 223–250 (2000)<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

Policy Networks in a Multilevel System: Converging Towards<br />

Moderate Diversity? West European Politics, Vol. 23, No. 4,<br />

94–120 (2000)<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

Rappresentanza degli interessi e politiche pubbliche nell’<br />

Unione Europea. Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica, Vol. 30,<br />

No. 1, 3–41 (2000)<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

The Institutional Framework of Labour Relations at the EUlevel:<br />

Provisions and Historical Background. In: Reiner Hoffmann<br />

et al. (eds.), Transnational Industrial Relations in Europe.<br />

Düsseldorf: Hans-Böckler-Stiftung, 2000, 11–28<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

European Social Policy: Towards Multi-level and Multi-actor<br />

Governance. In: Beate Kohler-Koch, Rainer Eising (eds.), The<br />

Transformation of Governance in the European Union. London:<br />

Routledge, 1999, 83–97<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

Corporatist Governance and Europeanisation: No Future in<br />

the Multi-level Game? Current Politics and Economics of<br />

Europe, Vol. 8, No. 4, 387–412 (1999)<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

Korporatismus auf österreichischer und europäischer Ebene:<br />

Verflechtung ohne Osmose? In: Ferdinand Karlhofer, Emmerich<br />

Tálos (eds.), Sozialpartnerschaft: Wandel und Reformfähigkeit.<br />

Vienna: Signum, 1999, 215–240<br />

Austria in the European Multilevel System<br />

Gerda Falkner and Wolfgang C. Müller (University of Vienna)<br />

The project participant at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> began work on this<br />

project at the University of Vienna in 1996 and completed the<br />

research at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> in 1999.<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

How Pervasive are Euro-Politics? Effects of EU Membership on<br />

a New Member State. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 99/4. Cologne:<br />

Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, 1999, 33 pp.<br />

Gerda Falkner and Wolfgang C. Müller (eds.)<br />

Österreich im europäischen Mehrebenensystem: Konsequenzen<br />

der EU-Mitgliedschaft für Politiknetzwerke und Entscheidungsprozesse.<br />

Vienna: Signum, 1998, 250 pp.<br />

Gerda Falkner, Wolfgang C. Müller, Martina Eder, Karin Hiller,<br />

Gerhard Steiner, Rita Trattnigg<br />

The Impact of EU Membership on Policy Networks in Austria:<br />

Creeping Change Beneath the Surface. Journal of European<br />

Public Policy, Vol. 6, No. 3, 496–516 (1999)<br />

The Differential Impact of EU Judicial Politics<br />

in the Field of Social Policy<br />

Sabrina Tesoka<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

The judicial activism of the European Court of Justice (ECJ)<br />

is transforming the Community legal order in a supranational<br />

direction. The ECJ has constitutionalized European law and<br />

expanded European authority in various policy areas. The<br />

influence of the ECJ has also been decisive in changing the<br />

position of the judiciary in the member-states. National<br />

judges are now responsible for the application, and therefore<br />

re-interpretation, of Community social law in the member-<br />

29


30<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

states. While this expansion of the judicial power and independence<br />

in the Union has been widely explored, the issue of<br />

the geographical and temporal variations of the number of<br />

social cases referred by national courts to the ECJ remains<br />

neglected. The existence of substantive differences between<br />

Community-level legislation and national-level legislation<br />

and practices partly explains this uneven influence. Equally,<br />

the question of the different national judges’ “attitudes”<br />

towards Community law is also often mentioned. While not<br />

unfounded, such explanations are not very satisfactory. The<br />

objective of this postdoctoral project is to examine why, how<br />

and under what conditions national courts mobilize Com-<br />

Shareholder Value and Codetermination in<br />

Germany<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

This doctoral project examines the shareholder orientation of<br />

large German companies. During the 1990s, German companies<br />

such as Veba, Hoechst or Bayer began to change their<br />

policy towards investors. Companies introduced profitability<br />

targets and stock option plans, set up investor relations<br />

departments and changed their accounting standards in order<br />

to improve their relationship with shareholders. The increasing<br />

significance of shareholder value orientation in large<br />

firms has been attributed to several factors such as the internationalization<br />

of companies, changes in ownership and<br />

company structures, or the changing labor market of top<br />

managers. The project tests these hypotheses using econometric<br />

methods. It also examines the consequences of shareholder<br />

orientation of large companies for the German system of<br />

industrial relations. It is assumed that works councils have<br />

different attitudes towards the shareholder strategies of management,<br />

depending on whether the company is a potential<br />

target for hostile takeovers or not. Project duration: January<br />

1999 to December 2002. Main project: The Impact of<br />

Internationalization on German Industrial Relations<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Wer beherrscht die Unternehmen? Shareholder Value, Managerherrschaft<br />

und Mitbestimmung in Deutschland. Frankfurt<br />

a.M.: Campus, 2003, 265 pp.<br />

munity social law and resort to the Community judicial<br />

sphere. It aims at explaining the divergent degree, forms and<br />

dynamics of judicial politics throughout the Union. The study<br />

has drawn more general conclusions regarding the differential<br />

impact of European integration on judicial politics in the<br />

social field. Project duration: October 1998 to February 2000.<br />

Sabrina Tesoka<br />

Judicial Politics in the European Union: Its Impact on National<br />

Opportunity Structures for Gender Equality. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion<br />

Paper 99/2. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of<br />

Societies, 1999, 30 pp.<br />

Regime Competition and Integration in Political Economy<br />

Completed Projects<br />

Wolfgang Streeck, Martin Höpner (eds.)<br />

Alle Macht dem Markt? Fallstudien zur Abwicklung der<br />

Deutschland AG. Frankfurt a.M.: Campus, 2003, 289 pp.<br />

Martin Höpner, Jürgen Beyer<br />

The Disintegration of Organised Capitalism: German Corporate<br />

Governance in the 1990s. In: Herbert Kitschelt, Wolfgang<br />

Streeck (eds.), Germany: Beyond the Stable State. Special Issue<br />

of West European Politics. London: Frank Cass Publishers<br />

(forthcoming 2003)<br />

Wolfgang Streeck, Martin Höpner<br />

Alle Macht dem Markt? Einleitung. In: Wolfgang Streeck,<br />

Martin Höpner (eds.), Alle Macht dem Markt? Fallstudien zur<br />

Abwicklung der Deutschland AG. Frankfurt a.M.: Campus,<br />

2003, 11–59<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

European Corporate Governance Reform and the German Party<br />

Paradox. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 03/4. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 2003, 45 pp.<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Mehr Mitbestimmung durch Shareholder-Value? In: Die<br />

Mitbestimmung, No. 6/2002, Allianz für mehr Transparenz,<br />

2–24 (2002)<br />

Martin Höpner, Gregory Jackson<br />

Das deutsche System der Corporate Governance zwischen<br />

Persistenz und Konvergenz. In: Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie<br />

und Sozialpsychologie, Vol. 54, No. 4, 36–368 (2002)


Martin Höpner, Gregory Jackson, Simone Leiber<br />

The Battle over the Takeovers Directive. In: Die Mitbestimmung,<br />

No. 8/2002, Taming the Market Predators, 2–26 (2002)<br />

Martin Höpner, Axel Hauser-Ditz<br />

Zur Bewertung mitbestimmter Unternehmen am Neuen<br />

Markt. In: Bertelsmann Stiftung und Hans-Böckler-Stiftung<br />

(eds.), Mitbestimmung in der digitalen Wirtschaft – (k)ein<br />

Widerspruch. Gütersloh, Verlag Bertelsmann Stiftung, 55–66,<br />

2001<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Corporate Governance in Transition: Ten Empirical Findings on<br />

Shareholder Value and Industrial Relations in Germany. <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Discussion Paper 01/5. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 2001, 61 pp.<br />

Martin Höpner, Gregory Jackson<br />

An Emerging Market for Corporate Control? The Mannesmann<br />

Takeover and German Corporate Governance. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion<br />

Paper 01/4. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 2001, 53 pp.<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Two Dimensions of the Internationalization of Firms. <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Working Paper 01/3. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 2001. Online: <br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Ach, ihr fremdbestimmten Arbeitgeber! In: Die Mitbestimmung,<br />

No. 5/2001, 50 Jahre Montan-Mitbestimmungsgesetz,<br />

3–35 (2001)<br />

Martin Höpner, Gregory Jackson<br />

Entsteht ein Markt für Unternehmenskontrolle? Der Fall<br />

Mannesmann. In: Leviathan, Vol. 29, No. 4, 544–563 (2001)<br />

Martin Höpner, Gregory Jackson, Simone Leiber<br />

Übernahmerichtlinie gestoppt. In: Die Mitbestimmung, No.<br />

10/2001, Unterschätzter Überlebenskünstler: Tarife neu austariert,<br />

4–47 (2001)<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta<br />

Rehder, Rainer Zugehör<br />

Dimensionen der Internationalisierung: Ergebnisse der Unternehmensdatenbank<br />

“Internationalisierung der 100 größten Unternehmen<br />

in Deutschland”. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 00/1.<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

2000. Online: <br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Unternehmensverflechtung im Zwielicht: Hans Eichels Plan<br />

zur Auflösung der Deutschland AG. In: WSI-Mitteilungen,<br />

Vol. 53, No. 10, 655–663 (2000)<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Ende der Deutschland AG? In: Die Mitbestimmung, No.<br />

11/2000, Auslaufmodell Deutschland AG, 12–16 (2000)<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Nachholende Modernisierung? Die Mitbestimmung, No. 5/<br />

2000, Den Bullen reiten – den Bären bändigen, 24–26 (2000)<br />

Martin Höpner, Anke Hassel, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Zwei Dimensionen der Internationalisierung: Eine empirische<br />

Analyse deutscher Großunternehmen. In: Kölner Zeitschrift<br />

für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, Vol. 52, No. 3,<br />

500–519 (2000)<br />

The Impact of Internationalization on German<br />

Industrial Relations<br />

Wolfgang Streeck and Anke Hassel<br />

German labor market institutions are characterized by pervasive<br />

regulation of company behavior by strong interest associations.<br />

Confederations of employers and trade unions engage<br />

in collective bargaining in a way that makes for high homogeneity<br />

of labor market conditions. At the level of individual<br />

companies, codetermination provides for stable relations between<br />

employers and worker representatives. There are indications<br />

that the internationalization of the economy might<br />

alter the incentive structure for companies to comply with the<br />

highly regulated industrial relations system. Among other<br />

things, internationalization pressures may be exerted by a<br />

changing structure of corporate governance resulting from an<br />

increase in securities rather than bank finance. This might<br />

result in a shift in the relationship between shareholders and<br />

stakeholders. Companies may also become reluctant to participate<br />

in centralized collective bargaining. The project will<br />

look at the interaction between external internationalization<br />

pressures, the incentive structure of the system of industrial<br />

relations, and the changing behavior of companies, works<br />

councils and unions. Its starting point is a quantitative assessment<br />

of the internationalization tendencies of the 100 largest<br />

German companies. This will be complemented with qualitative<br />

case studies on selected companies. The project is supported<br />

by a grant from the Hans Böckler Foundation. Project<br />

duration: January 1999 to July 2002.<br />

Related projects: Shareholder Value and Codetermination in<br />

Germany, The Impact of Capital Markets and Codermination<br />

on the Investment Behavior of Large German Companies,<br />

Company-Level Employment Pacts and the Transformation<br />

of the German System of Industrial Relations, Payment<br />

Systems under the Impact of Internationalization: Compensation<br />

Schemes in Large German Companies.<br />

Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung<br />

Arbeitsbeziehungen in Deutschland: Wandel durch Internationalisierung.<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of<br />

Societies, 2002, 66 pp.<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Wer beherrscht die Unternehmen? Shareholder Value, Managerherrschaft<br />

und Mitbestimmung in Deutschland. Frankfurt<br />

a.M.: Campus, 2003, 265 pp.<br />

31


32<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Wolfgang Streeck, Martin Höpner (eds.)<br />

Alle Macht dem Markt? Fallstudien zur Abwicklung der<br />

Deutschland AG. Frankfurt a.M.: Campus, 2003, 289 pp.<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Die Zukunft des rheinischen Kapitalismus: Unternehmen zwischen<br />

Kapitalmarkt und Mitbestimmung. Opladen: Leske +<br />

Budrich, 2003, 229 pp.<br />

Jürgen Beyer, Anke Hassel<br />

Die Folgen von Konvergenz: Der Einfluss der Internationalisierung<br />

auf die Verteilung der Wertschöpfung. In: Jürgen<br />

Beyer (ed.), Vom Zukunfts- zum Auslaufmodell? Die deutsche<br />

Wirtschaftsordnung im Wandel. Wiesbaden: Westdeutscher<br />

Verlag (forthcoming 2003)<br />

Wolfgang Streeck, Martin Höpner<br />

Alle Macht dem Markt? Einleitung. In: Wolfgang Streeck,<br />

Martin Höpner (eds.), Alle Macht dem Markt? Fallstudien zur<br />

Abwicklung der Deutschland AG. Frankfurt a.M.: Campus,<br />

2003, 289 pp.<br />

Martin Höpner, Jürgen Beyer<br />

The Disintegration of Organised Capitalism: German Corporate<br />

Governance in the 1990s. In: Herbert Kitschelt, Wolfgang<br />

Streeck (eds.), Germany: Beyond the Stable State. Special<br />

Issue of West European Politics. London: Frank Cass Publishers<br />

(forthcoming 2003)<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Konversion durch Überlagerung. Der Beitrag betrieblicher<br />

Bündnisse zum Wandel der Arbeitsbeziehungen in Deutschland.<br />

In: Jürgen Beyer (ed.), Vom Zukunfts- zum Auslaufmodell?<br />

Die deutsche Wirtschaftsordnung im Wandel. Wiesbaden:<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag (forthcoming 2003)<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Corporate Governance im Mehrebenensystem. Konfliktkonstellationen<br />

im Investitionswettbewerb deutscher Großunternehmen.<br />

In: Wolfgang Streeck, Martin Höpner (eds.), Alle<br />

Macht dem Markt? Fallstudien zur Abwicklung der Deutschland<br />

AG. Frankfurt am Main: Campus, 2003<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

European Corporate Governance Reform and the German Party<br />

Paradox. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 03/4. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 2003, 45 pp.<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Two Dimensions of the Internationalization of Firms. In:<br />

Journal of Management Studies, Special Issue edited by Glenn<br />

Morgan, 40, 3, 701–719 (2003)<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Wettbewerbskoalitionen oder Beschäftigungsinitiativen? In:<br />

Hartmut Seifert (ed.), Betriebliche Bündnisse für Arbeit. Rahmenbedingungen<br />

– Praxiserfahrungen – Zukunftsperspektiven.<br />

Berlin: edition sigma, 2002, 87–102<br />

Jürgen Beyer, Anke Hassel<br />

The Effects of Convergence: Internationalisation and the<br />

Changing Distribution of Net Value Added in Large German<br />

Firms. In: Economy and Society, Vol. 31, No. 3, 309–332 (2002)<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Mehr Mitbestimmung durch Shareholder-Value? In: Die Mitbestimmung,<br />

No. 6/2002, Allianz für mehr Transparenz, 21–24<br />

(2002)<br />

Martin Höpner, Gregory Jackson<br />

Das deutsche System der Corporate Governance zwischen<br />

Persistenz und Konvergenz. In: Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie<br />

und Sozialpsychologie, Vol. 54, No. 4, 362–368 (2002)<br />

Martin Höpner, Gregory Jackson, Simone Leiber<br />

The Battle over the Takeovers Directive. In: Die Mitbestimmung,<br />

No. 8/2002, Taming the Market Predators, 22–26<br />

(2002)<br />

Martin Höpner, Axel Hauser-Ditz<br />

Zur Bewertung mitbestimmter Unternehmen am Neuen<br />

Markt. In: Bertelsmann Stiftung and Hans-Böckler-Stiftung<br />

(eds.), Mitbestimmung in der digitalen Wirtschaft – (k)ein Widerspruch.<br />

Gütersloh: Verlag Bertelsmann Stiftung, 2001, 55–66<br />

Jürgen Beyer, Anke Hassel<br />

The Effects of Convergence: Internationalisation and the<br />

Changing Distribution of Net Value Added in Large German<br />

Firms. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 01/7. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 2001, 29 pp.<br />

Anke Hassel, Britta Rehder<br />

Institutional Change in the German Wage Bargaining System –<br />

The Role of Big Companies. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 01/9.<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

2001. Online: <br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Corporate Governance in Transition: Ten Empirical Findings on<br />

Shareholder Value and Industrial Relations in Germany. <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Discussion Paper 01/5. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 2001, 61 pp.<br />

Martin Höpner, Gregory Jackson<br />

An Emerging Market for Corporate Control? The Mannesmann<br />

Takeover and German Corporate Governance. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion<br />

Paper 01/4. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 2001, 53 pp.<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Two Dimensions of the Internationalization of Firms. <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Working Paper 01/3. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 2001. Online: <br />

Anke Hassel, Britta Rehder<br />

Warum Großunternehmen das deutsche Tarifsystem mögen.<br />

In: Die Mitbestimmung, No. 10/2001, Unterschätzter Überlebenskünstler<br />

– Tarife neu austariert, 10–15 (2001)<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Ach, ihr fremdbestimmten Arbeitgeber! In: Die Mitbestim-


mung, No. 5/2001, 50 Jahre Montan-Mitbestimmungsgesetz,<br />

34–35 (2001)<br />

Martin Höpner, Gregory Jackson<br />

Entsteht ein Markt für Unternehmenskontrolle? Der Fall<br />

Mannesmann. In: Leviathan, Vol. 29, No. 4, 544–563 (2001)<br />

Martin Höpner, Gregory Jackson, Simone Leiber<br />

Übernahmerichtlinie gestoppt. In: Die Mitbestimmung, No.<br />

10/2001, Unterschätzter Überlebenskünstler: Tarife neu austariert,<br />

45–47 (2001)<br />

Antje Kurdelbusch<br />

Variable Vergütung bedeutet Wettbewerb und Risiko. In: Die<br />

Mitbestimmung, No. 6/2001, Der neue Arbeit-auf-sich-nehmer-Geist,<br />

22–25 (2001)<br />

Britta Rehder, Anke Hassel<br />

Warum Großunternehmen das deutsche Tarifsystem mögen.<br />

In: Die Mitbestimmung, No. 10/2001, Unterschätzter Überlebenskünstler<br />

– Tarife neu austariert, 10–15 (2001)<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Mitbestimmt ins Kapitalmarktzeitalter? Restrukturierung bei<br />

VEBA AG und Siemens AG. In: Die Mitbestimmung, No.<br />

5/2001, 50 Jahre Montan-Mitbestimmungsgesetz, 38–42<br />

(2001)<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Dimensionen der Internationalisierung: Ergebnisse der Unternehmensdatenbank<br />

“Internationalisierung der 100 größten<br />

Unternehmen in Deutschland”. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 00/1.<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

2000. Online: <br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Zwei Dimensionen der Internationalisierung: Eine empirische<br />

Analyse deutscher Großunternehmen. In: Kölner Zeitschrift<br />

für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, Vol. 52, No. 3,<br />

500–519 (2000)<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Unternehmensverflechtung im Zwielicht: Hans Eichels Plan<br />

zur Auflösung der Deutschland AG. In: WSI-Mitteilungen,<br />

Vol. 53, No. 10 (2000)<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Ende der Deutschland AG? In: Die Mitbestimmung, No.<br />

11/2000, Auslaufmodell Deutschland AG, 12–16 (2000)<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Nachholende Modernisierung? Die Mitbestimmung, No.<br />

5/2000, Den Bullen reiten – den Bären bändigen, 24–26<br />

(2000)<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Abweichung als Regel? In: Die Mitbestimmung, No. 4/2000:<br />

Zwischen Partnerschaft und Notgemeinschaft: Bündnisse im<br />

Betrieb, 12–16 (2000)<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

Financial Globalization and Corporate<br />

Governance in Germany and France<br />

Michel Goyer<br />

This research project analyzes the impact of the rise of Anglo-<br />

Saxon institutional investors as shareholders on the development<br />

of financial markets in France and Germany. The literature<br />

on the development of financial markets emphasizes<br />

legal protection for investors. The provision of equity capital<br />

by outside investors is regarded as problematic given the separation<br />

of ownership and control. The size of the financial<br />

markets of Anglo-Saxon countries is said to be accounted for<br />

by their Common Law systems. The project analyzes the<br />

investment patterns of foreign shareholders in France and<br />

Germany. Looking at the 50 largest non-financial firms in the<br />

two countries, the study argues that the patterns of investment<br />

of foreign shareholders in France and Germany are<br />

driven by the innovative capabilities of domestic companies.<br />

The aim of the project is to show that different corporate governance<br />

systems have different ways of dealing with investors.<br />

It draws empirically on field work and interviews with representatives<br />

of mutual and pension funds. Project duration:<br />

March 2001 to December 2002.<br />

Michel Goyer<br />

Labor and Corporate Governance: Institutional versus Political<br />

Variables. In: Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics (forthcoming<br />

2003)<br />

Michel Goyer<br />

Labor and the Focus on Core Competencies: An Institutionalist<br />

Perspective on the French and German System of Corporate<br />

Governance. In: Curtis Milhaupt (ed.), Global Markets,<br />

Domestic Institutions: Corporate Law and Governance in a New<br />

Era of Cross-border Deals. New York: Columbia University<br />

Press, 2003<br />

Michel Goyer, Bob Hancké<br />

Labor in French Corporate Governance: The Missing Link.<br />

In: Howard Gospel, Andrew Pendleton (eds.), Human Resources<br />

and Corporate Governance. Oxford: Oxford University<br />

Press, 2003<br />

Michel Goyer<br />

Corporate Governance and the Innovation System in France<br />

1985–2000. In: Industry and Innovation, Vol. 8, No. 2, 135–158<br />

(2001)<br />

Welfare States and Industrial Relations in<br />

Europe: The Role of the Social Partners in<br />

Early Retirement Policy<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

The project investigates the interactions between welfare state<br />

regimes and industrial relations systems across Europe and in<br />

comparison with the USA and Japan. In particular, the project<br />

focuses on the conflicts of interest and governance strate-<br />

33


34<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

gies of organized labor and capital in social policy making<br />

and self-administration. Taking the case of early retirement,<br />

the project studies the interests of the social partners in externalizing<br />

social costs, as well as their role in current reform efforts.<br />

Both employers and trade unions have colluded in using<br />

“early exit” as a labor shedding strategy in the past. The project<br />

explains on the one hand the diverse national trajectories<br />

of early exit from work as a consequence of the interplay of<br />

the “pull” of welfare regimes, “the push” of production systems,<br />

and the mediation between the social partners. On the<br />

other hand, the project aims to analyze the varying capacities<br />

of the social partners to block reforms and the conditions<br />

under which they are willing to cooperate with the government<br />

in reforming social policy. Project duration: January<br />

1997 to November 2002.<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

Exit from Labor: Reforming Early Retirement and Social Partnership<br />

in Europe, Japan, and the USA. Habilitation thesis. University<br />

of Cologne, Department of Social Sciences, 2002, 401 pp.<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

When Labour and Capital Collude: The Political Economy of<br />

Early Retirement in Europe, Japan, and the USA. In: Bernhard<br />

Ebbinghaus and Philip Manow (eds.), Comparing Welfare Capitalism:<br />

Social Policy and Political Economy in Europe, Japan<br />

and the USA. London, New York: Routledge, 2001, 76–101<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

Reforming the Welfare State Through “Old” or “New” Social<br />

Partnerships? In: Carsten Kjaergaard and Sven-Åge Westphalen<br />

(eds.), From Collective Bargaining to Social Partnerships.<br />

Copenhagen: The Copenhagen Centre, 2001, 103–120<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

Any Way Out of “Exit from Work”? Reversing the Entrenched<br />

Pathways of Early Retirement. In: Fritz W. Scharpf and Vivien<br />

A. Schmidt (eds.), Welfare and Work in the Open Economy. Vol.<br />

II: Diverse Responses to Common Challenges. Oxford: Oxford<br />

University Press, 2000, 511–553<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

Does a European Model Exist and Can it Survive? In: Gerhard<br />

Huemer, Michael Mesch, and Franz Traxler (eds.), The Role of<br />

Employer Associations and Labour Unions in the EMU. Aldershot:<br />

Ashgate, 1999, 1–26<br />

Payment Systems under the Impact of<br />

Internationalization: Compensation Schemes<br />

in Large German Companies<br />

Antje Kurdelbusch<br />

Payment systems in Germany are changing. There is a noticeable<br />

trend towards a higher share of variable wage components<br />

compared to fixed pay. Bonus payments contingent on<br />

a company’s performance and on individual workers’ achievements<br />

are becoming more common, and so are employee<br />

ownership plans and innovative forms of fringe benefits. Can<br />

this trend be observed across the board, or is it company-specific?<br />

Are wage regimes and wages becoming more differentiated<br />

within and between companies? To what extent can these<br />

changing patterns be attributed to economic internationalization?<br />

Are the new payment systems consistent with centralized<br />

collective bargaining, which aims at a homogeneous wage<br />

structure, or will the bargaining system have to adjust? This<br />

doctoral project uses quantitative methods to analyze a sample<br />

of the 100 largest German companies, examining their pay<br />

systems and their degree of internationalization. Complementary<br />

case studies will illustrate the consequences of new<br />

compensation schemes on the German system of industrial<br />

relations. Project duration: January 1999 to May 2002.<br />

Main project: The Impact of Internationalization on German<br />

Industrial Relations<br />

Antje Kurdelbusch<br />

Variable Vergütung in deutschen Großunternehmen: Entgeltsysteme<br />

zwischen Flexibilisierung und Flächentarifvertrag.<br />

Doctoral thesis. University of Bochum, Department of Social<br />

Sciences, 2002<br />

Antje Kurdelbusch<br />

Variable Vergütung bedeutet Wettbewerb und Risiko. In: Die<br />

Mitbestimmung, No. 6/2001, Der neue Arbeit-auf-sich-nehmer-Geist,<br />

22–25 (2001)<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Two Dimensions of the Internationalization of Firms. <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Working Paper 01/3. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 2001. Online: <br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Zwei Dimensionen der Internationalisierung: Eine empirische<br />

Analyse deutscher Großunternehmen. In: Kölner Zeitschrift<br />

für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, Vol. 52, No. 3,<br />

500–519 (2000)<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Dimensionen der Internationalisierung: Ergebnisse der Unternehmensdatenbank<br />

“Internationalisierung der 100 größten<br />

Unternehmen in Deutschland”. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 00/1.<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

2000. Online: <br />

Company-Level Employment Pacts and the<br />

Transformation of the German System of<br />

Industrial Relations<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

For several decades the German system of industrial relations<br />

has been marked by a high degree of regulation. Central wage<br />

agreements protect employees from market fluctuations, and


make for comparable labor costs across firms and sectors.<br />

Centralized collective bargaining is conducive to cooperative<br />

relations between employers and employees at the company<br />

level. But since the 1990s a large number of company-specific<br />

employment pacts have emerged which aim at increasing<br />

competitiveness and securing jobs by lowering labor costs; in<br />

a number of respects, they modified or replaced central wage<br />

agreements. Exploring the impact of company-specific<br />

employment pacts on the German system of industrial relations,<br />

this doctoral project focuses on questions such as: To<br />

what extent do pacts go beyond the framework of existing<br />

collective agreements? Do trade unions participate in the bargaining<br />

processes or are they excluded? Are associations and<br />

the collective bargaining system losing legitimacy? To what<br />

extent can the new developments be explained by the internationalization<br />

process that German companies are undergoing?<br />

Project duration: January 1999 to April 2002.<br />

Main project: The Impact of Internationalization on German<br />

Industrial Relations<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Konversion durch Überlagerung. Der Beitrag betrieblicher<br />

Bündnisse zum Wandel der Arbeitsbeziehungen in Deutschland.<br />

In: Jürgen Beyer (ed.), Vom Zukunfts- zum Auslaufmodell?<br />

Die deutsche Wirtschaftsordnung im Wandel. Wiesbaden:<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag (forthcoming 2003)<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Corporate Governance im Mehrebenensystem. Konfliktkonstellationen<br />

im Investitionswettbewerb deutscher Großunternehmen.<br />

In: Wolfgang Streeck, Martin Höpner (eds.), Alle<br />

Macht dem Markt? Fallstudien zur Abwicklung der Deutschland<br />

AG. Frankfurt am Main: Campus, 2003<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Two Dimensions of the Internationalization of Firms. In:<br />

Journal of Management Studies, Special Issue edited by Glenn<br />

Morgan, 40, 3, 701–719 (2003)<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Pfadwechsel ohne Systembruch. Der Beitrag betrieblicher Bündnisse<br />

für Beschäftigungssicherung und Wettbewerbsfähigkeit<br />

zum Wandel der Arbeitsbeziehungen in Deutschland. Doctoral<br />

thesis. Humboldt-Universität Berlin, Faculty of Arts III, 2002<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Wettbewerbskoalitionen oder Beschäftigungsinitiativen? In:<br />

Hartmut Seifert (ed.), Betriebliche Bündnisse für Arbeit. Rahmenbedingungen<br />

– Praxiserfahrungen – Zukunftsperspektiven.<br />

Berlin: edition sigma, 2002, 87–102<br />

Anke Hassel, Britta Rehder<br />

Warum Großunternehmen das deutsche Tarifsystem mögen.<br />

In: Die Mitbestimmung, No. 10/2001, Unterschätzter Überlebenskünstler<br />

– Tarife neu austariert, 10–15 (2001)<br />

Anke Hassel, Britta Rehder<br />

Institutional Change in the German Wage Bargaining System –<br />

The Role of Big Companies. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 01/9.<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

2001. Online: <br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Two Dimensions of the Internationalization of Firms. <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Working Paper 01/3. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 2001. Online: <br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Zwei Dimensionen der Internationalisierung: Eine empirische<br />

Analyse deutscher Großunternehmen. In: Kölner Zeitschrift<br />

für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, Vol. 52, No. 3,<br />

500–519 (2000)<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Abweichung als Regel? In: Die Mitbestimmung, No. 4/2000,<br />

Zwischen Partnerschaft und Notgemeinschaft: Bündnisse im<br />

Betrieb, 12–16 (2000)<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Dimensionen der Internationalisierung: Ergebnisse der Unternehmensdatenbank<br />

“Internationalisierung der 100 größten<br />

Unternehmen in Deutschland”. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 00/1.<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

2000. Online: <br />

Germany and Japan: The Future of Nationally<br />

Embedded Capitalism in a Global Economy<br />

Wolfgang Streeck and Kozo Yamamura (University of<br />

Washington–Seattle), with Gregory Jackson (project manager)<br />

Carried out in cooperation with leading German, Japanese<br />

and American social scientists, this project examines the similarities<br />

and differences between Germany and Japan’s national<br />

varieties of capitalism, and the present transformation of<br />

their economically relevant social institutions. Despite their<br />

past economic competitiveness relative to Anglo-American<br />

“normal capitalism,” their nationally specific institutions of<br />

economic governance have now begun a process of adaptation<br />

under the impact of economic and political internationalization.<br />

The study comparatively examines the areas of<br />

innovation, industrial relations, work organization, labor<br />

markets, corporate governance, financial markets and social<br />

security systems. It also looks at the regional and international<br />

embeddedness of each country and at its domestic politics,<br />

including political parties and interest associations. The theoretical<br />

background of the project is the question of institutional<br />

convergence or divergence in modern industrial societies,<br />

and the compatibility of different national regimes of<br />

economic governance with international market relations.<br />

The project is jointly directed by Wolfgang Streeck (Max<br />

35


36<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Planck Institute for the Study of Societies) and Kozo<br />

Yamamura (University of Washington–Seattle) with <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

research contributions from Philip Manow and Gregory Jackson.<br />

External participants include Robert Boyer (CEPREMAP,<br />

Paris), Ronald Dore (London School of Economics), Heidi<br />

Gottfried (Wayne State University), Erica Gould (Stanford<br />

University), Ulrich Jürgens (Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für<br />

Sozialforschung – WZB), Peter Katzenstein (Cornell University),<br />

Herbert Kitschelt (Duke University), Stephen Krasner<br />

(Stanford University), Ikuo Kume (Kobe University), Gerhard<br />

Lehmbruch (Universität Konstanz), Jacqueline O’Reilly<br />

(WZB), T.J. Pempel (University of Washington–Seattle),<br />

Kathleen Thelen (Northwestern University), Sigurt Vitols<br />

(WZB), and Steven Vogel (Harvard University). The project<br />

was begun in June 1996 and completed in June 1999 with support<br />

of the Tamaki Foundation. Its results have been published<br />

in two edited volumes. Project duration: June 1996 to<br />

December 2001.<br />

Related project: Organizing the Firm<br />

Wolfgang Streeck, Kozo Yamamura (eds.)<br />

The End of Diversity? Prospects for German and Japanese<br />

Capitalism. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2003, 401 pp.<br />

Wolfgang Streeck, Kozo Yamamura (eds.)<br />

The Origins of Nonliberal Capitalism: Germany and Japan in<br />

Comparison. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2001, 304<br />

pp.<br />

The Impact of Capital Markets and<br />

Codetermination on the Investment Behavior<br />

of Large German Companies<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

This doctoral project investigates the impact of the capital<br />

market on the investment behavior of firms under conditions<br />

of codetermination. There are strong indications that changing<br />

capital markets have a large impact on the investment<br />

decisions of German companies. If this is true, what role does<br />

codetermination play in companies’ decisions? And how is<br />

codetermination affected by German companies’ reactions to<br />

the changes in the capital market? Codetermination might<br />

become less effective if there was a trend toward short-term<br />

investment, if companies increased their investment in financial<br />

assets, and if they concentrated on their core business<br />

instead of pursuing diversification. Empirically, the project<br />

draws on quantitative data from the 100 largest German companies<br />

and on case studies based on interviews. Project duration:<br />

January 1999 to December 2001.<br />

Main project: The Impact of Internationalization on German<br />

Industrial Relations<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Zukunft des rheinischen Kapitalismus: Unternehmen zwischen<br />

Kapitalmarkt und Mitbestimmung. Opladen: Leske + Budrich,<br />

2003, 229 pp.<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Mitbestimmt ins Kapitalmarktzeitalter? Restrukturierung bei<br />

VEBA AG und Siemens AG. In: Die Mitbestimmung, No. 5/<br />

2001, 50 Jahre Montan-Mitbestimmungsgesetz, 38–42 (2001)<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Two Dimensions of the Internationalization of Firms. <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Working Paper 01/3. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 2001. Online: <br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Zwei Dimensionen der Internationalisierung: Eine empirische<br />

Analyse deutscher Großunternehmen. In: Kölner Zeitschrift<br />

für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, Vol. 52, No. 3,<br />

500–519 (2000)<br />

Anke Hassel, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder,<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Dimensionen der Internationalisierung: Ergebnisse der Unternehmensdatenbank<br />

Internationalisierung der 100 größten<br />

Unternehmen in Deutschland. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 00/1.<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

2000. Online: <br />

Organizing the Firm: Corporate Governance<br />

in Germany and Japan<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

This project examines the historical origins and contemporary<br />

transformation of corporate governance in Germany and<br />

Japan. Historically, how did Germany and Japan develop<br />

similar non-liberal corporate governance regimes relative to<br />

Anglo-Saxon models? And how has the diversity of national<br />

models evolved under the pressures of political and economic<br />

internationalization? Two sets of institutions are examined:<br />

those fostering “closed ownership” and patient capital, and<br />

those establishing rights of industrial citizenship giving<br />

employees voice in the corporation. Despite the historical<br />

strengths of the German and Japanese models, internationalization<br />

alters the capacity of states and organized social groups<br />

to shape corporate governance. Corporations now face growing<br />

constraints from financial markets that raise the question<br />

of convergence on an Anglo-Saxon model of the corporation,<br />

embodied in the concept of shareholder value. The project<br />

began in 1998 in conjunction with the <strong>MPIfG</strong> project<br />

“Germany and Japan: The Future of Nationally Embedded<br />

Capitalism in a Global Economy.” The results were submitted<br />

as a Ph.D. thesis at Columbia University (New York) in<br />

February 2001. Project duration: May 1998 to October 2001.<br />

Main project: Germany and Japan<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

Corporate Governance in Germany and Japan: Liberalization


Pressures and Responses. In: Wolfgang Streeck, Kozo<br />

Yamamura (eds.), The End of Diversity? Prospects for German<br />

and Japanese Capitalism. Ithaca/NY: Cornell University Press,<br />

2003<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

Organizing the Firm: Corporate Governance in Germany and<br />

Japan, 1870–2000. Ph.D. Dissertation. New York: Columbia<br />

University, Department of Sociology, 2001<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

The Origins of Nonliberal Corporate Governance in Germany<br />

and Japan. In: Wolfgang Streeck, Kozo Yamamura<br />

(eds.), The Origins of Nonliberal Capitalism: Germany and<br />

Japan in Comparison. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press,<br />

2001, 121–170<br />

The Impact of Internationalization on the<br />

Distribution of Net Value Added of Companies<br />

Anke Hassel and Jürgen Beyer<br />

Recent literature points to the existence of a variety of institutionally<br />

embedded types of capitalism. The non-liberal<br />

German type of capitalism tends to place less emphasis on<br />

shareholder interests. While Anglo-American management is<br />

forced by the market for corporate control to maximize the<br />

returns on capital, German firms have a wider range of<br />

options and typically distribute a higher share of the net surplus<br />

to other stakeholders. Capitalist diversity is expected to<br />

come under pressure due to the internationalization of companies<br />

as competition intensifies and shareholders’ expectations<br />

about the return on their investments converge. The aim<br />

of this project is to determine whether the distribution of net<br />

value added in large German firms has changed in recent<br />

years in favor of shareholders or other stakeholder groups,<br />

and whether these changes can be related to internationalization.<br />

Several measures of internationalization are used, focusing<br />

on the development of the 100 largest German companies<br />

between 1986 and 1996. The project is funded by the<br />

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. Project duration: January<br />

2000 to June 2001.<br />

Jürgen Beyer (ed.)<br />

Vom Zukunfts- zum Auslaufmodell? Die deutsche Wirtschaftsordnung<br />

im Wandel. Wiesbaden: Westdeutscher Verlag (forthcoming<br />

2003)<br />

Jürgen Beyer, Anke Hassel<br />

Die Folgen von Konvergenz: Der Einfluss der Internationalisierung<br />

auf die Verteilung der Wertschöpfung. In: Jürgen<br />

Beyer (ed.), Vom Zukunfts- zum Auslaufmodell? Die deutsche<br />

Wirtschaftsordnung im Wandel. Wiesbaden: Westdeutscher<br />

Verlag (forthcoming 2003)<br />

Jürgen Beyer, Anke Hassel<br />

The Effects of Convergence: Internationalisation and the<br />

Changing Distribution of Net Value Added in Large German<br />

Firms. In: Economy and Society, Vol. 31, No. 3, 309–332 (2002)<br />

Jürgen Beyer<br />

“One best way” oder Varietät? Strategien und Organisationsstrukturen<br />

von Großunternehmen im Prozess der Internationalisierung.<br />

In: Soziale Welt, Vol. 52, No. 1, 7–28 (2001)<br />

Jürgen Beyer<br />

“One best way” oder Varietät? Strategischer und organisatorischer<br />

Wandel von Großunternehmen im Prozess der Internationalisierung.<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 01/2. Cologne: Max<br />

Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, 2001, 33 pp.<br />

Jürgen Beyer, Anke Hassel<br />

The Effects of Convergence: Internationalisation and the<br />

Changing Distribution of Net Value Added in Large German<br />

Firms. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 01/7. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 2001, 29 pp.<br />

Varieties of Welfare Capitalism in Europe,<br />

North America, and Japan<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus and Philip Manow<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

Philip Manow Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

This conference project brought together an international<br />

interdisciplinary group of researchers to discuss the interrelations<br />

between the welfare state and its political economy. Extending<br />

the “varieties of capitalism” perspective by taking into<br />

account variations in welfare state structures and their impact<br />

on the different forms of contemporary capitalism, the project<br />

focused on co-variations between different welfare state<br />

regimes and particular aspects of the national political economy,<br />

especially in the area of labor relations, production and<br />

employment regimes, and financial systems. The conference<br />

held at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> in Cologne in June 1998 compared European<br />

welfare capitalisms and contrasted them with Anglo-<br />

American “uncoordinated” and Japanese “coordinated” capitalism.<br />

The results, published in the edited volume “Comparing<br />

Welfare Capitalism,” bridge these often unrelated research<br />

areas and concerns in an interdisciplinary perspective.<br />

Project duration: June 1998 to May 2000.<br />

37


38<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Philip Manow (eds.)<br />

Comparing Welfare Capitalism: Social Policy and Political<br />

Economy in Europe, Japan and the USA. London: Routledge,<br />

2001, 352 pp.<br />

Variants of Welfare Capitalism: Pension<br />

Systems in Japan and Germany<br />

Philip Manow<br />

The social security systems in developed industrial societies<br />

are not merely buffers to protect individuals from the negative<br />

externalities of a free market economy. They are also an<br />

integral part of a country’s institutional framework and influence<br />

its national version of capitalism. Systems of social security<br />

profoundly affect a country’s industrial relations, its ability<br />

to implement economic restructuring policies, and its<br />

financial system. With declining economic growth, increasing<br />

globalization of markets and the aging of the populations of<br />

developed countries, the pressure on policy-makers to reform<br />

national welfare systems intensifies, especially the pension<br />

systems. By comparing the institutional development of pension<br />

systems in Japan and Germany, as well as the adaptation<br />

processes currently taking place in these countries, this habilitation<br />

project investigates the role old-age insurance has<br />

played in each country’s political economy and explores its<br />

future in an increasingly unfavorable economic and demographic<br />

context. The comparative approach should also answer<br />

more general questions about the stability and instability<br />

of national variants of capitalism within the context of a<br />

global economy. Project duration: 1996 to September 2000.<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Social Protection, Capitalist Production. The German Political<br />

Economy and the Bismarckian Welfare State from the 1880s to<br />

the 1990s. Habilitation thesis submitted to the University of<br />

Konstanz, Faculty for Politics and Management, 20 July 2001<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Crisis and Change in Pension Finance: Germany and Japan<br />

Compared. In: Kozo Yamamura, Wolfgang Streeck (eds.), The<br />

Future of Nationally Embedded Capitalism in Germany and<br />

Japan (edited volume planned for publication in 2003)<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Welfare State Building and Coordinated Capitalism in Japan<br />

and Germany. In: Wolfgang Streeck, Kozo Yamamura (eds.),<br />

The Origins of Nonliberal Capitalism: Germany and Japan in<br />

Comparison. Ithaca/NY: Cornell University Press 2001,<br />

94–120<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Business Coordination, Wage Bargaining and the Welfare<br />

State: Germany and Japan in Comparative Historical<br />

Perspective. In: Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Philip Manow (eds.),<br />

Comparing Welfare Capitalism. Social Policy and Political<br />

Economy in Europe, Japan and the USA. London: Routledge,<br />

2001, 27–51<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Consociational Roots of German Corporatism: The Bismarckian<br />

Welfare State within the German Political Economy. In:<br />

Jürg Steiner, Thomas Ertman (eds.), Consociationalism in Europe.<br />

Thirty Years of Debate. Acta Politica, Special Issue,<br />

Spring/Summer, Vol. 37, 195–212 (2002)<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Wage Coordination and the Welfare State: Germany and Japan<br />

Compared. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 00/7. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 2000. Online: <br />

Philip Manow<br />

The Uneasy Compromise of Liberalism and Corporatism in<br />

Postwar Germany. CGES Working Paper 5/88. Berkeley: University<br />

of California, Center for German and European Studies,<br />

1999<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Social Insurance and the German Political Economy. <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Discussion Paper 97/2. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 1997, 48 pp.<br />

European Social Dialogue after Maastricht<br />

Ute Hartenberger<br />

Since the Maastricht Treaty, the European social partners have<br />

greater opportunities to shape European social policy. But<br />

there is still no agreement as to what effects these institutional<br />

innovations will have on policy contents and the further<br />

development of the integration process. The doctoral project<br />

examines the application of the procedures in Articles 3 and 4<br />

of the Agreement on Social Policy between November 1993<br />

and the incorporation of the agreement into the Amsterdam<br />

Treaty. By analyzing the cases which have been dealt with under<br />

these procedures, the project aims to illustrate the effects<br />

of the new institution on actors, decision-making processes<br />

and the substance of regulations in the arena of European<br />

social policy. The multilevel governance approach is then<br />

used to explain the empirical results and to analyze why<br />

almost all the relevant actors in the policy arena support the<br />

new procedure even though the potential for any kind of substantial<br />

innovation in Community social policy is quite limited.<br />

The analysis draws not only upon theoretical work on<br />

interest politics, intergovernmentalism and the effects of<br />

structural decoupling within systems of multilevel governance,<br />

but also upon the general debate about the democratic<br />

legitimacy of the EU.<br />

Ute Hartenberger<br />

Europäischer sozialer Dialog nach Maastricht. EU-Sozialpart-


nerverhandlungen auf dem Prüfstand. Baden-Baden: Nomos,<br />

2001, 261 pp.<br />

Economic Effects of European Integration:<br />

Economic Theory and Empirical Research<br />

Patrick Ziltener<br />

Great economic expectations were raised by the implementation<br />

of the European Single Market, which received unprecedented<br />

public attention in the late 1980s and early 1990s.<br />

This project evaluates the empirical research on the real economic<br />

effects of Single Market implementation and compares<br />

them with economic integration theory. The boom in economic<br />

growth research and the wealth of studies resulting from<br />

the European Commission’s “Single Market Review” make it<br />

possible to assess the integration-induced economic processes<br />

in Western Europe. The trends triggered by the implementation<br />

of the Single Market differed greatly from those predicted<br />

by economic integration theorists and their econometric<br />

simulations. Investment and trade in Western Europe were<br />

stimulated, but there was no big bang in the liberalization and<br />

deregulation process resulting in significant impulses for economic<br />

growth. There were few short term effects at all, and<br />

there is no empirical evidence of such long-term effects as<br />

increasing specialization, a “growth bonus” for the countries<br />

involved or “knowledge spillovers.” The most important effect<br />

was the wave of mergers and acquisitions among European<br />

firms, which the economic integration models neglected<br />

completely.<br />

Project duration: October 2000 to March 2001.<br />

Patrick Ziltener<br />

Wirtschaftliche Effekte der europäischen Integration. Theoriebildung<br />

und empirische Forschung. <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper<br />

01/7. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

2001. Online: <br />

Public Interest and the Company in Britain<br />

and Germany<br />

Gregory Jackson with Andrew Gamble and Shawn Donnelly<br />

(Political Economy Research Centre, University of Sheffield),<br />

Gavin Kelly (Institute for Public Policy Research, London) and<br />

John Parkinson (University of Bristol)<br />

The company is a vital institution in all modern economies,<br />

but its character varies considerably between national systems.<br />

This research considers the different political and legal<br />

assumptions on which the company is organized, and their<br />

linkage to different understandings of the public interest in<br />

Britain and Germany. In the UK, the company is viewed as a<br />

private association, and its public interest aspects have historically<br />

been identified with the maximization of profits, the<br />

protection of small shareholders, and the reluctance of the<br />

state to specify particular company structures. In Germany,<br />

companies are regarded as constitutional entities with their<br />

own sets of rights and obligations. The public interest is conceived<br />

to include wider responsibilities toward employees and<br />

society. The project looks at these national differences in historical<br />

relation to the politics of company law since the nineteenth<br />

century, and examines how each country’s respective<br />

public interest conceptions<br />

have changed since the 1990s<br />

as a result of economic internationalization<br />

and EU regulation.<br />

The research was<br />

conducted from October<br />

1998 to August 2000, and its<br />

final report was published by<br />

the sponsoring Anglo-German<br />

Foundation for the<br />

Study of Industrial Society<br />

in February 2001.<br />

John Parkinson, Andrew<br />

Gamble, Gavin Kelly (eds.)<br />

The Political Economy of the<br />

Company. Oxford: Hart Publishing,<br />

2001, 320 pp.<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

Comparative Corporate Governance: Sociological Perspectives.<br />

In: John Parkinson, Andrew Gamble, Gavin Kelly (eds.),<br />

The Political Economy of the Company. Oxford: Hart Publishing,<br />

2001, 265–287<br />

The Transformation of European Corporate<br />

Governance: Changing Ownership and Control<br />

Structures among Europe’s Largest Companies<br />

Bastiaan van Apeldoorn<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

Although share ownership becomes more dispersed with the<br />

growth of European capital markets, this development seems<br />

to paradoxically coincide with the rise of shareholder power<br />

as corporations increasingly orient themselves to the goal of<br />

“shareholder value.” The latter suggests the possible disembedding<br />

of productive capital from national institutions that<br />

in the past insulated both managers and workers from the discipline<br />

of capital markets within the context of the debate on<br />

globalization and its impact upon capitalist diversity. This<br />

poses the question of whether we are witnessing a convergence<br />

of corporate governance practices in Western Europe<br />

on the “Anglo-Saxon” liberal model. This project seeks to<br />

address these issues by examining the changing structures of<br />

ownership and control, and related practices of corporate<br />

39


40<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

governance, among Europe’s 100 largest non-financial companies.<br />

The project thus develops a political economy of capital<br />

ownership in Europe, and places this in the historical context<br />

of the development of the distribution and organization<br />

of property rights within modern capitalism. Its theoretical<br />

point of departure is that the rise of a new “shareholder capitalism”<br />

would be bound up with an increasing dominance of<br />

financial capital over productive capital, or with the rise of<br />

“outside” shareholders operating in globalizing capital markets,<br />

and oriented exclusively to financial returns, compared<br />

to other groups of owners whose fate is more tied up with that<br />

of the individual company and its “stakeholders.” Project<br />

duration: December 1998 to December 2000.<br />

Preliminary report on the project:<br />

Bastiaan van Apeldoorn<br />

The Rise of Shareholder Capitalism in Continental Europe? Paper<br />

prepared for the 18th World Congress of the International<br />

Political Science Association, Québec City, 1–5 August, 2000<br />

Employers’ Associations in Central and Eastern<br />

Europe<br />

Franciszek Draus<br />

The formation of employers’ associations in central and eastern<br />

European countries is influenced by many endogenous<br />

and exogenous factors. Endogenous factors include the structure<br />

of the economic system, which is characterized by a predominance<br />

of the state and a very complex property rights<br />

situation; the ideologically or politically motivated interest of<br />

governments, which have in many cases influenced the formation<br />

of employers’ associations; and the strength or weakness<br />

of trade unions, which are always an important point of<br />

reference for employers. Exogenous factors include institutional<br />

contacts with employers’ associations in western<br />

Europe, which can be defined as a search for models, as well<br />

as the institutional requirements of European integration<br />

with respect to social partnership, which are proactively taken<br />

into consideration. The analysis concentrates on the organization,<br />

functions and representativeness of employers’ associations,<br />

and on their position within the system of industrial<br />

relations in Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary. The<br />

institutional requirements for the development of social dialogue<br />

and for the future implementation of European social<br />

policy are also discussed. The project is conducted jointly<br />

with the European Trade Union Institute in Brussels. Project<br />

duration: August 1998 to January 2000.<br />

Franciszek Draus<br />

Les organisations patronales dans les pays de l’Europe centrale et<br />

orientale: Pologne, République tchèque, Hongrie. Brussels:<br />

European Trade Union Institute (ETUI), 2000, 124 pp.<br />

Franciszek Draus<br />

European Organizations and Social Partnership in Central<br />

and Eastern European Countries. Poland, Czech Republic and<br />

Hungary. In: Emilio Gabaglio, Reiner Hoffmann (eds.), European<br />

Trade Union Yearbook 1999. Brussels: European Trade<br />

Union Institute, 2000, 385–396<br />

The Impact of Decollectivization of Labor<br />

Relations on Employment<br />

Stefan Zagelmeyer<br />

In recent years, the evolution of collective bargaining systems<br />

and their impact on economic and social performance have<br />

increasingly been the focus of research in a number of social<br />

science disciplines. Although collective bargaining is the core<br />

of industrial relations systems, and research on bargaining<br />

structures has focused more attention on the decentralization<br />

of collective bargaining and on the resurgence of national<br />

level social pacts, current understanding of the underlying<br />

processes and their effects is still rudimentary. Theory construction<br />

seems to be underdeveloped, and the empirical evidence<br />

available on the impact of different configurations of<br />

collective bargaining arrangements is mixed. The project,<br />

which will result in a doctoral dissertation, comprises a comparative<br />

sectoral analysis of the impact of decollectivization<br />

processes in labor relations on employment. The study covers<br />

a number of sectors in Germany and the UK. Whereas the UK<br />

has experienced a decollectivization process since the 1970s,<br />

German collective industrial relations have been in a process<br />

of erosion since the early 1990s. In the project, the concept of<br />

decollectivization of labor relations is illustrated using two<br />

main examples: the demise of multi-employer collective bargaining<br />

and the move of many companies to single-employer<br />

collective bargaining, and the individualization of the<br />

employment relationship with fewer and fewer employees<br />

being covered by collective bargaining. Project duration: June<br />

1999 to March 2000.<br />

Stefan Zagelmeyer discontinued his project at the <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

when he accepted a position as a researcher at the Chair of<br />

Labour and Regional Economics at the Friedrich-Alexander-<br />

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg.


Science, Technology and Systems of Innovation<br />

Completed Projects<br />

Internet Governance: The Coordination of a<br />

Global Network between State and Market<br />

Volker Leib<br />

This doctoral project examines the transformation of the<br />

governance structure of the Internet during its evolution<br />

from a US-centered research network into a global multipurpose<br />

network. The research aims at identifying actors, interests<br />

and ideas that guided the process of institutional change,<br />

and tries to explain why a private transnational regime for the<br />

coordination of the Internet came into being. Due to the<br />

commercial and global success of the Internet, its governance<br />

structure had to be privatized and internationalized at the<br />

same time. To achieve this, the Internet community designed<br />

a public-private coordination structure which included the<br />

International Telecommunication Union. The US government,<br />

however, did not welcome this and initiated a private<br />

transnational regime made up of non-governmental organizations.<br />

At its core was the Internet Corporation for Assigned<br />

Names and Numbers (ICANN). As this new regime moves<br />

beyond technical issues and becomes involved in economic<br />

and political coordination and regulation, it will be confronted<br />

with problems of representation, legitimacy and control.<br />

Studying Internet governance will provide general insights<br />

into the possibilities of global governance and transnational<br />

regulation. Project duration: May 1999 to June 2002.<br />

Volker Leib<br />

ICANN und der Konflikt um die Internet-Ressourcen: Institutionenbildung<br />

im Problemfeld Internet Governance zwischen<br />

multinationaler Staatstätigkeit und globaler Selbstregulierung.<br />

Doctoral thesis. University of Konstanz, Department of Politics<br />

and Management, 2002<br />

Volker Leib<br />

ICANN – EU Can’t: Internet Governance and Europe’s Role<br />

in the Formation of the Internet Corporation for Assigned<br />

Names and Numbers (ICANN). In: Telematics and Informatics,<br />

Vol. 19, No. 2, 159-171 (2002)<br />

Volker Leib<br />

Das Doppelgesicht ICANNs: Koordination und Regulierung<br />

des Internet. In: Herbert Kubicek et al. (eds.), Internet@<br />

Future. Jahrbuch Telekommunikation und Gesellschaft 2001.<br />

Heidelberg: Hüthig, 2001, 124–126<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

The Governance of Local Economies:<br />

An International Comparison<br />

Helmut Voelzkow with Colin Crouch (European University<br />

Institute, Florence), Carlo Trigilia (University of Florence) and<br />

Patrick Le Galès (Centre d’études de la vie politique française –<br />

CEVIPOF, Paris)<br />

Economic sociologists agree today that local economies are<br />

emerging again in Europe as a result of structural change.<br />

This phenomenon is reminiscent of the mid-nineteenth century,<br />

when such areas were referred to as “industrial districts.”<br />

The study analyzes the institutional effectiveness of local<br />

economies, which is defined as the ability to produce collective<br />

goods that enhance economic competitiveness (vocational<br />

training, continuing education, technology transfer between<br />

research and industry, international marketing and the<br />

like). From a comparative perspective, the study focuses on<br />

the institutional infrastructure of local economies, on the<br />

programs and funds supporting firms and networks between<br />

firms, and on the economic and social impact of effective or<br />

ineffective regional institutions. Case studies will be conducted<br />

in England, France, Italy and Germany. Project duration:<br />

January 1997 to March 2002.<br />

Colin Crouch, Patrick Le Galès, Carlo Trigilia, Helmut Voelzkow<br />

(eds.)<br />

Changing Governance of Local Economies in Europe. Oxford:<br />

Oxford University Press (forthcoming 2003)<br />

Colin Crouch, Patrick Le Galès, Carlo Trigilia, Helmut Voelzkow<br />

(eds.)<br />

Local Production Systems in Europe: Rise or Demise? Oxford:<br />

Oxford University Press, 2001, 286 pp.<br />

Colin Crouch (ed.)<br />

Challenges to European Economic Governance: Responding to<br />

Change in the Machinery Industries. EUI Working Paper SPS<br />

No. 2002/13. Florence: European University Institute, 2002,<br />

148 pp.<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Die Governance regionaler Ökonomien im internationalen<br />

Vergleich: Deutschland und Italien. In: Gerhard Krauss, Gerhard<br />

Fuchs, Hans-Georg Wolf (eds.), Die Bindungen der<br />

Globalisierung. Marburg: Metropolis, 1999, 48–91<br />

41


42<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Global Networks and Local Values<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Tensions can be observed between the global expansion of the<br />

Internet and other communications networks that traverse<br />

borders seamlessly and often uncontrollably, and the desire of<br />

nations to protect indigenous values through policies that<br />

apply within their borders. Global telecommunications<br />

potentially changes the ability of governments to maintain<br />

influence and control with respect to the values over which<br />

they have stewardship. Potential impacts of global telecommunications<br />

on various social values of Germany and the<br />

United States are explored and guidelines for governments on<br />

how to cope with these policy issues are developed. This collaborative<br />

project brings together lawyers, economists, social<br />

scientists and IT experts from the United States and Germany.<br />

A steering committee, which includes the project participant<br />

from the <strong>MPIfG</strong>, was named by the Computer Science and<br />

Telecommunications Board (CSTB) of the U.S. National Research<br />

Council (NRC) and the German Max Planck Project<br />

Group “Common Goods: Law, Politics and Economics”<br />

(Bonn). A final report will be published by the NRC. The<br />

project is funded by the German-American Academic<br />

Council. Project duration: February 1999 to February 2002.<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Internet and Culture: The Dynamics of Interdependence. In:<br />

Gerhard Banse, Armin Grunwald, Michael Rader (eds.),<br />

Innovations for an e-Society. Challenges for Technology<br />

Assessment. Berlin: edition sigma, 2002, 243–259<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

The Impact of Information Networks on the Structure of<br />

Political Systems. In: Christoph Engel, Kenneth H. Keller<br />

(eds.), Understanding the Impact of Global Networks on Local<br />

Social, Political and Cultural Values. Baden-Baden: Nomos,<br />

2000, 159–185<br />

Raymund Werle, Bernd Holznagel (eds.)<br />

Schwerpunktheft “Internet Regulation.” Zeitschrift für Rechtssoziologie,<br />

Vol. 23, No. 1 (2002)<br />

Raymund Werle, Bernd Holznagel<br />

Sectors and Strategies of Global Communications Regulation.<br />

In: Raymund Werle, Bernd Holznagel (eds.), Schwerpunktheft<br />

“Internet Regulation.” Zeitschrift für Rechtssoziologie,<br />

Vol. 23, No. 1, 3–23 (2002)<br />

Raymund Werle, Bernd Holznagel<br />

Lessons Learnt from the Internet: Hands Off, Hands On, or<br />

What Role of Public Policy in Europe? In: Druzboslovne<br />

Razprave (Journal of Social Science Studies) Vol. 18, No. 39–40,<br />

205–224 (2002)<br />

Arbeitsgruppe “Globale Netze und Lokale Werte”<br />

Globale Netze und lokale Werte: Eine vergleichende Studie zu<br />

Deutschland und den Vereinigten Staaten. Baden-Baden:<br />

Nomos, 2002. (Raymund Werle is a member of the Committee<br />

to Study Global Networks and Local Values of the<br />

National Research Council and a co-author of this book.)<br />

Committee to Study Global Networks and Local Values,<br />

Computer Science and Telecommunications Board, National<br />

Research Council<br />

Global Networks and Local Values: A Comparative Look at<br />

Germany and the United States. Washington, DC: National<br />

Academy Press, 2001. (Raymund Werle is a member of the<br />

Committee to Study Global Networks and Local Values of the<br />

National Research Council and a co-author of this book.)<br />

The Science–Society Interface of Max Planck<br />

Institutes<br />

Renate Mayntz<br />

This project examines the way Max Planck institutes interact<br />

with different fields of societal praxis, with politics, and with<br />

the national and international scientific community in the<br />

process of choosing their research topics. In a first phase in<br />

1998, statistical data about the external relations of Max<br />

Planck institutes were analyzed. In 1999 and 2000, this was<br />

followed by a series of interviews with the directors of selected<br />

institutes. Project duration: January 1998 to December<br />

2001.<br />

Renate Mayntz<br />

Die Bestimmung von Forschungsthemen in Max-Planck-<br />

Instituten im Spannungsfeld wissenschaftlicher und außerwissenschaftlicher<br />

Interessen: Ein Forschungsbericht. <strong>MPIfG</strong>


Discussion Paper 01/8. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the<br />

Study of Societies, 2001<br />

The Governance of Local Economies:<br />

Baden-Württemberg and Emilia-Romagna<br />

in Comparison<br />

Ulrich Glassmann<br />

The economies of Baden-Württemberg and Emilia-Romagna<br />

have long been seen as remarkable examples of how small and<br />

medium-sized firms could achieve outstanding economic<br />

performance through inter-firm and institutional cooperation<br />

at the local level. In this study it is assumed that the provision<br />

of collective competition goods is essential for the performance<br />

of firms in both regions. However, the way in which<br />

these goods are provided differs according to the diverse institutional<br />

settings in which these economies are embedded.<br />

This project explains why diverging systems of collective<br />

goods provision occur in comparably performing local<br />

economies. Its two principal aims are to show empirically<br />

how local economies differ structurally, and to use the information<br />

obtained to test a theory of collective goods provision.<br />

Taking as an example education, vocational training, and<br />

technology transfer in the mechanical engineering sectors of<br />

Stuttgart and Bologna from 1980 to the present, the study<br />

analyzes the existence and change of cooperation strategies in<br />

economic and political networks. Project duration at the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> was from November 1997 to November 2000. A dissertation<br />

entitled “The Governance of Local Economies:<br />

Baden-Württemberg and Emilia-Romagna in Comparison” is<br />

expected to be submitted to the University of Osnabrück,<br />

Department of Social Sciences, in summer 2003.<br />

Main project: Governance of Local Economies.<br />

Ulrich Glassmann<br />

Refining National Policy: The Machine Tool Industry in the<br />

Local Economy of Stuttgart. In: Colin Crouch, Patrick Le<br />

Galès, Carlo Trigilia, Helmut Voelzkow (eds.), Changing<br />

Governance of Local Economies in Europe. Oxford: Oxford<br />

University Press (forthcoming 2003)<br />

Ulrich Glassmann, Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Local Production Systems Substituting the Large Plant:<br />

Duisburg as a Test Case for Restructuring. In: Colin Crouch,<br />

Patrick Le Galès, Carlo Trigilia, Helmut Voelzkow (eds.),<br />

Changing Governance of Local Economies in Europe. Oxford:<br />

Oxford University Press (forthcoming 2003)<br />

Ulrich Glassmann<br />

Refining National Policy: The Machine Tool Industry in the<br />

Local Economy of Stuttgart. In: Colin Crouch (ed.), Challenges<br />

to European Economic Governance: Responding to<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

Change in the Machinery Industries. EUI Working Paper SPS<br />

No. 2002/13. Florence: European University Institute, 2002,<br />

43–74<br />

Ulrich Glassmann, Helmut Voelzkow<br />

The Governance of Local Economies in Germany. In: Colin<br />

Crouch, Patrick Le Galès, Carlo Trigilia, Helmut Voelzkow<br />

(eds.), Local Production Systems in Europe: Rise or Demise?<br />

Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002, 79–116<br />

European Comparison of Public Research<br />

Systems<br />

Uwe Schimank (FernUniversität Hagen) with Markus Winnes<br />

Public research systems in Europe have been confronted with<br />

new challenges since the middle of the 1970s. Growth rates of<br />

public expenditure on R&D have declined, while the demand<br />

for scientific research that addresses economic and societal<br />

problems has increased. In addition, new research areas and<br />

key technologies and the increasing importance of interdisciplinary<br />

and international research require changes in priorities<br />

and organizational structures. The objective of the project<br />

is to gain insights into the problems and dynamics of<br />

change of national research systems with different historical<br />

traditions and institutional structures on the basis of a common<br />

analytical framework. The project, which involves research<br />

teams from ten European countries, is coordinated by<br />

the “Science Policy Research Unit” (SPRU) at the University of<br />

Sussex and co-funded by the EU. The comparative reports are<br />

supplemented by case studies of research institutes in the area<br />

of human genetics focusing on the mediating structures between<br />

research institutes and their societal environment. A<br />

central element of the whole project is the development of a<br />

sound methodology for comparing research institutions in<br />

different national and institutional contexts. Project duration:<br />

May 1997 to May 1999. Two reports by Schimank and Winnes<br />

are available as downloads from the <strong>MPIfG</strong> website. The comprehensive<br />

report by Senker et al. can be downloaded from<br />

the research section of the SPRU website.<br />

Uwe Schimank, Markus Winnes<br />

Public Sector Research in Europe: Comparative Case Studies on<br />

the Organisation of Human Genetics Research. Synthesis<br />

Report. Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

1999, 74 pp. Online: <br />

Markus Winnes, Uwe Schimank<br />

National Report: Federal Republic of Germany. Cologne: Max<br />

Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, 1999, 262 pp.<br />

Online: <br />

43


44<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Jacqueline M. Senker et al.<br />

European Comparison of Public Research Systems. Brighton:<br />

SPRU, University of Sussex, 1999, 71 pp. Online: <br />

Economic Research Institutes in the Federal<br />

Republic of Germany: Publicly Funded<br />

Economic Research in Its Social Context<br />

Arnold Wilts<br />

This project was launched by Renate Mayntz as part of a larger<br />

research project on questions of the institutional linking<br />

mechanisms between science and its societal environment (cf.<br />

Renate Mayntz and Uwe Schimank, eds., Linking Theory and<br />

Practice: Intermediation between Science and Society and its<br />

Effects on the Development of Scientific Knowledge. Research<br />

Policy, Special Issue Vol. 27, No. 8, pp. 747–879, 1998). In this<br />

context, this particular project investigates the organization of<br />

economic research in the Federal Republic of Germany. Its<br />

central question is how topics of economic research are identified<br />

in different institutional contexts and how the decisionmaking<br />

procedures with respect to the identification of goals<br />

and priorities of economic research differ across those contexts.<br />

The answer to the research question shows that the way<br />

in which policy initiatives and market incentives are brought<br />

to bear on the contents of economic research is structured by<br />

both the internal organization of research institutes and by<br />

the organization of their external relations with actors in<br />

other social subsystems. This finding highlights the selectivity<br />

of different intermediary structures between science and its<br />

societal environment. The empirical phase of the project was<br />

concluded in the summer of 1998 with a series of expert<br />

interviews. In summer of<br />

1999, a final report was<br />

published. Two journal articles<br />

discuss the project’s findings.<br />

Project duration: May<br />

1997 to August 1999.<br />

Arnold Wilts<br />

Forms of Research Organization<br />

and Their Responsiveness<br />

to External Goal<br />

Setting. In: Research Policy,<br />

Vol. 29, No. 6, 767–781<br />

(2000)<br />

Arnold Wilts<br />

Arnold Wilts<br />

Theoretical and Practical Research Orientations in German<br />

Economics. In: Science Studies, Vol. 12, No. 1, 3–20 (1999)<br />

Arnold Wilts<br />

Institutionelle Vermittlungsmechanismen zwischen Wissenschaft<br />

und Praxis – Am Beispiel der universitären und außeruniversitären<br />

Wirtschaftsforschung in Deutschland. Endbericht.<br />

Cologne: Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies,<br />

1999, 154 pp. Online: <br />

The Internet and the Development of<br />

Research Computer Networks: An International<br />

Comparison from a Governance<br />

Perspective<br />

Raymund Werle and Volker Leib<br />

Since the early 1990s the Internet, originally a US research<br />

network, has grown immensely. Not only the academic but<br />

also the global business community has increasingly been<br />

attracted by this network. Our project aims to explain the<br />

career of the Internet, which is regarded as the prototype of a<br />

new socio-technical model of the development and operation<br />

of large technical systems based on non-hierarchical, decentralized<br />

organizational structures with a great number of<br />

organizations involved. We compare the Internet to research<br />

networks in Germany (DFN/WiN) and the United Kingdom<br />

(JANET) in order to identify the factors that led to its success.<br />

We suggest that differences in the governance structures of<br />

these countries account for the different careers of the networks.<br />

Governance includes the institutionalized modes of<br />

coordination and cooperation and the business and political<br />

interests unfolding in this context. Network features such as<br />

organization, funding and financing, utilization and standards<br />

are used as indicators of the careers of the networks.<br />

They are objects of political and institutional control, which<br />

is shaped by the governance structure of three sectors in particular:<br />

telecommunications, information technology, and<br />

research and education. Control becomes effective in pivotal<br />

moments for each network’s development, i.e. when decisions<br />

about different possible paths of development have to be<br />

taken. Several articles based on the project’s results have been<br />

published in journals and edited volumes. Project duration:<br />

April 1996 to April 1999.<br />

Many of the print publications from this project are also available<br />

online at .


Raymund Werle<br />

Internet@Europe: Overcoming Institutional Fragmentation and<br />

Policy Failure. European Integration online Papers (EIoP),<br />

Vol. 5, No. 7 (2001). Online: <br />

Volker Leib<br />

ICANN–EU Can’t: Internet Governance and Europe’s Role in<br />

the Formation of the Internet Corporation for Assigned<br />

Names and Numbers (ICANN). In: Telematics and Informatics,<br />

19, 159–171 (2002)<br />

Volker Leib<br />

Bürger mit Netzanschluß. Über Partizipation, Internet und<br />

“elektronische Demokratie”. In: Renate Martinsen, Georg Simonis<br />

(eds.), Demokratie und Technik – (k)eine Wahlverwandtschaft?<br />

Opladen: Leske + Budrich, 2000, 363–386<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Innovationspotentiale im Internet – Selbstregelung auf Strukturebene.<br />

In: Wolfgang Hoffmann-Riem (ed.), Innovation und<br />

Telekommunikation. Rechtliche Steuerung von Innovationsprozessen<br />

in der Telekommunikation. Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2000,<br />

141–160<br />

Raymund Werle, Volker Leib<br />

The Internet Society and Its Struggle for Recognition and<br />

Influence. In: Karsten Ronit, Volker Schneider (eds.), Private<br />

Organisations in Global Politics. London: Routledge, 2000,<br />

102–123<br />

Also: <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 99/12. Cologne: Max Planck Institute<br />

for the Study of Societies, 1999. Online: <br />

Raymund Werle<br />

The Impact of Information Networks on the Structure of<br />

Political Systems. In: Christoph Engel, Kenneth H. Keller<br />

(eds.), Understanding the Impact of Global Networks on Local<br />

Social, Political and Cultural Values. Baden-Baden: Nomos,<br />

2000, 159–185<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Das “Gute” im Internet und die Civil Society als Informationsgesellschaft.<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Paper 00/6. Cologne: Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies, 2000. Online: <br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Zwischen Selbstorganisation und Steuerung. Geschichte und<br />

aktuelle Probleme des Internet. In: Jürgen Wilke (ed.), Massenmedien<br />

und Zeitgeschichte. Konstanz: UVK Medien, 1999,<br />

499–517<br />

Raymund Werle, Volker Leib<br />

Die Bedeutung der Wissenschaftsorganisationen für die Entstehung<br />

und die Entwicklung des Internet. In: Mitteilungen<br />

Project Areas and Research Projects<br />

des Verbunds Sozialwissenschaftliche Technikforschung, No. 20,<br />

9–35 (1998)<br />

Volker Leib, Raymund Werle<br />

Computernetze als Infrastrukturen und Kommunikationsmedien<br />

der Wissenschaft. In: Rundfunk und Fernsehen, Vol.<br />

46, No. 2–3, 254–273 (1998)<br />

Volker Leib<br />

Wissenschaftsnetze und Bürgernetze: Vom selbstgesteuerten<br />

Internet zur elektronischen Demokratie? In: Winand Gellner,<br />

Fritz von Korff (eds.), Demokratie und Internet. Baden-Baden:<br />

Nomos, 1998, 81–94<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Netzgeschichte(n). Vom Wissenschaftsnetz zum Kommerznetz.<br />

Zur Entstehung und Entwicklung des Internet. In:<br />

Christian Hartmann, Christoph Hüttig (eds.), Netzdiskurs:<br />

Das Internet und der Strukturwandel von Kommunikation und<br />

Öffentlichkeit. Loccum: Evangelische Akademie, 1998, 25–52<br />

Raymund Werle, Christa Lang (eds.)<br />

Modell Internet? Entwicklungsperspektiven neuer Kommunikationsnetze.<br />

Frankfurt a.M: Campus, 1997, 308 pp.<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Academic-Industry-Government Relations and Cross Sectoral<br />

Coordination in the Development of Research and<br />

Education Networks (REN). In: Philip Enslow, Pete Desrochers,<br />

Irene Bonifacio (eds.), Global Networking ’97. Volume<br />

II: Policy, Social Applications. Proceedings of the Global<br />

Networking ’97 Conference. Amsterdam: IOS Press, 1997,<br />

401–408<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Einleitung: Modell Internet? In: Raymund Werle, Christa<br />

Lang (eds.), Modell Internet? Entwicklungsperspektiven neuer<br />

Kommunikationsnetze. Frankfurt a.M.: Campus, 1997, 9–19<br />

Volker Leib, Raymund Werle<br />

Wissenschaftsnetze in Europa und den USA – Die Rolle staatlicher<br />

Akteure bei ihrer Bereitstellung. In: Raymund Werle,<br />

Christa Lang (eds.), Modell Internet? Entwicklungsperspektiven<br />

neuer Kommunikationsnetze. Frankfurt a.M.: Campus, 1997,<br />

157–185<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Zukunft des Erfolgsmodells Internet: Selbstgestaltung und<br />

Selbstkontrolle durch Partizipation und Kontextsteuerung.<br />

In: Franz Büllingen (ed.), Technikfolgenabschätzung und<br />

Technikgestaltung in der Telekommunikation. Bad Honnef:<br />

Wissenschaftliches Institut für Kommunikationsdienste<br />

(WIK), 1996, 223–243<br />

45


46<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Theories and Methods<br />

Completed Projects<br />

Visualizing Economic Transition in Bulgaria<br />

Lothar Krempel with Gancho Ganchev (Bulgarian Academy<br />

of Sciences, Sofia) and Margarita Shivergeva (New Bulgarian<br />

University, Sofia)<br />

The project aims to analyze Bulgaria’s economic transition to<br />

a post-communist economy. The analysis is based on economic<br />

input-output tables which are available for different<br />

points in time. Visualization methods for the analysis of social<br />

structures make it possible to visualize the complicated economic<br />

dependencies between different sectors in national<br />

economies. The project aims to understand how the sectoral<br />

structure in Bulgaria has changed over time and which sectors<br />

have undergone stronger changes than others. The results will<br />

give a detailed picture of the role different sectors have played<br />

in the transition phase of the Bulgarian economy. They will<br />

also help to identify the most crucial factors in the country’s<br />

economic development. Project duration: September 2000 to<br />

December 2001.<br />

Main project: Visualization of Social Structures<br />

Gancho Ganchev, Lothar Krempel, Margarita Shivergeva<br />

Visualization of Structural Changes. Transition in Bulgaria<br />

and the Role of the Financial Sector. In: Banks, Investments,<br />

Money Magazine, No. 3/2002, 3–8 (2002)<br />

Fraud in Science<br />

Renate Mayntz<br />

Renate Mayntz<br />

Wissenschaftliches Fehlverhalten: Formen, Faktoren und<br />

Unterschiede zwischen Wissenschaftsgebieten. In: Ethos der<br />

Forschung. Max Planck Forum 2, München 2000, 57–72<br />

Lothar Krempel


Research Cooperation<br />

Cooperation and Communication within the Institute<br />

Exchanging Information<br />

The institute has made strong efforts in recent years to enhance the exchange of<br />

information on current work among its researchers and staff. The institute’s projects<br />

were grouped into project clusters, enabling the directors to intensify contacts<br />

with and between the researchers working in their respective area. Improved<br />

supervision of doctoral candidates by the directors and several senior researchers<br />

has increased the chance that doctoral theses will be completed in time. In part as<br />

a result of the bi-weekly colloquium for doctoral candidates, but also of the closer<br />

attachment of doctoral research to larger collaborative projects, interaction<br />

between the doctoral candidates themselves has significantly increased.<br />

Generally, more researchers than in the past are now attached to projects in<br />

which they cooperate with others at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>. Groups working together prepare<br />

and conduct conferences with collaborators from other research institutions. The<br />

many international conferences and workshops at the institute are vital to the<br />

exchange of ideas between the institute and the scientific community.<br />

For better exchange of information, there is on average one in-house project<br />

presentation a month. All researchers at the institute are expected to attend. A<br />

half-day workshop is scheduled when a major project has been completed, to discuss<br />

jointly the implications of its results for the future development of the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong>’s research program. All visitors and postdoctoral fellows introduce them-<br />

47


48<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

selves by giving at least one seminar. Occasionally researchers will present their<br />

findings to the entire staff, especially when research results have attracted public<br />

attention or when there is an issue in the news that a scholar at the institute can<br />

shed light on. Twice a year a number of researchers, usually three, present their<br />

current projects to the administrative staff. This has been very well received and<br />

enhances the overall atmosphere among researchers and administrative staff<br />

members. There are also a<br />

great number of guest lectures,<br />

some of which are for<br />

the <strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers only<br />

to provide an opportunity<br />

for scholarly debate. Others<br />

are open to the general<br />

public or, by invitation, to<br />

friends of the institute.<br />

Collaborative Research<br />

Within the institute, researchers frequently collaborate on publications. Also, the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong>’s internal peer review of papers submitted for publication as <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Working Papers or Discussion Papers is an important vehicle for mutual information<br />

and debate. <strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers at all levels, including doctoral candidates,<br />

participate in this rigorous review system, which enables the reviewers to develop<br />

their critical skills, and the authors to gain from their colleagues’ experience and<br />

insights.<br />

Establishing Contacts<br />

Weekly in-house lunch meetings enhance personal contacts and help integrate the<br />

visiting researchers. Each visiting researcher is assigned to a research staff member<br />

who shows him or her around the building and helps establish professional contacts<br />

inside and outside the institute. The visiting researchers and new employees<br />

are introduced to the entire staff at the “Kaffee im Foyer,” which takes place every<br />

few months. Also, many features of the institute’s new building encouraged contact<br />

among the staff. With access to four seminar rooms, researchers are able to<br />

gather and discuss their work whenever they want to. There are also three spacious<br />

lunch rooms, which have proven to be popular meeting points for informal discussions<br />

and personal get-togethers such as the daily after-lunch espresso.<br />

The directors of the <strong>MPIfG</strong> regard it as one of their core tasks to provide for a rich<br />

social and intellectual context at the Institute, one within which independent and


spontaneous discussion and<br />

cooperation among all members<br />

can flourish. Horizontal<br />

communication among researchers,<br />

within projects and<br />

project clusters as well as<br />

across their boundaries, is no<br />

less essential for this than the direct interaction between directors and research<br />

staff. The recruitment of staff and visitors, the selection of topics for internal seminars<br />

and workshops, the invitation of guest speakers and the organization of lecture<br />

series are all important instruments of cultivating collective and individual<br />

creativity and independent motivation to produce excellent work. It is only in an<br />

environment like this that the directors can avoid becoming restricted to research<br />

management and can remain actively involved in research themselves.<br />

Cooperation with Other Research Institutes<br />

In addition to the projects <strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers conduct jointly with colleagues<br />

around the world, the <strong>MPIfG</strong> itself cooperates closely with a number of research<br />

institutes working in similar fields, among them the Robert Schuman Centre for<br />

Advanced Studies at the European University Institute in Florence, the Center for<br />

European Studies at Harvard University, the Centre européen at the Institut d’études<br />

politiques in Paris, CEPREMAP (Centre d’Études Prospectives d’Économie<br />

Mathematique Appliquées à la Planification) in Paris, and the AIAS (Amsterdam<br />

Institute for Advanced Labour Studies) in Amsterdam.<br />

Since 1998, the <strong>MPIfG</strong> has also been involved in a joint archive for publications on<br />

research in the field of European integration, ERPA – the European Research Papers<br />

Archive. The decision to establish ERPA was made jointly in November 1997 by<br />

Joseph H.H. Weiler (Harvard Law School, Cambridge, USA), Fritz W. Scharpf and<br />

Wolfgang Streeck (Max Planck Institute for the Study of<br />

Societies, Cologne), Philip Alston (Academy of European<br />

Law, European University Institute, Florence), Yves<br />

Mény (Robert Schuman Centre, European University<br />

Institute, Florence) and Michael Nentwich (Austrian<br />

Academy of Sciences, Vienna), who<br />

is the archive’s coordinator.<br />

Research Cooperation<br />

49


50<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

ERPA’s aim is to provide a common access point<br />

for the online working paper series of the participating<br />

institutions in order to help researchers in the<br />

field of European Integration studies searching the<br />

growing number of working papers now available in<br />

the internet. ERPA is confined to high-quality series<br />

in order to guarantee high standards. The paper series<br />

included in the Archive (http://eiop.or.at/erpa/) are:<br />

Online publications on European research, Robert Schuman<br />

Centre and Academy of European Law at the European<br />

University Institute, Florence<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Papers and <strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Papers, Max<br />

Planck Institute for the Study of Societies (<strong>MPIfG</strong>), Cologne<br />

Jean Monnet Working Papers, Harvard Law School, Cambridge,<br />

MA<br />

European Integration online Papers (EIoP), ECSA-Austria,<br />

Vienna<br />

Working Papers, Advanced Research on the Europeanisation of the Nation-State (ARENA),<br />

Oslo<br />

Working Papers, Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES), Mannheim<br />

Working Papers, The ESRC One Europe or Several? Programme based at Sussex European<br />

Institute<br />

Queen’s Papers on Europeanisation, IES, Queen’s University of Belfast<br />

The Constitutionalism Web-Papers (ConWEB), University of Manchester / Queen’s University of<br />

Belfast<br />

Projects with Guest Status at the <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Project Group Funded by the Hans Böckler Foundation<br />

In January 1999 the PhD program “The German System of Industrial Relations<br />

under the Impact of Internationalization” was set up with four PhD students<br />

funded by the Hans Böckler Foundation. Affiliated to the German Trade Union<br />

Federation (DGB), the Hans Böckler Foundation funds PhD programs at universities<br />

and research institutes. In the case of the <strong>MPIfG</strong>, it funds the PhD scholarships<br />

and the students’ travel expenses, and provides support for workshops and<br />

conferences.


The four PhD projects at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> are based on a common data set on the 100<br />

largest companies in Germany, each analyzing a different research question.<br />

Directed by Wolfgang Streeck and Anke Hassel, the program aims to facilitate cooperation<br />

between researchers and provide high-quality PhD supervision. The<br />

program participants, Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder and<br />

Rainer Zugehör, will be finishing their projects by December 31, 2001.<br />

Benchmarking Project<br />

On June 1, 1999, the “Office for the Benchmarking<br />

Project” (Projektbüro Benchmarking) was established<br />

at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> in cooperation between the German<br />

Federal Chancellor’s Office, the Bertelsmann<br />

Stiftung and the <strong>MPIfG</strong>. The purpose of the Benchmarking<br />

Project is to provide expert advice for the<br />

German federal government’s “Alliance for Employment,<br />

Training and Competitiveness” by conducting<br />

an internationally comparative study of quantitative<br />

and qualitative data on labor market and employment<br />

policy. The project, whose two-year stay at the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> has come to an end on September 30, 2001,<br />

has been conducted by project head Werner Eichhorst,<br />

a former postdoctoral fellow at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>, by Stefan Profit (from 1999–<br />

2000) and by Eric Thode (since 2000).<br />

As a guest of the <strong>MPIfG</strong>, the Benchmarking Project pays the institute for office<br />

space and use of its infrastructure. The project’s researchers participate fully in the<br />

activities of the institute.<br />

Ernst Rudolf Schloessmann Scholarship<br />

In 1998, Dr. Gabriele Metzler was awarded a Schloessmann Seminar Fellowship<br />

for “Social Sciences and Institutional Change.” From October 2000 to September<br />

2001 she conducted research at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> on “Political Planning as a Democratic<br />

Process – Political Thinking and Actions in the Federal Republic of Germany from<br />

the 1950s to the 1970s.”<br />

The Ernst Rudolf Schloessmann Foundation was established by a Supporting<br />

Member of the Max Planck Society. It makes awards to promote promising junior<br />

scientists. Each year what is known as the Schloessmann Seminar is funded by the<br />

returns on the Foundation’s capital. Up to six participants in such seminars can be<br />

awarded a prize for outstanding contributions. Eight to ten more junior scientists<br />

are awarded one-year grants for carrying out promising research projects in Max<br />

Planck institutes in their respective fields.<br />

Gabriele Metzler: Der deutsche Sozialstaat. Vom bismarckschen Erfolgsmodell zum Pflegefall.<br />

Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart 2003, 268 pp.<br />

Research Cooperation<br />

Werner Eichhorst<br />

Gabriele Metzler<br />

51


52<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

* Completed in 1999–2002.<br />

Project Area “Multilevel Problem Solving in<br />

European Public Policy”<br />

Adjustment of National Employment and Social Policy<br />

Systems to the Internationalized Economy*<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf and Vivien Schmidt (Boston University)<br />

with Anton Hemerijck (Erasmus University Rotterdam),<br />

Steffen Ganghof, Martin Schludi and Eric Seils<br />

Austria in the European Multilevel System*<br />

Gerda Falkner and Wolfgang C. Müller<br />

(University of Vienna)<br />

Democratic Politics in International Multilevel Governance<br />

Systems: The Regulation of Genetically Modified Plants and<br />

Food*<br />

Susanne Lütz, Ulrich Müller and William D. Coleman<br />

(McMaster University, Hamilton/Ontario)<br />

How Intergovernmental Are Intergovernmental<br />

Conferences? (Conference Project)*<br />

Bennigsen-Foerder Prize<br />

In 1999, Dr. Susanne Lütz was awarded the Bennigsen-Foerder Prize in Bochum,<br />

Germany. Susanne Lütz used the grant for her research project on “Democratic<br />

Politics in International Multilevel Governance Systems: The Regulation of Genetically<br />

Modified Plants and Food”. This two-year comparative study concentrated<br />

on developments in Germany, the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada.<br />

Granted by the state of North Rhine-Westphalia to promote innovative research<br />

projects of young scholars in that state, the annual Bennigsen-Foerder Prize<br />

provides grants of up to 50,000 EUR per project. The money is earmarked for personnel<br />

costs, materials and scientific instruments directly related to the project.<br />

The project proposals are refereed by an independent jury which recommends ten<br />

recipients each year to the State Ministry of Education and Science.<br />

Susanne Lütz, Interests, Institutions and the Politics of Regulation: Agricultural Biotechnology<br />

in the United States and the European Union (unpublished manuscript)<br />

Projects Conducted in Cooperation<br />

with Researchers outside the <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Gerda Falkner with Philip Budden (London), Thomas<br />

Christiansen (University of Aberystwyth, UK), Knud Erik<br />

Jorgensen (University of Aarhus, DK), Ulf Sverdrup<br />

(ARENA, Oslo)<br />

The Implementation of European Structural Fund<br />

Programs in North Rhine-Westphalia*<br />

Helmut Voelzkow, Rolf G. Heinze (Ruhr University,<br />

Bochum) and Volker Eichener (Ruhr University, Bochum)<br />

Incorporating Aspects of Environmental Protection into<br />

Product Standardization*<br />

Helmut Voelzkow and Volker Eichener<br />

(Ruhr University, Bochum)<br />

Project Area “Regime Competition and<br />

Integration in Political Economy”<br />

Business Associations in an Internationalized Economy<br />

Wolfgang Streeck with Volker Schneider and Jürgen Grote<br />

(University of Konstanz) and Jelle Visser (University of<br />

Amsterdam)


Germany and Japan: The Future of Nationally Embedded<br />

Capitalism in a Global Economy*<br />

Wolfgang Streeck and Kozo Yamamura (University of<br />

Washington–Seattle), with Gregory Jackson (project manager)<br />

Germany: Beyond the Stable State<br />

Wolfgang Streeck with Herbert Kitschelt (Duke University)<br />

Public Interest and the Company in Britain and Germany*<br />

Gregory Jackson with Andrew Gamble and Shawn Donnelly<br />

(Political Economy Research Centre, University of Sheffield),<br />

Gavin Kelly (Institute for Public Policy Research, London)<br />

and John Parkinson (University of Bristol)<br />

Varieties of Welfare Capitalism in Europe, North America,<br />

and Japan (Conference Project)*<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus and Philip Manow<br />

Project Area “Science, Technology and Systems<br />

of Innovation”<br />

European Comparison of Public Research Systems*<br />

Uwe Schimank (FernUniversität Hagen)<br />

with Markus Winnes<br />

Global Networks and Local Values*<br />

Raymund Werle (as part of a research network of American<br />

Visiting Researchers at the <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Johnson O. Amadi<br />

Governance Institutions in Germany and European Union<br />

Research Department<br />

Ministry of Justice, Port Harcourt<br />

Nigeria<br />

01/01–01/05<br />

Kiki Anastasakos<br />

Labor Aspects of Internationalization: Mergers & Acquisitions<br />

and Employment Relations in Advanced Market Economies<br />

Department of Political Science<br />

Temple University, Philadelphia<br />

USA<br />

01/08<br />

and German researchers selected by the Computer Science<br />

and Telecommunications Board of the U.S. National<br />

Research Council and the Max Planck Project Group<br />

“Common Goods: Law, Politics and Economics,” Bonn)<br />

The Governance of Local Economies:<br />

An International Comparison*<br />

Helmut Voelzkow with Colin Crouch (European University<br />

Institute, Florence), Carlo Trigilia (University of Florence)<br />

and Patrick Le Galès (Centre d’études de la vie politique<br />

française – CEVIPOF, Paris)<br />

Project Area “Theories and Methods”<br />

Research Cooperation<br />

Continuity and Discontinuity in Institutional Analysis<br />

Wolfgang Streeck with Kathleen Thelen (Northwestern<br />

University)<br />

Institutional Complementarity and the Dynamics of<br />

Economic Systems<br />

Wolfgang Streeck and Martin Höpner with Robert Boyer<br />

and Bruno Amable (CEPREMAP, Paris) and Colin Crouch<br />

(European University Institute, Florence, and <strong>MPIfG</strong>)<br />

Visualizing Economic Transition in Bulgaria*<br />

Lothar Krempel with Gancho Ganchev (Bulgarian Academy<br />

of Sciences, Sofia) and Margarita Shivergeva (New Bulgarian<br />

University, Sofia)<br />

Seiko Arai<br />

Management of Multinational High-Tech Companies in Japan<br />

and Europe, Especially with Regard to R&D<br />

St Peter’s College<br />

Oxford University<br />

UK<br />

02/03–02/04<br />

Gergana Atanasova<br />

Industrial Relations and EU Integration Processes<br />

Faculty of Philosophy, European Studies Department<br />

Sofia University<br />

Bulgaria<br />

02/08–03/07<br />

53


54<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Lucio Baccaro<br />

Book manuscript: The Coming of “Democratic” Corporatism –<br />

Industrial Relations and Economic Policy in Ireland and Italy<br />

International Labour Organization, Geneva<br />

Switzerland<br />

02/08–02/09<br />

Aditi Bagchi<br />

Institutional Determinants of Labor Movements’ Capacity to<br />

Manage Internal Conflict, Especially in Britain, Germany and<br />

Sweden<br />

Oxford University<br />

UK<br />

00/07–00/08<br />

Thomas Banchoff<br />

Welfare State Reform in Germany and the United States<br />

Department of Government<br />

Georgetown University<br />

USA<br />

99/07–99/08<br />

Jeremy Baskin<br />

Labor Market Reform, Employment Policy and Public Service<br />

Reform in South Africa<br />

SWOP research unit<br />

University of the Witwatersrand<br />

South Africa<br />

00/05–00/07<br />

Arne Baumann<br />

Convergence vs. Path-Dependency: Training and Qualification<br />

in the Media Production Industries in Germany and the UK<br />

European University Institute, Florence<br />

Italy<br />

01/07-02/02<br />

Mikhail Beliaev<br />

Institutional Design and Consolidation of New Democracies in<br />

Central and Eastern Europe<br />

University of Warsaw<br />

Poland<br />

00/04<br />

Vandna Bhatia<br />

Reforms in German Health Care Policies; Health Care Policy<br />

Reform and Retrenchment in Canada<br />

Department of Political Science<br />

McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario<br />

Canada<br />

00/08–00/12; 01/10–01/12<br />

Giuliano Bonoli<br />

Cultures of Welfare<br />

University of Bath<br />

UK<br />

99/05–99/06<br />

József Böröcz<br />

New Book on the Eastern Enlargement of the European Union<br />

Rutgers University, New Brunswick<br />

USA<br />

02/01–02/05<br />

Marina Bourgain<br />

Social Policy, Comparison between Social Plans of Germany<br />

and France<br />

European University Institute, Florence<br />

Italy<br />

01/04<br />

Pieter Bouwen<br />

The Complexity and<br />

Diversity of European<br />

Interest Politics<br />

European University<br />

Institute, Florence<br />

Italy<br />

01/06–02/06<br />

Martin Brussig<br />

Institutionen und Unternehmen<br />

– Bedingungen und<br />

Blockaden ihrer Koppelung<br />

Zentrum für<br />

Sozialforschung Halle e.V.<br />

Germany<br />

01/05–01/06<br />

Pieter Bouwen<br />

Philip G. Cerny<br />

Financial Globalization<br />

Department of Politics<br />

University of Leeds<br />

UK<br />

99/03–99/04<br />

Hugh Compston<br />

Social Partnership in the European Union<br />

Cardiff University<br />

UK<br />

99/06–99/07<br />

Roland Czada<br />

Completing Book with Susanne Lütz and Stefan Mette<br />

(Deutsche Telekom) on How Regulatory Policy “Tames”<br />

Markets and Technologies<br />

FernUniversität Hagen<br />

Germany<br />

00/11–01/02<br />

Richard Deeg<br />

Financial Market Changes in Germany and Europe and Their<br />

Consequences for Domestic Political Institutions<br />

Political Science Department<br />

Temple University, Philadelphia<br />

USA<br />

01/03<br />

Scott R. Eliason<br />

Taught the 2002 <strong>MPIfG</strong> Summer School on Social Science<br />

Methodology<br />

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis


USA<br />

02/06<br />

Carola Frege<br />

Union Revitalization in the US, Germany and the United<br />

Kingdom<br />

Department of Industrial Relations<br />

London School of Economics<br />

UK<br />

99/09–00/02<br />

Gancho Ganchev<br />

Institutional Changes in the Financial Sector in Bulgaria;<br />

Input-output Visualization (with Lothar Krempel)<br />

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and Society for the<br />

Advancement of Socio-Economics (SASE), Bulgarian<br />

Chapter, Sofia<br />

Bulgaria<br />

00/05; 01/04–01/05<br />

Terri Givens<br />

Radical Right Parties in Europe; Immigration<br />

Politics and the EU<br />

Department of Political Science<br />

University of Washington, Seattle<br />

USA<br />

01/08–01/09<br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Conference Project “Adjustment of National<br />

Employment and Social Policy Systems to<br />

Economic Internationalization”<br />

Erasmus University, Rotterdam<br />

Netherlands<br />

98/10/–99/09<br />

Mark Hallerberg<br />

Fiscal Institutions and Tax Reform in EU Member States<br />

Department of Political Science<br />

University of Pittsburgh<br />

USA<br />

01/06–01/07<br />

Martin Hering<br />

European Integration and<br />

the Reform of Continental<br />

Welfare States: Institutional<br />

Path-Departure in the<br />

German and French Pension<br />

Systems<br />

Johns Hopkins University,<br />

Baltimore<br />

USA<br />

01/07–01/09<br />

Monika Sie Dhian Ho<br />

Modes of European<br />

Governance and Their<br />

Dynamics<br />

Scientific Council for<br />

Government Policy, Den Monika Sie Dhian Ho<br />

Research Cooperation<br />

Haag<br />

Netherlands<br />

02/11–03/03<br />

Cynthia Horne<br />

Institutional Discrimination against the Previously<br />

Non-market Economies through the Anti-dumping Laws<br />

University of Washington–Seattle<br />

USA<br />

99/09–99/12<br />

Bill Jordan<br />

Empirical Comparative Work in Germany<br />

University of Exeter<br />

UK<br />

99/11–00/01<br />

“The atmosphere and resources of the Institute helped to make this period a<br />

remarkably productive one for me. … I was honored to have the opportunity to<br />

work there. Its high quality and intense intellectual atmosphere, its library<br />

resources, and its helpful and highly qualified staff make it an ideal site for productive<br />

scholarship and careful thinking.”<br />

“I do miss having all those active researchers around from different parts of the<br />

world, whose work often tended to intersect in one way or another with my<br />

own broad interests and who all seemed to have tremendous motivation and<br />

ideas.”<br />

“I have ... profited enormously from the opportunities to discuss my work with<br />

colleagues at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> and continue to do so. … The discussions and exchange<br />

of ideas and comments … continue to be a source of inspiration. My stay at the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> has proven very fruitful … .”<br />

“It was a great pleasure to stay at the MPI. The institute is an extremely stimulating<br />

intellectual environment and it offers excellent infrastructure to scholars<br />

which greatly facilitates research.”<br />

André Kaiser<br />

Alternanz und Demokratie<br />

Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaften, Fachbereich<br />

Politikwissenschaft<br />

Universität Mannheim<br />

Germany<br />

01/10–02/02<br />

Lane Kenworthy<br />

A Survey and Assessment of Quantitative Indicators of<br />

Corporatism;<br />

Comparative Assessment of the Tradeoff Notion, Based on<br />

Multivariate Regression Analyses and In-depth Case Studies<br />

of 14 OECD Countries in the 1980s and 1990s<br />

East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, and<br />

Department of Sociology, Emory University, Atlanta<br />

USA<br />

00/05–00/06; 01/05–01/06<br />

Harold R. Kerbo<br />

The Rise of East Asia as a Process of Regional Integration<br />

(with Patrick Ziltener)<br />

Social Sciences Department<br />

California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo<br />

USA<br />

02/10<br />

55


56<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Herbert Kitschelt<br />

Book project “German Politics in the New Century”<br />

Department of Political Science<br />

Duke University, Durham<br />

USA<br />

02/06<br />

Bernhard Kittel<br />

Kombinierte Zeitreihen-Querschnittanalyse in der ländervergleichenden<br />

Forschung<br />

Institute of Sociology, Center for Business Administration<br />

Vienna University<br />

Austria<br />

00/04–00/05<br />

Carla I. Koen<br />

The Chemical Industry in Germany and Japan<br />

Warwick University, Coventry<br />

UK<br />

00/03<br />

Yu-Chen Lan<br />

The Politics of Welfare States<br />

under Globalization: A Study<br />

of National Adaption –<br />

Germany, Sweden, United<br />

Kingdom, and Taiwan in<br />

Comparison<br />

Department of Political<br />

Science<br />

National Chengchi<br />

University, Taipeh<br />

Taiwan, Republic of China<br />

02/11–03/10<br />

Gerhard Lehmbruch<br />

Perspektiven des<br />

Föderalismus<br />

Yu-Chen Lan<br />

Universität Konstanz<br />

Germany<br />

01/12<br />

Margaret Levi<br />

Preparation of the international “Trust Conference”<br />

(December 2000)<br />

University of Washington–Seattle<br />

USA<br />

00/10–00/12<br />

Anders Lindbom<br />

Converging Welfare State? Sweden and Germany<br />

Department of Government<br />

Uppsala University<br />

Sweden<br />

99/02–99/03<br />

Christelle Mandin<br />

Reforms in the Pension Systems of Germany and France – The<br />

Role of the EU<br />

Centre d’Etude de la Vie Politique Française (CEVIPOF)<br />

CNRS, Institut d’études politiques, Paris<br />

France<br />

02/11–03/01<br />

Isabela Mares<br />

Comparative Social Policy, Work with Conference Project<br />

“Varieties of Welfare Capitalism”<br />

Stanford University<br />

USA<br />

99/03–99/05<br />

Andrew Martin<br />

Model of Society<br />

Center for European Studies<br />

Harvard University<br />

USA<br />

99/05<br />

Margitta Mätzke<br />

Die Entwicklung der sozialen Selbstverwaltung seit 1945 und<br />

ihre Rolle bei der Gestaltung der Sozialpolitik<br />

Department of Political Science<br />

Northwestern University, Chicago<br />

USA<br />

01/10–02/03<br />

Gabriele Metzler<br />

Entstehung und Entwicklung politischer Planungs- und<br />

Steuerungskonzeptionen in der BRD von den 50er bis zu den<br />

70er Jahren<br />

Seminar für Zeitgeschichte<br />

Eberhard-Karl-Universität Tübingen<br />

Germany<br />

00/10–01/10<br />

Christoph Meyer<br />

Legitimating Supranational Governance? The European Union<br />

and Political Communication<br />

Cambridge University<br />

UK<br />

99/08–99/12<br />

Eli Moen<br />

Globalisation and Small<br />

Countries: The Case of<br />

Finland and Norway<br />

University of Oslo<br />

Norway<br />

02/07–03/03<br />

Eli Moen


Jim Mosher<br />

Historical Sources of National Production Systems<br />

University of Wisconsin, Madison<br />

USA<br />

99/02–99/04; 01/06<br />

Michael Nentwich<br />

Wissenschaft im “Cyberspace”-Zeitalter: Auf der Suche nach<br />

neuen Qualitäten wissenschaftlicher Kommunikation? Eine<br />

Technikfolgen-Abschätzung<br />

Austrian Academy of<br />

Sciences, Vienna<br />

Austria<br />

98/10–99/11<br />

Abraham Newman<br />

The Politics of Personal<br />

Information Markets in the<br />

United States and Europe<br />

University of California,<br />

Berkeley<br />

USA<br />

02/09–03/06<br />

Pavel Ovseiko<br />

The Politics of Health Care<br />

Reform in Central and<br />

Abraham Newman<br />

Eastern Europe<br />

Hansard Scholars<br />

Programme<br />

London School of Economics<br />

UK<br />

02/01–02/12<br />

T. J. Pempel<br />

Germany-Japan Project<br />

University of Washington–Seattle<br />

USA<br />

99/10–00/01<br />

Vivien A. Schmidt<br />

Conference Project “Adjustment of National Employment and<br />

Social Policy Systems to Economic Internationalization”<br />

University of Massachusetts, Boston<br />

USA<br />

98/10–99/03<br />

Michael Shalev<br />

Public Lecture: Taming the Globalization Beast – Some<br />

Failures of Comparative Political Economy<br />

Hebrew University, Jerusalem<br />

Israel<br />

99/03<br />

Margita Shivergeva-Maslarska<br />

Input-output Visualization (with Lothar Krempel)<br />

Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (SASE),<br />

Bulgarian Chapter, Sofia<br />

Bulgaria<br />

01/04–01/05<br />

Research Cooperation<br />

Beate Sissenich<br />

Transnationaler Institutionentransfer in der Sozialpolitik und<br />

den industriellen Beziehungen im Zuge der EU-Osterweiterung<br />

mit Schwerpunkt Polen und Ungarn<br />

Central European University, Budapest<br />

Hungary<br />

00/07<br />

Arndt Sorge<br />

Internationalization and Provincialization: Organizational<br />

Change in Different Societal Contexts<br />

University of Groningen<br />

Netherlands<br />

02/09–03/08<br />

Sven Steinmo<br />

New Political Economy of Taxation<br />

Department of Political Science<br />

University of Colorado, Boulder<br />

USA<br />

01/05–01/06<br />

Robin Stryker<br />

European Court of Justice: Market Making and State Building;<br />

Political Partisanship and European Welfare States<br />

University of Iowa, Iowa City, and University of Minnesota,<br />

Minneapolis<br />

USA<br />

99/09–99/10; 02/05–02/06<br />

Christian Toft<br />

Multi-level Governance and Unemployment Compensation<br />

and Labour Market Policy Reform<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwesen<br />

Universität Gesamthochschule Kassel<br />

Germany<br />

00/02–01/01<br />

Ingeborg Tömmel<br />

Policy-Making in the EU<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Germany<br />

02/02–02/04<br />

George Tsebelis<br />

Taught the 2001 <strong>MPIfG</strong> Summer School on Game Theory and<br />

Its Applications in Political Research<br />

University of California, Los Angeles<br />

USA<br />

01/09<br />

Jelle Visser<br />

Dezentralisierungstendenzen in Europäischen<br />

Arbeitsverhältnissen; Mimicking and Learning: oder wie man<br />

Reformen in der europäischen Arbeitsmarkt- und Sozialpolitik<br />

erklärt<br />

Amsterdam School for Social Research (ASSR)<br />

University of Amsterdam<br />

Netherlands<br />

01/07–01/08<br />

57


58<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Claudius Wagemann<br />

Internship, <strong>MPIfG</strong> Project on the Europeanization<br />

of Organized Interests<br />

Universität Konstanz<br />

Germany<br />

00/03–00/07<br />

Arnold Wilts<br />

Vermittlungsinstitutionen und -prozesse zwischen<br />

Wissenschaft und Praxis im sektoralen und internationalen<br />

Vergleich<br />

Andreas Broscheid<br />

Research, Forum Politics in Europe, University College<br />

London, School of Public Policy, London, 19–22 February<br />

2002<br />

Research, Inferentielle Statistik mit Vollerhebungsdaten,<br />

Mannheimer Zentrum für Europäische Sozialforschung,<br />

Mannheim, 3 May and 3 July 2002<br />

Research, Insider and Outsider Lobbying in Europe,<br />

University College London, School of Public Policy, London,<br />

25–29 November 2002<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

Research, The Role of Social Partners in European Welfare<br />

State Reforms, John F. Kennedy Memorial Fellowship, Center<br />

for European Studies, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA,<br />

September 1999–June 2000<br />

Research, The Role of Social Partners in European Welfare<br />

State Reforms, John F. Kennedy Memorial Fellowship, Center<br />

for European Studies, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA,<br />

USA, September 1999–June 2000<br />

International Institute Visiting Professor, University of<br />

Wisconsin, Madison, USA, September–December 2001<br />

Jürgen Feick<br />

Research, National and European Pharmaceuticals<br />

Regulation, as part of the “Training and Mobility of<br />

Researchers Programme of the European Community,”<br />

London School of Economics: British Library of Political and<br />

Economic Science, London, 28 June–23 July 1999<br />

University of Amsterdam<br />

Netherlands<br />

97/05–99/04<br />

Cornelia Woll<br />

Lobbying in Transatlantic Comparison: EU and US<br />

in the Service Sector Negotiations of the World Trade<br />

Organization<br />

Institut d’Études Politiques (Sciences Politiques), Paris<br />

France<br />

02/09–03/02<br />

Outside Research and Study Visits by<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Researchers<br />

Harvard Yard, Cambridge, MA<br />

Steffen Ganghof<br />

Study, Exploring Social Relationships in Small Samples over<br />

Time and Space, Essex Summer School in Data Analysis and<br />

Collection, University of Essex, Colchester, UK, 8–18 August<br />

1999<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

Acting Professor, Technische Universität München, Munich,<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Ulrich Glassmann<br />

Research, The Local Economy of Bologna, European<br />

University Institute, Florence and Bologna, 3 months altogether<br />

in 1999<br />

Research, The Local Economy of Stuttgart, February–April<br />

1999<br />

Anke Hassel<br />

Study, Institutions and Economic Performance in Advanced<br />

Economies since 1945, Summer Institute of the German-


American Academic Council, Center for Advanced Study in<br />

Behavioral Science (CASBS), Stanford University, Palo Alto,<br />

CA, 20–31 July 1999<br />

Visiting Researcher, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für<br />

Sozialforschung, Berlin, September 2002–April 2003<br />

Miriam Hartlapp<br />

Study, Social Science and Game Theory, Essex Summer<br />

School in Social Science Data Analysis, University of Essex,<br />

Colchester, UK, 10–21 July 2000<br />

Summer School, European Seminars 2001 – Workshop on<br />

Europeanization, School of Social Sciences, University of<br />

Crete, Rethymno, 10–15 September 2001<br />

Marco Hauptmeier<br />

Essex Summer School in Social Science Data Analysis and<br />

Collection, University of Essex, Colchester, UK, 6 July–4<br />

August 2002<br />

Hans-Willy Hohn<br />

Research, Berkeley Roundtable on the International<br />

Economy (BRIE), University of California, Berkeley, CA,<br />

1 May–31 July 2000<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Study, Industrial Relations and European Integration,<br />

European Seminars 2000, University of Crete, Rethymno,<br />

Crete, 10–16 September 2000<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

Research, The Public Interest and the Company in Germany<br />

and Britain, Political Economy Research Centre, University of<br />

Sheffield, Sheffield, UK, 13–21 November 1999<br />

Research, Corporate Governance in Japan, Ministry of<br />

International Trade and Industry Research Institute,Tokyo,<br />

22 February–25 March 1999<br />

Research, Japanese Corporate Governance, Research Institute,<br />

Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI/RI),<br />

Tokyo, April–July 2000<br />

Antje Kurdelbusch<br />

Study, Industrial Relations and European Integration,<br />

European Seminars 2000, University of Crete, Rethymno,<br />

Crete, 11–16 September 2000<br />

Marcus Leyrer<br />

Research, Union of Industrial and Employers’ Confederations<br />

of Europe (UNICE), UNICE, Brussels, 1 January–28<br />

February 1999<br />

Research, European Lobbying, Europäische Kommission,<br />

Brussels, March 1999<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Expert Interviews for Project on the Regulation of<br />

Genetically Modified Plants and Food, Brussels, 18–21 June<br />

2001, and Washington, DC, 3–17 September 2001<br />

Research Cooperation<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Research, (1) Bismarckian Welfare State and Its Role in the<br />

German Model of “Coordinated Capitalism” and (2) A<br />

Cross-National Comparison of Pension Systems, Minda de<br />

Gunzburg Center for European Studies, Harvard University,<br />

Cambridge, MA, August 1999–July 2000<br />

Renate Mayntz<br />

Research, Robert Schumann Centre, European University<br />

Institute, Florence, Italy, 3–12 May 2000<br />

Roswitha Pioch<br />

Study, The Economics and Politics of Labor in Advanced<br />

Societies, Summer Institute of the German American<br />

Academic Council, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,<br />

Cambridge, MA, 23 August–2 September 1999<br />

Study, The Economics and Politics of Labor in Advanced<br />

Societies, Summer Institute, German American Academic<br />

Council, Massachussetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge,<br />

MA, 10–21 July 2000<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Study, Industrial Relations and European Integration,<br />

European Seminars 2000, University of Crete, Rethymno,<br />

Crete, 11–16 September 2000<br />

Armin Schäfer<br />

Research, Historical Archives of the European Communities,<br />

OECD Archive, Florence, 2 September 2001–17 February<br />

2002<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Research, Institutional Capabilities for Effective Policy –<br />

Responses to Economic Internationalization, European<br />

University Institute, Robert Schuman Centre, Florence,<br />

22 September–22 October 1999<br />

Research, European Governance: Coping with Legitimate<br />

Diversity, Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris, Paris, 1–30<br />

November 2001<br />

Eric Seils<br />

Research, Universiteit van Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 27<br />

August-7 September and 10–14 December 2001<br />

Oliver Treib<br />

Oslo Summer School in Comparative Social Science Studies,<br />

Course on “Comparative Methodology,” University of Oslo,<br />

Norway, 30 July–3 August 2001<br />

Patrick Ziltener<br />

Visiting Researcher, Research Institute of Economy, Trade<br />

and Industry (RIETI), Ministry of Economy, Trade and<br />

Industry (METI), Tokyo, Japan, April–June 2001<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Study, Industrial Relations and European Integration,<br />

European Seminars 2000, University of Crete, Rethymno,<br />

Crete, 11–16 September 2000<br />

59


60 Graduate Training and Teaching<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Doctoral Program<br />

By the end of 2002 the doctoral program of the <strong>MPIfG</strong> included thirteen students.<br />

This compares to only five doctoral students on January 1, 1998. In line with<br />

standard MPG practice, contracts for doctoral students are never extended<br />

beyond three years. On average students manage to submit their theses after about<br />

37 months.<br />

Most of the doctoral students at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> are working or have worked in<br />

close connection to major research projects. Steffen Ganghof, Martin Schludi and<br />

Eric Seils worked with Fritz W. Scharpf on the adjustment of the European welfare<br />

state to internationalization and have written dissertations on selected aspects of<br />

this theme. Martin Höpner, Antje Kurdelbusch, Britta Rehder and Rainer Zugehör<br />

worked with Wolfgang Streeck and Anke Hassel on the impact of internationalization<br />

on industrial relations in large German firms, and Miriam Hartlapp,<br />

Simone Leiber and Oliver Treib are contributing to Gerda Falkner’s project on the<br />

impact of European social policy directives at the level of the member states. Also,<br />

Volker Leib worked with Raymund Werle’s project on the Internet and then went<br />

on to write his dissertation on a related subject. It is <strong>MPIfG</strong> policy to assign all<br />

doctoral students for day-to-day support and supervision to a three-person committee<br />

including either one of the directors or a senior researcher and project<br />

leader.<br />

Most of the doctoral students in the program are funded by the <strong>MPIfG</strong>, in part<br />

from funds originally allocated to regular research positions. One student received<br />

the Doktorandenstipendium der Stadt Köln am <strong>MPIfG</strong> (City of Cologne Doctoral<br />

Fellowship at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>), which the <strong>MPIfG</strong> created from funds received from the


Cologne city government. Due to<br />

the current crisis of local government<br />

finance these were discontinued<br />

in 2003. The four students that<br />

worked with Streeck and Hassel on<br />

institutional change in German<br />

industrial relations were funded by<br />

the Hans-Böckler-Stiftung, a grantmaking<br />

foundation of the German<br />

trade union confederation (DGB).<br />

The Stiftung awards doctoral dissertation<br />

grants to particularly talented<br />

students. The four dissertation<br />

projects at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> were<br />

part of an experiment under which<br />

the <strong>MPIfG</strong> picked four applicants<br />

to the Stiftung for doctoral fellowships,<br />

to work concurrently under<br />

the supervision of one the <strong>MPIfG</strong>’s<br />

directors and a senior researcher on closely connected subjects while drawing on<br />

a shared data pool (“Dissertationsverbund”). Similar arrangements, with the same<br />

foundation or with others, will be sought in the future.<br />

Relations to Universities<br />

Difficulties may arise from the fact that the <strong>MPIfG</strong> is not a degree-conferring<br />

institution. While Streeck is now Außerplanmäßiger Professor at the University of<br />

Cologne, and Scharpf was Honorarprofessor at the University of Konstanz, doctoral<br />

students at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> are typically not recruited on the basis of their contributions<br />

to lectures and seminars of their future supervisors. Instead, most apply to<br />

the <strong>MPIfG</strong> on their own or respond to public advertisements. Increasingly, the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> is hiring graduates with a university Diplom for project assistantships, usually<br />

for two or three years; upon expiration of their contract, they are then offered<br />

a doctoral dissertation grant. While entry via a project assistant position results in<br />

postponement of an individual’s dissertation work, it is likely to shorten the time<br />

needed for its completion.<br />

Moreover, as the <strong>MPIfG</strong> cannot award degrees, its doctoral students have to<br />

find a faculty member at a university who is willing to sponsor their dissertation.<br />

External supervision, however, by university faculty members who are not affiliated<br />

with the <strong>MPIfG</strong> is difficult as <strong>MPIfG</strong> doctoral students are and should be closely<br />

integrated into the Institute. This makes it necessary to coordinate the sub-<br />

Graduate Training and Teaching<br />

Doctoral candidates at the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> 2001. Back: Oliver<br />

Treib, Steffen Ganghof,<br />

Antje Kurdelbusch, Till<br />

Müller-Schoell, Jörg Teuber,<br />

Miriam Hartlapp, Britta<br />

Rehder, Armin Schäfer.<br />

Front: Eric Seils, Simone<br />

Leiber, Martin Heipertz,<br />

Martin Schludi<br />

61


62<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

stance and method of a dissertation with a candidate’s official Doktorvater (or<br />

Doktormutter).<br />

Additional Activities<br />

Doctoral students at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> are fully integrated in the intellectual life of the<br />

Institute. The <strong>MPIfG</strong>’s small size ensures that they are from the beginning involved<br />

in all activities, including informal discussions, internal seminars and guest<br />

lectures. Also, to offer doctoral students optimal working conditions, they are all<br />

given single offices.<br />

Still, the absence of a diverse university environment, together with the students’<br />

consuming involvement in their thesis research, raises the danger of overspecialization<br />

at an early stage of a student’s career. Also, if a student’s training at<br />

the university stage was insufficient in specific respects, integration into a research-intensive<br />

context such as the <strong>MPIfG</strong> does not on its own remedy this. Since<br />

1996, the <strong>MPIfG</strong> has therefore organized internal training courses for its doctoral<br />

students. Participation is obligatory, also for project assistants about to move on<br />

to a doctoral dissertation grant at a later stage.<br />

In August 1999, the two directors began co-teaching a bi-weekly colloquium<br />

for the Institute’s doctoral students. The colloquium is listed at the University of<br />

Cologne and can be attended by students from outside the <strong>MPIfG</strong>. Each doctoral<br />

student presents his or her research project, which is then discussed by the participants<br />

and the directors.<br />

Other <strong>MPIfG</strong> courses aim to expand the reading experience of doctoral candidates<br />

beyond their immediate research needs. Four Summer Schools, open also to<br />

University of Cologne students, were held in the period from 1999 to 2002:<br />

Summer School 1999: Comparative Political Economy.<br />

A two-week intensive reading and discussion course<br />

taught by Prof. Herbert Kitschelt of Duke University,<br />

which ran from June 28–July 7.<br />

Summer School 2000: Leading Approaches in German<br />

Social Science. A lecture series featuring five prominent<br />

German scholars using different approaches and methods<br />

in Political Science and Sociology: Prof. Manfred<br />

G. Schmidt, University of Bremen; PD Dr. Frank<br />

Nullmeier, University of Hamburg; Prof. Dirk Berg-<br />

Schlosser, University of Marburg; Prof. Michael Zürn,<br />

University of Bremen; and Prof. Richard Münch, University<br />

of Bamberg. Speakers first gave a lecture on<br />

their research agendas and methods, which was open<br />

to all members of the Institute, before discussing their<br />

approaches in a two-hour workshop with the doctoral<br />

students.<br />

Summer School 2001: Game Theory and Its Applications<br />

in Political Research. Prof. George Tsebelis (Uni-


versity of California-Los Angeles) introduced twelve participants from inside and outside the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> to the main concepts in game theory, ranging from theoretical aspects – such as strategic<br />

interaction, bargaining theory with complete and incomplete information, and veto-player<br />

models – to how game theory can be applied to voting in the European Union before and after<br />

the Nice Treaty.<br />

Summer School 2002: Social Science Methodology. Prof. Scott R. Eliason (University of Michigan-Minneapolis)<br />

introduced regression analysis, probabilistic approaches, causal relationships,<br />

nonprobabilistic approaches, qualitative comparative analysis, logic and language of<br />

program evaluation methods.<br />

In addition, the <strong>MPIfG</strong> organized three short courses in research methodology:<br />

Types and Models of Multivariate Analysis. An advanced course in statistical analysis taught by<br />

Dr. Jürgen Sensch from the Central Archive for Empirical Social Research at the University of<br />

Cologne (September 4–16, 1999).<br />

Pooled Time Series Cross-Sectional Analysis. An intensive course on panel statistics, with a special<br />

focus on applications in current comparative political economy by PD Dr. Bernhard Kittel,<br />

University of Vienna (April 17–May 5, 2000).<br />

Cluster Analysis. A one-week introductory course taught by Dr. Uwe Wagschal from the University<br />

of Bremen (July 24–28, 2000).<br />

Doctoral Candidates 1999–2002<br />

Arne Baumann<br />

Labour Market Institutions in the Media Industries of the<br />

UK and Germany<br />

Pieter Bouwen<br />

Corporate Lobbying in the European Union<br />

Ira Denkhaus<br />

The Influence of Institutions on Policy Diffusion:<br />

The Privatization of State Railways in Europe<br />

Henrik Enderlein<br />

Stabilizing Economic Output in a Monetary Union<br />

Steffen Ganghof<br />

Adjusting National Tax Policy to Economic<br />

Internationalization<br />

Ulrich Glassmann<br />

The Governance of Local Economies:<br />

Baden-Württemberg and Emilia-Romagna in Comparison<br />

Ute Hartenberger<br />

European Social Dialogue after Maastricht<br />

Miriam Hartlapp<br />

EC Social Policy Directives in Southern and Francophone<br />

Europe<br />

Martin Heipertz<br />

The Making and Implications of the Stability and Growth<br />

Pact<br />

Graduate Training and Teaching<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Shareholder Value and Industrial Relations in Germany<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

Organizing the Firm<br />

Sigrun Kahl<br />

Social Assistance Reform in OECD Countries<br />

Imke Kruse<br />

The EU Regime on Illegal Migration<br />

Antje Kurdelbusch<br />

Contingent Compensation and Collective Bargaining<br />

Knut Lange<br />

Strategies of German Biotech Companies<br />

Volker Leib<br />

Internet Governance<br />

Simone Leiber<br />

EC Social Directives and the Social Partners<br />

Marcus J. Leyrer<br />

Organized Interests at the European Level:<br />

The Organizational History of UNICE<br />

Till Müller-Schoell<br />

Exemptions of Work from Social Security Contributions<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Company-level Employment Pacts<br />

Armin Schäfer<br />

Managing Economic Interdependence<br />

63


64<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Martin Schludi<br />

Pension Reform Politics<br />

Eric Seils<br />

Financial Policy and the Labor Market<br />

Jörg Teuber<br />

Europeanization of Organized Interests: Automobile and<br />

Retail<br />

Doctoral Degrees<br />

Bastiaan van Apeldoorn<br />

Doctor of the Social and Political Sciences, 29 January 1999<br />

European University Institute, Florence, Italy<br />

Dissertation (submitted October 1998)<br />

Transnational Capitalism and the Struggle over European<br />

Order<br />

Arne Baumann<br />

Dr. phil., 14 February 2003<br />

European University Institute, Florence, Italy<br />

Dissertation (submitted May 2002):<br />

Path-Dependency or Convergence? The Emergence of Labour<br />

Market Institutions in the Media Production Industries of the<br />

UK and Germany<br />

Pieter Bouwen<br />

Ph.D. in Political and Social Sciences, 27 May 2002<br />

European University Institute, Florence, Italy<br />

Dissertation (submitted December 2001):<br />

Gaining Access to the European Union: A Theoretical<br />

Framework and Empirical Study of Corporate Lobbying in the<br />

European Union<br />

Henrik Enderlein<br />

Dr. phil., 24 April 2002<br />

Universität Bremen, Germany<br />

Dissertation (submitted December 2001):<br />

Wirtschaftspolitik in der Währungsunion: Die Auswirkungen<br />

der Europäischen Wirtschafts- und Währungsunion auf die<br />

finanz- und lohnpolitischen Institutionen in den<br />

Mitgliedsländern<br />

Oliver Treib<br />

Policy Misfit and the Implementation of EC Social<br />

Directives<br />

Cornelia Woll<br />

Lobbying in Transatlantic Comparison<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Capital Markets, Codetermination and Investment<br />

Doctoral and Postdoctoral Degrees<br />

Ute Hartenberger<br />

Promotion, Dr. rer. soc., 30 October 2000<br />

Universität Tübingen<br />

Dissertation (submitted May 2000):<br />

Europäischer sozialer Dialog nach Maastricht.<br />

Grenzen institutioneller Reformen in der EU-Sozialpolitik<br />

Published in 2001 as: Europäischer sozialer Dialog nach<br />

Maastricht. EU-Sozialpartnerverhandlungen auf dem<br />

Prüfstand. Nomos, Baden-Baden, 261 pp.<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Dr. phil., 3 May 2002<br />

FernUniversität Hagen, Germany<br />

Dissertation (submitted February 2002):<br />

Wer beherrscht die Unternehmen? Shareholder Value,<br />

Managerherrschaft und Mitbestimmung in Deutschland<br />

Published: Wer beherrscht die Unternehmen? Shareholder<br />

Value, Managerherrschaft und Mitbestimmung in<br />

Deutschland. Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts für<br />

Gesellschaftsforschung Köln, Vol. 46. Campus, Frankfurt<br />

a.M., 2003, 265 pp.<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

Ph.D., 30 November 2001<br />

Columbia University, New York, USA<br />

Dissertation (submitted November 2001):<br />

Organizing the Firm: The Evolution of Corporate Governance<br />

in Germany and Japan<br />

Antje Kurdelbusch<br />

Dr. rer. soc., 23 January 2003<br />

Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany<br />

Dissertation (submitted October 2002):


Variable Vergütung in deutschen Großunternehmen:<br />

Entgeltsysteme zwischen Flexibilisierung und<br />

Flächentarifvertrag<br />

Volker Leib<br />

Dr. rer. soc., 11 December 2002<br />

Universität Konstanz, Germany<br />

Dissertation (submitted October 2002):<br />

ICANN und der Konflikt um die Internet-Ressourcen:<br />

Institutionenbildung im Problemfeld Internet Governance<br />

zwischen multinationaler Staatstätigkeit und globaler<br />

Selbstregulierung<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Dr. phil., 24 June 2002<br />

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany<br />

Dissertation (submitted April 2002):<br />

Pfadwechsel ohne Systembruch. Der Beitrag betrieblicher<br />

Bündnisse für Beschäftigungssicherung und<br />

Wettbewerbsstärkung zum Wandel der Arbeitsbeziehungen<br />

in Deutschland<br />

To be published: Betriebliche Bündnisse für Arbeit in<br />

Deutschland: Mitbestimmung und Flächentarif im Wandel.<br />

Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts für<br />

Gesellschaftsforschung Köln, Vol. 48. Campus: Frankfurt<br />

a.M., forthcoming fall 2003<br />

Martin Schludi<br />

Dr. phil., 21 February 2003<br />

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany<br />

Dissertation (submitted December 2002):<br />

Die Reform des Bismarck’schen Rentensystems: Ein rentenpolitischer<br />

Vergleich in Österreich, Frankreich, Deutschland,<br />

Italien und Schweden<br />

Eric Seils<br />

Dr. phil., 23 February 2003<br />

FernUniversität Hagen, Germany<br />

Dissertation (submitted September 2002):<br />

Finanzpolitik und Arbeitsmarkt in den Niederlanden:<br />

Haushaltsinstitutionen, Koalitionsverträge und die<br />

Beschäftigungswirkung von Abgaben<br />

Oliver Treib<br />

Dr. rer. pol., 20 December 2002<br />

Universität zu Köln, Germany<br />

Dissertation (submitted June 2002):<br />

Europäische Vorgaben, nationaler Anpassungsbedarf und seine<br />

politische Verarbeitung: Eine ländervergleichende Studie über<br />

die Umsetzung arbeitsrechtlicher EU-Richtlinien unter besonderer<br />

Berücksichtigung von Deutschland, den Niederlanden,<br />

Großbritannien und Irland<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Dr. rer. pol., February 2002<br />

Universität Trier, Germany<br />

Dissertation (submitted January 2002):<br />

Kapitalmarkt, Mitbestimmung und Investitionen am<br />

Beispiel großer deutscher Unternehmen – Die Rolle der<br />

Mitbestimmung auf das Investitionsverhalten von<br />

Unternehmen unter den Bedingungen des Kapitalmarkteinflusses:<br />

Eine empirische Analyse der 100<br />

größten deutschen Unternehmen<br />

Published: Die Zukunft des rheinischen Kapitalismus –<br />

Unternehmen zwischen Kapitalmarkt und Mitbestimmung.<br />

Opladen, Leske + Budrich, 2003, 228 pp.<br />

Postdoctoral Thesis (Habilitation)<br />

Graduate Training and Teaching<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

Venia legendi in political science, 23 April 2001<br />

Universität Konstanz, Rechts-, Wirtschafts- und<br />

Sozialwissenschaftliche Sektion, Germany<br />

Habilitation thesis (submitted 13 December 2000):<br />

Steuerharmonisierung und Steuerwettbewerb in Europa:<br />

Die Steuerpolitik der Europäischen Union<br />

Published: Steuerwettbewerb und Steuerharmonisierung in<br />

der Europäischen Union. Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts<br />

für Gesellschaftsforschung Köln, Vol. 44. Campus, Frankfurt<br />

a.M., 2002, 313 pp.<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

Habilitation thesis to obtain venia legendi in sociology<br />

Universität zu Köln, Wirtschafts- und<br />

Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät, Germany<br />

(submitted 28 October 2002):<br />

Exit from Labor: Reforming Early Retirement and Social<br />

Partnership in Europe, Japan, and the USA, 401 pp.<br />

Lothar Krempel<br />

Will obtain venia legendi in sociology in summer of 2003<br />

Gerhard-Mercator-Universität – Gesamthochschule<br />

Duisburg, Fachbereich 1 Soziologie, Germany<br />

Habilitation thesis (submitted 11 November 2001):<br />

Netzwerkvisualisierung: Prinzipien und Elemente einer graphischen<br />

Technologie zur multidimensionalen Exploration sozialer<br />

Strukturen, 276 p.<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Venia legendi in Political Science, 19 December 2001<br />

FernUniversität Hagen, Fachbereich Erziehungs-, Geistesund<br />

Gesellschaftswissenschaften, Germany<br />

Habilitation thesis (submitted 19 April 2001):<br />

Der Staat und die Globalisierung von Finanzmärkten.<br />

Regulative Politik in Deutschland, Großbritannien und<br />

den USA<br />

Published: Der Staat und die Globalisierung von<br />

Finanzmärkten. Regulative Politik in Deutschland,<br />

Großbritannien und den USA. Schriften des Max-Planck-<br />

Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung Köln, Vol. 43. Campus,<br />

Frankfurt a.M., 2002, 354 pp.<br />

65


66<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Teaching<br />

Bastiaan van Apeldoorn<br />

Summer undergraduate course<br />

The Political Economy of Western Europe between<br />

Globalisation and Regionalisation<br />

Department of Political Science, University of Victoria, BC,<br />

Canada, 27 July–20 August, 1999<br />

Seminar<br />

Political Economy of Western Europe<br />

Department of Political Science, University of Victoria, BC,<br />

Canada, 3–28 July 2000<br />

Jürgen Beyer<br />

Proseminar<br />

Netzwerke in Wirtschaft und Politik<br />

Institut für Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin<br />

Spring 2002<br />

Seminar<br />

Varieties of Capitalism – Marktwirtschaftliche Systeme im<br />

Vergleich<br />

Institut für Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin<br />

Spring 2002<br />

Pieter Bouwen<br />

Lecture<br />

European Economic Integration<br />

Economische Hogeschool (Business School), Brussels<br />

Winter 2002/2003<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

Proseminar<br />

Arbeitsbeziehungen und sozialer Dialog in Europa<br />

Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Humboldt-Universität<br />

zu Berlin, Spring 1999<br />

Vorlesung<br />

Comparative Industrial Relations in Developed Countries II<br />

Industrial Relations Research Institute<br />

University of Wisconsin, Madison<br />

Fall (September–December) 2001<br />

Proseminar<br />

Europa im Wandel: Einführung in die vergleichende<br />

Makrosoziologie<br />

Seminar für Soziologie, Wirtschafts- und<br />

Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Spring 2002<br />

Proseminar<br />

Methoden der vergleichenden Soziologie<br />

Seminar für Soziologie, Wirtschafts- und<br />

Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2002/2003<br />

Werner Eichhorst<br />

Proseminar<br />

EU-Umwelt- und Sozialpolitik im Vergleich<br />

Seminar für politische Wissenschaft, Universität zu Köln,<br />

Spring 1999<br />

Henrik Enderlein<br />

Teaching Assistant (with Bernhard Kittel)<br />

Pooled Time Series Cross Section Analysis<br />

Essex Summer School in Social Science Data Analysis,<br />

University of Essex, 7–18 August 2000<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

Seminar<br />

Folgen der europäischen Integration auf nationaler Ebene:<br />

Österreich und andere Mitgliedstaaten<br />

Sozial- und wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät,<br />

Universität Wien,<br />

Spring 2000<br />

Seminar aus österreichischer Regimelehre<br />

Papiertiger Binnenmarkt? Implementations- und<br />

Anwendungsprobleme des EG-Rechts<br />

Universität Wien<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Lehrgang Sozialmanagement<br />

Europäisches Sozialrecht<br />

Universität Salzburg<br />

Spring 2002<br />

Forschungsseminar<br />

Politikwissenschaft<br />

Institut für Höhere Studien, Vienna<br />

Winter 2002/2003<br />

Research Seminar<br />

The EU and its (present and future) Member States<br />

College of Europe, Brugge, Belgium<br />

Winter 2002/2003


Philipp Genschel<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Was bringt Europa? Harmonisierung oder regulativer<br />

Wettbewerb<br />

Fachbereich Politikwissenschaft, Universität Konstanz,<br />

Winter 1998/99<br />

Doktorandenkolloquium<br />

Graduiertenkolleg Europäische Integration und<br />

gesellschaftlicher Strukturwandel, Universität Osnabrück,<br />

Winter 1999/2000<br />

Grundkurs<br />

Internationale Beziehungen<br />

Lehrstuhl für Politikwissenschaft<br />

Technische Universität München<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Lektürekurs<br />

Internationale Politik im 21. Jahrhundert<br />

Lehrstuhl für Politikwissenschaft<br />

Technische Universität München<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Institutionelle Theorien der Politik<br />

Lehrstuhl für Politikwissenschaft<br />

Technische Universität München<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Vorlesung<br />

Internationale Politik im 20. Jahrhundert<br />

Lehrstuhl für Politikwissenschaft<br />

Technische Universität München<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Lehrstuhlvertretung<br />

Lehrstuhl Prof. Dr. Edgar Grande<br />

Technische Universität München<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Ulrich Glassmann<br />

Mentorat<br />

Politische Theorie/Demokratietheorie<br />

Fachbereich Erziehungs-, Sozial- und Geisteswissenschaften,<br />

FernUniversität Hagen, Studienzentrum Köln,<br />

Winter 1998/99<br />

Mentorat<br />

Die politischen Systeme Westeuropas<br />

Fachbereich Politikwissenschaft, FernUniversität Hagen,<br />

Studienzentrum Köln, Spring 1999<br />

Mentorat<br />

Wirtschaftliches Handeln und institutioneller Kontext<br />

Fachbereich Erziehungs-, Sozial- und Geisteswissenschaften,<br />

Studienzentrum Köln, FernUniversität Hagen,<br />

Winter 1999/2000<br />

Mentorat<br />

Internationale Politische Ökonomie<br />

Fachbereich Politikwissenschaft, Studienzentrum Köln,<br />

FernUniversität Hagen, Winter 1999/2000<br />

Mentorat<br />

Internationale Beziehungen (Grundkurs)<br />

Fachbereich Politikwissenschaft, Studienzentrum<br />

Leverkusen, FernUniversität Hagen, Spring 2000<br />

Mentorat<br />

Verbände in westlichen Demokratien<br />

Fachbereich Politikwissenschaft, FernUniversität Hagen,<br />

Studienzentrum Leverkusen<br />

Proseminar<br />

Verbände in westlichen Demokratien<br />

Forschungsinstitut für Politische Wissenschaft und<br />

Europäische Fragen, Universität zu Köln, Winter 2000/01<br />

Michel Goyer<br />

Lecture Course<br />

European Public Policy & Management<br />

Department of Management<br />

Birkbeck College, University of London<br />

October–December 2002<br />

Lecture Course<br />

Strategic Management<br />

Department of Management<br />

Birkbeck College, University of London<br />

October–December 2002<br />

Anke Hassel<br />

Proseminar<br />

Scheitert das Bündnis für Arbeit?<br />

Einführung in die Verbändesoziologie<br />

Graduate Training and Teaching<br />

67


68<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Seminar für Soziologie, Universität zu Köln,<br />

Winter 1999/2000<br />

Seminar<br />

Institutionen in den Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Spring 2002<br />

Hans-Willy Hohn<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Strukturen, Funktionen und Funktionswandel<br />

nationaler Innovationssysteme<br />

Fakultät für Soziologie, Universität Bielefeld,<br />

Winter 1998/1999<br />

Proseminar<br />

Einführung in die Familiensoziologie<br />

Fachbereich IV, Universität Trier, Spring 1999<br />

Kolloquium<br />

Unternehmensnetzwerke<br />

Fachbereich IV, Universität Trier, Spring 1999<br />

Vorlesung<br />

Organisationssoziologie<br />

Fachbereich IV, Universität Trier, Spring 1999<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Globalisierung und industrielle Beziehungen<br />

Fachbereich IV, Universität Trier, Spring 1999<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Strukturen, Funktionen und institutioneller Wandel<br />

nationaler Innovationssysteme<br />

Fakultät für Soziologie, Universität Bielefeld,<br />

Winter 1999/2000<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Theorie und Empirie des akteurzentrierten<br />

Institutionalismus<br />

Fakultät für Soziologie, Universität Bielefeld,<br />

Winter 2000/01<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Corporate Governance im internationalen Vergleich<br />

Institut für Ostasienwissenschaften<br />

Universität Duisburg<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Bernhard Kittel<br />

Course<br />

Pooled Time-Series Cross-Section Analysis: Exploring<br />

Social Relationships in Small Samples Over Space<br />

and Time<br />

Essex Summer School in Social Science Data<br />

Analysis and Collection<br />

University of Essex Colchester, UK<br />

5–17 August 2001<br />

Course<br />

Pooled Time-Series Cross-Section Analysis: Exploring Social<br />

Relationships in Small Samples Across Space and Time<br />

Essex Summer School in Social Science Data Analysis, Essex,<br />

UK<br />

5–16 August 2002<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Lehrstuhlvertretung<br />

Institut für Politikwissenschaft, Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine<br />

Politikwissenschaft, FernUniversität Hagen, June<br />

1998–March 1999<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Aktuelle Probleme der Demokratietheorie<br />

Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine Politikwissenschaft,<br />

FernUniversität Hagen, Max-Planck-Institut für<br />

Gesellschaftsforschung, Köln, 26–28 March 1999<br />

Kursbetreuung<br />

Regulative Politik, Hauptseminar<br />

Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine Politikwissenschaft,<br />

FernUniversität Hagen, Spring 1999<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Zwischen Wettbewerb und Kooperation: Föderale Systeme im<br />

internationalen Vergleich<br />

Forschungsinstitut für Politische Wissenschaft und<br />

Europäische Fragen<br />

(Vertretung des Lehrstuhls für Vergleichende Systemlehre)<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Der Aufstieg des Regulierungsstaates in Westeuropa: Regulative<br />

Politik im internationalen Vergleich<br />

Forschungsinstitut für Politische Wissenschaft und<br />

Europäische Fragen<br />

(Vertretung des Lehrstuhls für Vergleichende Systemlehre)<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Kolloquium für Examenskandidaten<br />

Regieren in entgrenzten Räumen<br />

Forschungsinstitut für Politische Wissenschaft und<br />

Europäische Fragen<br />

(Vertretung des Lehrstuhls für Vergleichende Systemlehre)<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Vorlesung<br />

Grundzüge politischer Systeme<br />

Forschungsinstitut für Politische Wissenschaft und<br />

Europäische Fragen


(Vertretung des Lehrstuhls für Vergleichende Systemlehre)<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Vertretung des Lehrgebiets “Politikfeldanalyse und<br />

Verwaltungswissenschaft” (C3)<br />

Institut für Politikwissenschaft<br />

FernUniversität Hagen<br />

As of Spring 2002<br />

Kursbetreuung<br />

Politikfeldanalyse<br />

Die Mitbestimmung in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland –<br />

Modell und Wirklichkeit<br />

Grundlagen der Umweltpolitik<br />

Der neue Institutionalismus<br />

Regulative Politik<br />

Theorien rationalen Handelns in der Politikwissenschaft<br />

Korporative Akteure, Netzwerke und öffentliche Politik<br />

Sozialpolitik im internationalen Vergleich<br />

FernUniversität Hagen<br />

Spring 2002<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Der Aufstieg des Regulierungsstaates in Westeuropa –<br />

Regulative Politik im internationalen Vergleich<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Vertretung des Lehrstuhls für Vergleichende Systemlehre<br />

(C4)<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Vorlesung<br />

Grundzüge politischer Systeme – Deutschland, Großbritannien<br />

und die USA<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Kolloquium für Examenskandidaten<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Zwischen Wettbewerb und Kooperation – Föderale Systeme im<br />

internationalen Vergleich<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Spieltheorie und politikwissenschaftliche Analyse<br />

Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Spring 1999<br />

Proseminar<br />

Gesundheitspolitik in Deutschland<br />

Universität Konstanz, Winter 2000/2001<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Die Rolle des Sozialstaats in der Politischen Ökonomie<br />

entwickelter Industriestaaten<br />

Universität Konstanz, Winter 2000/2001<br />

Till Müller-Schoell<br />

Tutorium<br />

Tutorium Hauptseminar Prof. Streeck “Arbeitsmarkt und<br />

Gewerkschaften”<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2002/2003<br />

Roswitha Pioch<br />

Seminar<br />

Herausforderungen des Sozialstaates<br />

Institut für Soziologie, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena,<br />

Winter 1999/2000<br />

Intensive Course<br />

Social Exclusion in Europe<br />

EU Socrates Programme<br />

Monte Gordo, Portugal,<br />

26 February–4 March 2000<br />

Seminar<br />

Sozialstaaten in Europa<br />

Institut für Politikwissenschaften, Universität zu Köln,<br />

Spring 2000<br />

Seminar<br />

Sozialstaaten und Beschäftigung in der EU<br />

Institut für Soziologie, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena,<br />

Winter 2000/2001<br />

Seminar<br />

Gerechtigkeit in der Sozialpolitik<br />

Masterstudiengang Sozialmanagement<br />

Universität Bonn<br />

Spring 2002<br />

Birgitta Rabe<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Stand und Perspektiven der Arbeitsmarktpolitik<br />

Sektion für Sozialökonomik<br />

Ruhr-Universität Bochum<br />

Winter 2002/2003<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Seminar (with Ellen Immergut)<br />

Staatstheorien<br />

Fakultät für Verwaltungswissenschaften,<br />

Universität Konstanz, Spring 1999<br />

Graduate Training and Teaching<br />

69


70<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Seminar (with Volker Schneider)<br />

Politikfeldanalyse<br />

Fakultät für Verwaltungswissenschaften,<br />

Universität Konstanz, 12–13 February 1999<br />

Blockseminar<br />

Sozialstaaten in der Globalisierungsfalle?<br />

Ergebnisse eines internationalen Vergleichs<br />

Universität Konstanz, 14–19 July 2000<br />

Kompaktkurs<br />

Institutionelle Strukturen der europäischen Mehrebenenpolitik.<br />

Problemlösungsfähigkeit und Legitimität<br />

Fakultät für Verwaltungswissenschaften<br />

Universität Konstanz<br />

Spring 2001<br />

Susanne K. Schmidt<br />

Proseminar<br />

Der europäische Politikprozess am Beispiel ausgewählter<br />

Policies<br />

Institut für Politische Wissenschaft und Europäische Fragen,<br />

Universität zu Köln, Winter 1998/1999<br />

Eintagesseminar<br />

Projektdesign<br />

Graduiertenkolleg Europäische Integration und gesellschaftlicher<br />

Strukturwandel,<br />

Universität Osnabrück, 28 September 1999<br />

Proseminar<br />

Die Europäische Union: Funktionsweise und<br />

Herausforderungen<br />

Seminar für Politische Wissenschaft, Universität zu Köln,<br />

Winter 2000/2001<br />

Summer School<br />

Europeanization and the Transformation of European Politics:<br />

Policies, Interests and Institutions<br />

University of Crete, Rethymnon<br />

10–15 September 2001<br />

Proseminar<br />

Deutschland und Frankreich – Regierungssysteme im Vergleich<br />

Forschungsinstitut für Politische Wissenschaft<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Spring 2001<br />

Proseminar<br />

Die Bundesrepublik als Mitgliedstaat der EU<br />

Forschungsinstitut für Politische Wissenschaft<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Proseminar<br />

Die Europäische Union: Polity, Politics und Policies<br />

Seminar für Politische Wissenschaft<br />

Universität zu Köln, Winter 2002/2003<br />

Wolfgang Streeck<br />

Seminar<br />

Deutschland und Japan: Krise des national organisierten<br />

Kapitalismus<br />

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Winter 1998/1999<br />

Seminar (with Peter Hanau and H.M. Schellhaaß)<br />

Recht und Ökonomie des Arbeitsmarktes<br />

Universität zu Köln, 12 October–21 December 1999<br />

Vorlesung<br />

Wirtschaftssoziologie<br />

Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät,<br />

Universität zu Köln, Spring 2000<br />

Lectures in the “European Master in Labor Studies” Program<br />

The Internationalization of Industrial Relations<br />

University of Milan, 25–26 May 2000<br />

European Seminars 2000<br />

Industrial Relations and European Integration<br />

University of Crete, Faculty of Social Sciences, Jean Monnet<br />

European Center of Excellence<br />

Rethymno, 11–16 September 2000<br />

Seminar<br />

High Equality, Low Acitivity: The Contribution of the Social<br />

Welfare System to the Stability of the German Collective<br />

Bargaining Regime<br />

Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, European<br />

University Institute, Florence, Italy, 3 October 2000<br />

Seminar<br />

Conservative Corporatism: Path-Dependency and the<br />

“Alliance for Jobs”<br />

Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, European<br />

University Institute, Florence, Italy, 11 October 2000<br />

Proseminar<br />

Wirtschaftssoziologie<br />

Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät,<br />

Universität zu Köln, Winter 2000/2001<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Wirtschaftssoziologie<br />

Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät,<br />

Universität zu Köln, Spring 2001<br />

Seminar<br />

Korporatismus in Europa: National, supranational?<br />

Institut für Höhere Studien, Vienna<br />

17–20 July 2001


Öffentliche Vorlesung<br />

Kontinuität oder Epochenbruch? Überlegungen zur “Zukunft<br />

der Arbeit”<br />

Institut für Höhere Studien, Vienna<br />

19 July 2001<br />

Lecture, Summer School<br />

Problems of European Legitimacy: The Role of Collective Actors<br />

European Consortium for Political Research<br />

Universität Brüssel<br />

7 September 2001<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Ökonomie und Soziologie der industriellen Beziehungen<br />

(mit Prof. H.M. Schellhaaß)<br />

Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Interessengruppen und Verbände<br />

Seminar für Soziologie, Wirtschafts- und<br />

Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Spring 2002<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Arbeitsmarkt und Gewerkschaften<br />

Seminar für Soziologie, Wirtschafts- und<br />

Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät<br />

Universität zu Köln<br />

Winter 2002/2003<br />

Christine Trampusch<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Methoden Vergleichender Untersuchungen<br />

Institut für Sozialpolitik – Graduiertenkolleg “Die Zukunft<br />

des Europäischen Sozialmodells”<br />

Universität Göttingen<br />

Winter 2000/2001<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Das Bündnis für Arbeit, Ausbildung und Wettbewerbsfähigkeit.<br />

Der deutsche Korporatismus und sein Wirken in der Sozialund<br />

Tarifpolitik (1998 bis 2001)<br />

Institut für Sozialpolitik, Universität Göttingen<br />

Spring 2002<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Methoden vergleichender Untersuchungen<br />

Graduiertenkolleg “Die Zukunft des Europäischen<br />

Sozialmodells”<br />

Universität Göttingen<br />

19–20 April 2002<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Warum gibt es keine Vollbeschäftigung? Beschäftigungspolitik<br />

in Deutschland und anderen europäischen Ländern<br />

Institut für Sozialpolitik<br />

Universität Göttingen<br />

Winter 2002<br />

Sabrina Tesoka<br />

Course<br />

European Social Policy<br />

Institut d’Etudes Politiques, Lille, France,<br />

Academic year 1999–2000<br />

Graduate Training and Teaching<br />

Oliver Treib<br />

Graduierten-Seminar<br />

Literaturverwaltung und -recherche zu Europafragen<br />

Institut für Höhere Studien, Vienna<br />

16–19 December 2002<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Seminar<br />

“Postfordismus”<br />

Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaft,<br />

Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Winter 1998/99<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Die Europäische Integration<br />

Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaft,<br />

Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Spring 1999<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Neuere Wirtschaftssoziologie – Theorie und Empirie<br />

Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaft,<br />

Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Winter 1999/2000<br />

Seminar<br />

Modell Deutschland<br />

Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaft,<br />

Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Spring 2000<br />

Seminar<br />

Europäische Integration: Wirtschaftliche und soziale Aspekte<br />

Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaft,<br />

Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Winter 2000/2001<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Varieties of Capitalism: Nationale und regionale<br />

Innovationsmodelle im Vergleich europäischer Länder<br />

(Deutschland, Italien, Frankreich und Großbritannien)<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Spring 2001<br />

71


72<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Seminar<br />

Europäische Wohlfahrtsstaaten im Vergleich<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Spring 2001<br />

Seminar<br />

Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft in Deutschland und in Europa<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Seminar<br />

Vergleichende Demokratieforschung<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Hauptseminar<br />

Europäische Integration und verbandliche Intressenvermittlung<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Seminar<br />

Europäische Wohlfahrtsstaaten im Vergleich<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Seminar<br />

Vergleichende Demokratieforschung<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Seminar<br />

Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft in Deutschland und in Europa<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Vertiefungsseminar (Hauptstudium)<br />

Europäische Integration und verbandliche<br />

Interessenvermittlung (mit einer Exkursion nach Brüssel vom<br />

22.1.–24.1.2002)<br />

Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaft<br />

Ruhr-Universität Bochum<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Seminar<br />

Europäische Integration und verbandliche<br />

Interessenvermittlung<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Seminar<br />

Europäische Wohlfahrtsstaaten im internationalen Vergleich<br />

Fachbereich Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Winter 2001/2002<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Doktorandenseminar<br />

The Internet: Development, Regulation and Political Economy<br />

Departamento de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales<br />

Universitat Pompeu Fabra<br />

Barcelona<br />

29–31 May 2002


<strong>Publications</strong><br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Publication Series<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Books<br />

Altemeier, J.: Föderale Finanzbeziehungen unter Anpassungsdruck.<br />

Verteilungskonflikte in der Verhandlungsdemokratie.<br />

Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung,<br />

Bd. 38. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 1999, 279 pp.<br />

Crouch, C.: Social Change in Western Europe. Oxford University<br />

Press, Oxford 1999, 543 pp.<br />

Crouch, C., P. le Galès, C. Trigilia and H. Voelzkow: Local Production<br />

Systems in Europe: Rise or Demise? Oxford University<br />

Press, Oxford 2001, 286 pp.<br />

Czada, R. and S. Lütz (Eds.): Die politische Konstitution von<br />

Märkten. Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2000, 296 pp.<br />

Draus, F.: Les organisations patronales dans les pays de<br />

l’Europe centrale et orientale (Pologne, République tchèque,<br />

Hongrie). Institut syndical européen, Rapport 64. ISE,<br />

Bruxelles 2000, 124 pp.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B. and P. Manow (Eds.): Comparing Welfare<br />

Capitalism: Social Policy and Political Economy in Europe,<br />

Japan and the USA. Routledge, London 2001, 352 pp.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B. and J. Visser: Trade Unions in Western Europe<br />

since 1945. (Includes CD-ROM). Macmillan Reference, London<br />

and Grove’s Dictionaries, New York 2000, 807 pp.<br />

Eichhorst, W.: Europäische Sozialpolitik zwischen nationaler<br />

Autonomie und Marktfreiheit. Die Entsendung von Arbeitnehmern<br />

in der EU. Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts für<br />

Gesellschaftsforschung, Bd. 40. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2000,<br />

333 pp.<br />

Genschel, P.: Steuerwettbewerb und Steuerharmonisierung in<br />

der Europäischen Union. Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts<br />

für Gesellschaftsforschung Köln, Bd. 44. Campus, Frankfurt<br />

a.M. 2002, 313 pp.<br />

Grundmann, R.: Transnationale Umweltpolitik zum Schutz<br />

der Ozonschicht. USA und Deutschland im Vergleich. Schriften<br />

des Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung, Bd.<br />

37. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 1999, 402 pp.<br />

Lütz, S.: Der Staat und die Globalisierung von Finanzmärkten.<br />

Regulative Politik in Deutschland, Großbritannien und<br />

den USA. Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung<br />

Köln, Bd. 43. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2002,<br />

354 pp.<br />

Mayntz, R. (Ed.): Akteure – Mechanismen – Modelle. Zur<br />

Theoriefähigkeit makro-sozialer Analysen. Schriften des<br />

Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung Köln, Bd.<br />

42. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2002, 236 pp.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Governing in Europe: Effective and Democratic?<br />

Oxford University Press, Oxford 1999, 243 pp.<br />

73


74<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Interaktionsformen. Akteurzentrierter Institutionalismus<br />

in der Politikforschung. Leske + Budrich, Opladen<br />

2000, 446 pp.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Regieren in Europa: Effektiv und demokratisch?<br />

Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung,<br />

Sonderband. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 1999, 201 pp.<br />

Scharpf, F.W. and V.A. Schmidt (Eds.): Welfare and Work in<br />

the Open Economy, Vol. I: From Vulnerability to Competitiveness.<br />

Oxford University Press, Oxford 2000, 403 pp.<br />

Scharpf, F.W. and V.A. Schmidt (Eds.): Welfare and Work in<br />

the Open Economy, Vol. II: Diverse Responses to Common<br />

Challenges. Oxford University Press, Oxford 2000, 656 pp.<br />

Schneider, V.: Staat und technische Kommunikation. Die politische<br />

Entwicklung der Telekommunikation in den USA,<br />

Japan, Großbritannien, Deutschland, Frankreich und Italien.<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 1999, 276 pp.<br />

Schneider, V.: Die Transformation der Telekommunikation.<br />

Vom Staatsmonopol zum globalen Markt (1800–2000).<br />

Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung,<br />

Bd. 41. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2001, 344 pp.<br />

Streeck, W.: Korporatismus in Deutschland. Zwischen Nationalstaat<br />

und Europäischer Union. Campus, Frankfurt a.M.<br />

1999, 324 pp.<br />

Streeck, W. and K. Yamamura<br />

(Eds.): The Origins of Nonliberal<br />

Capitalism. Germany<br />

and Japan in Comparison.<br />

Cornell University Press,<br />

Ithaca, NY 2001, 304 pp.<br />

Werle, R. and U. Schimank<br />

(Eds.): Gesellschaftliche Komplexität<br />

und kollektive Handlungsfähigkeit.<br />

Schriften des<br />

Max-Planck-Instituts für<br />

Gesellschaftsforschung, Bd.<br />

39. Campus, Frankfurt a.M.<br />

2000, 319 pp.<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Papers<br />

Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne,<br />

1999–2002, ISSN 0944-2073<br />

99/1: Schmitter, P.C. and W. Streeck: The Organization of<br />

Business Interests. Studying the Associative Action of<br />

Business in Advanced Industrial Societies. 95 pp.<br />

99/2: Tesoka, S.: Judicial Politics in the European Union. Its<br />

Impact on National Opportunity Structures for Gender<br />

Equality. 30 pp.<br />

99/3: Ebbinghaus, B. and A. Hassel: Striking Deals. Concertation<br />

in the Reform of Continental European Welfare States.<br />

26 pp.<br />

99/4: Falkner, G.: How Pervasive are Euro-Politics? Effects of<br />

EU Membership on a New Member State. 33 pp.<br />

99/5: Hassel, A.: Bündnisse für Arbeit. Nationale Handlungsfähigkeit<br />

im europäischen Regimewettbewerb. 38 pp.<br />

99/6: Ganghof, S.: Adjusting National Tax Policy to Economic<br />

Internationalization. Strategies and Outcomes. 52 pp.<br />

00/1: Werle, R.: Institutional Aspects of Standardization.<br />

Jurisdictional Conflicts and the Choice of Standardization<br />

Organizations. 43 pp.<br />

00/2: Lütz, S.: From Managed to Market Capitalism? German<br />

Finance in Transition. 28 pp.<br />

00/3: Mayntz, R.: Politikwissenschaft in einer entgrenzten<br />

Welt. 26 pp.<br />

00/4: Kenworthy, L.: Quantitative Indicators of Corporatism.<br />

A Survey and Assessment. 49 pp.<br />

00/5: Scharpf, F.W.: Notes Toward a Theory of Multilevel Governing<br />

in Europe. 32 pp.<br />

01/1: Green-Pedersen, C.: Minority Governments and Party<br />

Politics: The Political and Institutional Background to the<br />

“Danish Miracle”. 30 pp.<br />

01/2: Beyer, J.: “One best way” oder Varietät? Strategischer<br />

und organisatorischer Wandel von Großunternehmen im<br />

Prozess der Internationalisierung. 33 pp.<br />

01/3: Kittel, B.: How Bargaining Mediates Wage Determination:<br />

An Exploration of the Parameters of Wage Functions<br />

in a Pooled Time-Series Cross-Section Framework. 32 pp.<br />

01/4: Höpner, M. and G. Jackson: An Emerging Market for<br />

Corporate Control? The Mannesmann Takeover and German<br />

Corporate Governance. 53 pp.<br />

01/5: Höpner, M.: Corporate Governance in Transition: Ten<br />

Empirical Findings on Shareholder Value and Industrial Relations<br />

in Germany. 61 pp.<br />

01/6: Deeg, R.: Institutional Change and the Uses and Limits<br />

of Path Dependency: The Case of German Finance. 39 pp.


01/7: Hassel, A. and J. Beyer: The Effects of Convergence:<br />

Internationalisation and the Changing Distribution of Net<br />

Value Added in Large German Firms. 29 pp.<br />

01/8: Mayntz, R.: Die Bestimmung von Forschungsthemen in<br />

Max-Planck-Instituten im Spannungsfeld wissenschaftlicher<br />

und außerwissenschaftlicher Interessen: Ein Forschungsbericht.<br />

60 pp.<br />

01/9: Ganghof, S.: Global Markets, National Tax Systems, and<br />

Domestic Politics: Rebalancing Efficiency and Equity in Open<br />

States’ Income Taxation. 42 pp.<br />

01/10: Kenworthy, L.: Do Affluent Countries Face an Incomes-<br />

Jobs Tradeoff? 38 pp.<br />

01/11: Schludi, M.: The Politics of Pensions in European<br />

Social Insurance Countries. 49 pp.<br />

02/1: Kittel, B. and H. Obinger: Political Parties, Institutions,<br />

and the Dynamics of Social Expenditure in Times of Austerity.<br />

56 pp.<br />

02/2: Lehmbruch, G.: Der unitarische Bundesstaat in Deutschland:<br />

Pfadabhängigkeit und Wandel. 74 pp.<br />

02/3: Kittel, B. and H. Winner: How Reliable is Pooled Analysis<br />

in Political Economy? The Globalization-Welfare State Nexus<br />

Revisited. 39 pp.<br />

02/4: Schmidt, S.K.: Die Folgen der europäischen Integration<br />

für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland: Wandel durch Verflechtung.<br />

31 pp.<br />

02/5: Crouch, C. and H. Farrell: Breaking the Path of Institutional<br />

Development? Alternatives to the New Determinism.<br />

35 pp.<br />

02/6: Feick, J.: Regulatory Europeanization, National Autonomy<br />

and Regulatory Effectiveness: Marketing Authorization<br />

for Pharmaceuticals. 55 pp.<br />

02/7: Bouwen, P.: A Comparative Study of Business Lobbying<br />

in the European Parliament, the European Commission and<br />

the Council of Ministers. 41 pp.<br />

02/8: Kemmerling, A.: The Employment Effects of Different<br />

Regimes of Welfare State Taxation: An Empirical Analysis of<br />

Core OECD Countries. 39 pp.<br />

02/9: Schäfer, A.: Vier Perspektiven zur Entstehung und Entwicklung<br />

der “Europäischen Beschäftigungspolitik”. 54 pp.<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Papers<br />

<strong>Publications</strong><br />

Online Paper Series<br />

Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne,<br />

1999–2002 (only available online at www.mpi-fg-koeln.<br />

mpg.de)<br />

99/1: Hemerijck, A.: Prospects for Inclusive Social Citizenship<br />

in an Age of Structural Inactivity.<br />

99/2: Streeck, W.: Verbände als soziales Kapital: Von Nutzen<br />

und Nutzung des Korporatismus in einer Gesellschaft im<br />

Wandel.<br />

99/3: Scharpf, F.W.: Föderale Politikverflechtung: Was muß<br />

man ertragen – was kann man ändern?<br />

99/4: Mayntz, R.: Betrug in der Wissenschaft: Randerscheinung<br />

oder wachsendes Problem?<br />

99/5: Mayntz, R.: Individuelles Handeln und gesellschaftliche<br />

Ereignisse: Zur Mikro-Makro-Problematik in den Sozialwissenschaften.<br />

99/6: Nentwich, M.: Cyberscience: Die Zukunft der Wissenschaft<br />

im Zeitalter der Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologien.<br />

99/7: Schmidt, V.A.: The EU and Its Member-States: Institutional<br />

Contrasts and Their Consequences.<br />

99/8: Streeck, W.: Competitive Solidarity: Rethinking the “European<br />

Social Model”.<br />

99/9: Scharpf, F.W.: The Viability of Advanced Welfare States<br />

in the International Economy: Vulnerabilities and Options.<br />

99/10: Sorge, A.: Organizing Societal Space within Globalization:<br />

Bringing Society Back In.<br />

99/11: Streeck, W.: Die Gewerkschaften im Bündnis für Arbeit.<br />

99/12: Werle, R. and V. Leib: The Internet Society and its<br />

Struggle for Recognition and Influence.<br />

00/1: Hassel, A., M. Höpner, A. Kurdelbusch, B. Rehder and R.<br />

Zugehör: Dimensionen der Internationalisierung. Ergebnisse<br />

der Unternehmensdatenbank “Internationalisierung der 100<br />

größten Unternehmen in Deutschland”.<br />

00/2: Zagelmeyer, S.: Brothers in Arms in the European Car<br />

Wars. Management-Labour Pacts in the Context of Regime<br />

Competition.<br />

00/3: Scharpf, F.W.: Institutions in Comparative Policy Research.<br />

75


76<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

00/4: Falkner, G. and M. Nentwich: Enlarging the European<br />

Union: The Short-Term Success of Incrementalism and De-<br />

Politicisation.<br />

00/5: Genschel, P.: Der Wohlfahrtsstaat im Steuerwettbewerb.<br />

00/6: Werle, R.: Das “Gute” im Internet und die Civil Society<br />

als globale Informationsgesellschaft.<br />

00/7: Manow, P.: Wage Coordination and the Welfare State:<br />

Germany and Japan Compared.<br />

01/1: Genschel, P.: Globalization, Tax Competition, and the<br />

Fiscal Viability of the Welfare State.<br />

01/2: Mayntz, R.: Zur Selektivität der steuerungstheoretischen<br />

Perspektive.<br />

01/3: Hassel, A., M. Höpner, A. Kurdelbusch, B. Rehder and R.<br />

Zugehör: Two Dimensions of the Internationalization of<br />

Firms.<br />

01/4: Scharpf, F.W.: What Have We Learned? Problem-Solving<br />

Capacity of the Multilevel European Polity.<br />

01/5: Manow, P.: Globalization, Corporate Finance, and Coordinated<br />

Capitalism: Pension Finance in Germany and Japan.<br />

01/6: Scharpf, F.W.: European Governance: Common Concerns<br />

vs. The Challenge of Diversity.<br />

01/7: Ziltener, P.: Wirtschaftliche Effekte der europäischen<br />

Integration – Theoriebildung und empirische Forschung.<br />

01/8: Streeck, W.: The Transformation of Corporate Organization<br />

in Europe: An Overview.<br />

01/9: Hassel, A. and B. Rehder: Institutional Change in the<br />

German Wage Bargaining System – The Role of Big Companies.<br />

02/1: Kittel, B.: EMU, EU Enlargement, and the European<br />

Social Model: Trends, Challenges, and Questions.<br />

02/2: Miliband, D.: Perspectives on European Integration – A<br />

British View.<br />

02/3: Ebbinghaus, B.: Dinosaurier der Dienstleistungsgesellschaft?<br />

Der Mitgliederschwund deutscher Gewerkschaften im<br />

historischen und internationalen Vergleich.<br />

02/4: Beyer, J.: Deutschland AG a.D.: Deutsche Bank, Allianz<br />

und das Verflechtungszentrum großer deutscher Unternehmen.<br />

02/5: Trampusch, C.: Die Bundesanstalt für Arbeit und das<br />

Zusammenwirken von Staat und Verbänden in der Arbeitsmarktpolitik<br />

von 1952 bis 2001.<br />

02/6: Vandenbroucke, F.: The EU and Social Protection: What<br />

Should the European Convention Propose?<br />

02/7: Broscheid, A. and D. Coen: Business Interest Representation<br />

and European Commission Fora: A Game Theoretic Investigation.<br />

02/8: Scharpf, F.W.: The European Social Model: Coping with<br />

the Challenges of Diversity.<br />

02/9: Ziltener, P.: Ostasiatische oder pazifische Handelsdynamik?<br />

Eine Analyse von UNCTAD-Handelsdaten, 1970–2000.<br />

02/10: Goyer, M.: The Transformation of Corporate Governance<br />

in France and Germany: The Role of Workplace Institutions.<br />

02/11: Falkner, G., M. Hartlapp, S. Leiber and O. Treib: Transforming<br />

Social Policy in Europe? The EC’s Parental Leave<br />

Directive and Misfit in the 15 Member States.<br />

Berichte über Forschung am <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung: Arbeitsbeziehungen<br />

in Deutschland – Wandel durch Internationalisierung.<br />

Bericht über Forschung am <strong>MPIfG</strong>, 2002, 66 pp.


Further <strong>Publications</strong> by <strong>MPIfG</strong> Researchers<br />

A<br />

Apeldoorn, B. van: The Political Economy of European Integration:<br />

Transnational Social Forces in the Making of the New<br />

European Order. In: Political Economy and the Changing<br />

Global Order, (Eds.) G. Underhill, R. Stubbs. Oxford University<br />

Press, Oxford 2000, 235–244.<br />

Apeldoorn, B. van: Transnational Class Agency and European<br />

Governance: The Case of the European Roundtable of Industrialists.<br />

New Political Economy 5, 157–181 (2000).<br />

Apeldoorn, B. van: Transnationale Klassen und Europäisches<br />

Regieren. In: Die Konfiguration Europas, (Eds.) H.-J. Bieling,<br />

J. Steinhilber. Westfälisches Dampfboot, Münster 2000,<br />

189–221.<br />

Apeldoorn, B. van: Transnationalisation and the Restructuring<br />

of Europe’s Socio-Economic Order. International Journal of<br />

Political Economy 28, 12–53 (1999).<br />

B<br />

Baumann, A.: Informal Labour Market Governance: The Case<br />

of the British and German Media Production Industries.<br />

Work, Employment and Society 16, 27–46 (2002).<br />

Beyer, J.: Ausländische Direktinvestitionen – eine Herausforderung<br />

für die politische Steuerung der Transformation. In:<br />

Gelegenheit und Entscheidung – Policies und Politics erfolgreicher<br />

Transformationssteuerung. (Ed.) H. Wiesenthal.<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2001, 191–213.<br />

Beyer, J.: Beyond the Gradualism-Big Bang Dichotomy: The<br />

Sequencing of Reforms and Its Impact on GDP. In: Successful<br />

Transitions. (Eds.) J. Beyer, J. Wielgohs, H. Wiesenthal. Nomos,<br />

Baden-Baden 2001, 23–39.<br />

Beyer, J.: Wie erfolgreich sind Maßnahmen zur Förderung<br />

von ausländischen Direktinvestitionen? Empirische Befunde<br />

aus den Transformationsländern. Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftspolitik<br />

51, 63–83 (2002).<br />

Beyer, J.: Jenseits von Gradualismus und Schocktherapie. In:<br />

Gelegenheit und Entscheidung – Policies und Politics erfolgreicher<br />

Transformationssteuerung. (Ed.) H. Wiesenthal.<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2001, 169–190.<br />

Beyer, J.: “One best way” oder Varietät? Strategien und Organisationsstrukturen<br />

von Großunternehmen im Prozess der<br />

Internationalisierung. Soziale Welt 52, 7–28 (2001).<br />

Beyer, J.: Please Invest in Our Country. How Successful Were<br />

the Tax Incentives for Foreign Direct Investment in Transition<br />

Countries? Communist and Post-Communist Studies 35,<br />

191–211 (2002).<br />

Beyer, J.: Postcommunism as an Example of Successful Large-<br />

Scale Reform. In: Successful Transitions. (Eds.) J. Beyer, J.<br />

Wielgohs, H. Wiesenthal. Nomos, Baden-Baden 2001, 7–22.<br />

Beyer, J.: Postsozialistische Unternehmensprivatisierung und<br />

die Anwendungsgrenzen des Pfadabhängigkeitsbegriffs. In:<br />

Wandel, Wende, Wiederkehr. (Ed.) E. Dittrich. Ergon, Würzburg<br />

2001, 79–108.<br />

Beyer, J.: Jeffrey Pfeffer and Gerald R. Salancik: The External<br />

Control of Organizations. A Resource Dependence Perspective.<br />

New York 1978. In: Hauptwerke der Organisationstheorie,<br />

(Ed.) K. Türk. Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2000,<br />

240–242.<br />

Beyer, J. and J. Wielgohs: On the Limits of Path-Dependency<br />

Approaches for Explaining Post-Socialist Institution-Building.<br />

East European Politics and Societies 15, 353–384 (2001).<br />

Beyer, J., J. Wielgohs and H. Wiesenthal (Eds.): Successful Transitions.<br />

Political Factors of Socio-Economic Progress in Postsocialist<br />

Countries. Nomos, Baden-Baden 2001, 245 pp.<br />

Bouwen, P.: Corporate Lobbying in the European Union: The<br />

Logic of Access. Journal of European Public Policy 9, 365–390<br />

(2002).<br />

C<br />

<strong>Publications</strong><br />

Crouch, C.: Adapting the European Model: The Role of Employers’<br />

Associations and Trade Unions. In: The Role of Employer<br />

Associations and Labour Unions in the EMU, (Eds.) G.<br />

Huemer, M. Mesch, F. Traxler. Ashgate, Aldershot 1999,<br />

27–52.<br />

Crouch, C.: La ampliación de la ciudadanía social y económica<br />

y la participación. In: Ciudadanía: justicia social, identidad<br />

y participación, (Eds.) S. García, S. Lukes. Siglo XXI, Madrid<br />

1999, 258–285.<br />

Crouch, C.: Employment, Industrial Relations and Social Policy:<br />

New Life in an Old Connection. Social Policy and Administration<br />

33, 437–457 (1999).<br />

Crouch, C.: Non amato ma inevitabile il ritorno al neo-corporatismo.<br />

Giornale di diritto del lavoro e di relazioni industriali<br />

77, 55–80 (1999).<br />

Crouch, C.: Ottimisti e pessimisti nel dibattito sul mercato del<br />

lavoro. Un commento. Stato e mercato 1999/2, 243–248<br />

(1999).<br />

Crouch, C.: Skills-Based Full Employment: The Latest Philosopher’s<br />

Stone. In: Vocational and Adult Education in Europe,<br />

(Eds.) F. Wieringen, G. Attwell. Kluwer, Dordrecht 1999,<br />

29–48.<br />

77


78<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Crouch, C.: Social Change in Western Europe. Oxford University<br />

Press, Oxford 1999, 543 pp.<br />

Crouch, C.: The Parabola of Working Class Politics. In: The<br />

New Social Democracy, (Eds.) A. Gamble, T. Wright. Blackwell,<br />

Oxford 1999, 69–83.<br />

Crouch, C., D. Finegold and M. Sako: Are Skills the Answer?<br />

The Political Economy of Skill Creation in Advanced Industrial<br />

Countries. Oxford University Press, Oxford 1999, 280 pp.<br />

D<br />

Deeg, R. and S. Lütz: Internationalization and Financial Federalism.<br />

The United States and Germany at the Crossroads?<br />

Comparative Political Studies 33, 374–405 (2000).<br />

Draus, F.: European Organizations and Social Partnership in<br />

Central and Eastern European Countries. Poland, Czech<br />

Republic and Hungary. In: European Trade Union Yearbook<br />

1999, (Eds.) E. Gabaglio, R. Hoffmann. European Trade<br />

Union Institute, Brussels 2000, 385–396.<br />

E<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Does a European Social Model Exist and Can<br />

It Survive? In: The Role of Employer Associations and Labour<br />

Unions in the EMU, (Eds.) G. Huemer, M. Mesch, F. Traxler.<br />

Ashgate, Aldershot 1999, 1–26.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Globalization and Trade Unions: A Comparative-Historical<br />

Examination of the Convergence Thesis. Économie<br />

appliquée (An International Journal of Economic<br />

Analysis) 55, 2, 121–139 (2002).<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Introduction: Studying Varieties of Welfare<br />

Capitalism. In: Comparing Welfare Capitalism: Social Policy<br />

and Political Economy in Europe, Japan and the USA. (Eds.)<br />

B. Ebbinghaus, P. Manow. Routledge, London 2001, 1–24.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: When Labour and Capital Collude: The Varieties<br />

of Welfare Capitalism and Early Retirement in Europe,<br />

Japan and the USA. Program for the Study of Germany and<br />

Europa Working Paper 00.4. Center for European Studies,<br />

Harvard University, Cambridge/MA, 2000, 42 pp.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: From Means to Ends: Linking Wage Moderation<br />

and Social Policy Reform. In: Social Pacts in Europe: New<br />

Dynamics, (Eds.) G. Fajertag, P. Pochet. European Union<br />

Trade Institute, Brussels 2000, 61–84.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Mellan stat och marknad. Tjänstepensioner<br />

och offentligt/privat i Storbritannien, Tyskland, Italien och<br />

Sverige. In: Pensionsreformer World Wide. Europa och Amerika<br />

möter aldrande befolkningar. (Ed.) J. Palme. Pensionsforum,<br />

Stockholm 2001, 90–120.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Where Have All the Members Gone? Die Mitbestimmung<br />

8/2000, 57–59 (2000).<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Vom Norden organisieren lernen. Die Mitbestimmung<br />

6/2000, 39–41 (2000).<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: The Political Economy of Early Retirement in<br />

Europe, Japan and the USA. In: Comparing Welfare Capitalism:<br />

Social Policy and Political Economy in Europe, Japan and<br />

the USA. (Eds.) B. Ebbinghaus, P. Manow. Routledge, London<br />

2001, 76–101.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Reforming the Welfare State through ‘Old’ or<br />

‘New’ Social Partnerships? In: From Collective Bargaining to<br />

Social Partnerships: New Roles of the Social Partners in Europe.<br />

(Eds.) C. Kjaergaard, S.A. Westphalen. The Copenhagen<br />

Centre, Copenhagen 2001, 103–120.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Soziale Pakte: Die Rolle der Konzertierung in<br />

der Reform kontinentaleuropäischer Wohlfahrtsstaaten. In:<br />

Europäische Politikwissenschaft, (Eds.) J.W. van Deth, T. König.<br />

Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2000, 418–445.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Trade Unions’ Changing Role: Membership<br />

Erosion, Organisational Reform, and Social Partnership in<br />

Europe. EU Paper Series. The European Union Center, University<br />

of Wisconsin, Madison 2002, 32 pp.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Trade Unions’ Changing Role: Membership<br />

Erosion, Organisational Reform, and Social Partnership in<br />

Europe. Industrial Relations Journal 33, 465–483 (2002).<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Varieties of Welfare Capitalism: An Outlook<br />

on Future Directions of Research. In: Comparing Welfare<br />

Capitalism: Social Policy and Political Economy in Europe,<br />

Japan and the USA. (Eds.) B. Ebbinghaus, P. Manow. Routledge,<br />

London 2001, 304–315.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B.: Any Way Out of “Exit from Work”? Reversing<br />

the Entrenched Pathways of Early Retirement. In: Welfare and<br />

Work in the Open Economy, Vol. II: Diverse Responses to<br />

Common Challenges, (Eds.) F.W. Scharpf, V.A. Schmidt.<br />

Oxford University Press, Oxford 2000, 511–553.


Ebbinghaus, B., A. Brugiavini, R. Freeman, P. Garibaldi, B.<br />

Holmund, M. Schludi and Th. Verdier: Part II: What Do<br />

Unions Do to the Welfare States? In: The Role of Unions in<br />

the Twenty-First Century. A Study of the Fondazione Rodolfo<br />

DeBenedetti. (Eds.) T. Boeri, A. Brugiavini, L. Calmfors. Oxford<br />

University Press, Oxford 2001, 157–277.<br />

Ebbinghaus, B. and A. Hassel: The Role of Tripartite Concertation<br />

in the Reform of the Welfare State. Transfer 5, 64–81<br />

(1999).<br />

Ebbinghaus, B. and A. Hassel: Striking Deals: Concertation in<br />

the Reform of Continental European Welfare States. European<br />

Journal of Public Policy 7, 44–62 (2000).<br />

Ebbinghaus, B. and J. Visser: When Institutions Matter: Union<br />

Growth and Decline in Western Europe, 1950–1995. European<br />

Sociological Review 15, 135–158 (1999).<br />

Eichhorst, W.: Die beschäftigungsfördernde Koordination von<br />

staatlicher Sozial- und Steuerpolitik und sozialpartnerschaftlicher<br />

Tarifpolitik: Erfahrungen aus dem europäischen Ausland.<br />

WSI-Mitteilungen 52, 530–538 (1999).<br />

Eichhorst, W.: Europäische marktgestaltende Politik zwischen<br />

Supranationalität und nationaler Autonomie: Das Beispiel<br />

der Entsenderichtlinie. Industrielle Beziehungen 6, 340–359<br />

(1999).<br />

Eichhorst, W., S. Profit, and E. Thode (unter Mitwirkung von G.<br />

Fels, R.G. Heinze, H. Pfarr, G. Schmid and W. Streeck): Benchmarking<br />

Deutschland: Arbeitsmarkt und Beschäftigung. Bericht<br />

der Arbeitsgruppe Benchmarking und der Bertelsmann<br />

Stiftung an das Bündnis für Arbeit, Ausbildung und Wettbewerbsfähigkeit.<br />

Springer, Berlin/Heidelberg 2001, 440 pp.<br />

Enderlein, H.: “Adapt a Winning Team!” Die Auswirkungen<br />

der Europäischen Wirtschafts- und Währungsunion auf<br />

Konjunkturzyklen und die wirtschaftspolitischen Institutionen:<br />

Österreich im europäischen Vergleich. Österreichische<br />

Zeitschrift für Politikwissenschaft 30, 257–274 (2001).<br />

F<br />

Falkner, G.: Nach Amsterdam: Ist die neue institutionelle<br />

Balance “erweiterungsfest”? In: Europäische Leitbilder, (Eds.)<br />

R. Hierzinger, J. Pollak. Nomos, Baden-Baden 2000, 119–134.<br />

Falkner, G.: The Amsterdam Treaty: The Blueprint for the<br />

Future Institutional Balance? In: European Integration after<br />

Amsterdam: Institutional Dynamics and Prospects for<br />

Democracy, (Eds.) K. Neunreither, A. Wiener. Oxford University<br />

Press, Oxford 2000, 15–35.<br />

Falkner, G.: Austria’s Welfare State: Withering Away in the<br />

Union? Contemporary Austrian Studies 10, 161–179 (2002).<br />

Falkner, G.: Corporatist Governance and Europeanization: No<br />

Future in the Multi-Level Game? Current Politics and Economics<br />

of Europe 8, 387–412 (1999).<br />

<strong>Publications</strong><br />

Falkner, G.: The Council or the Social Partners? EC Social Policy<br />

Between Diplomacy and Collective Bargaining. Journal of<br />

European Public Policy 7, 705–724 (2000).<br />

Falkner, G.: EG-Sozialpolitik nach Verflechtungsfalle und Entscheidungslücke:<br />

Bewertungsmaßstäbe und Entwicklungstrends.<br />

Politische Vierteljahresschrift 41, 279–301 (2000).<br />

Falkner, G.: Enlarging the European Union: The Short-term<br />

Success of Incrementalism and De-politicisation. In: European<br />

Union – Power and Policy-Making. (Ed.) J.J. Richardson.<br />

Routledge, London 2001, 259–282.<br />

Falkner, G. (Ed.): EU Treaty Reform as a Three-level Process:<br />

Historical Institutionalist Perspectives. Special Issue of the<br />

Journal of European Public Policy 9. London, Routledge<br />

2002, 146 pp.<br />

Falkner, G.: EU Treaty Reform as a Three-level Process: Introduction.<br />

Journal of European Public Policy 9, 1–11 (2002).<br />

Falkner, G.: European Social Policy: Towards Multi-Level and<br />

Multi-Actor Governance. In: The Transformation of Governance<br />

in the European Union, (Eds.) B. Kohler-Koch, R. Eising.<br />

Routledge, London 1999, 83–97.<br />

Falkner, G.: The Europeanisation of Austria: Misfit, Adaptation<br />

and Controversies. European Integration online Papers<br />

(EIoP) 5, 13 (2001). Internet: .<br />

Falkner, G.: The EU14’s “Sanctions” against Austria: Sense and<br />

Nonsense. ECSA Review (Journal of the European Community<br />

Studies Association USA) 14, 14–20 (2001).<br />

Falkner, G.: Interest Groups in a Multi-Level Polity: The Impact<br />

of European Integration on National Systems. EUI Working<br />

Paper RSC No. 99/34. EUI, Florence 1999, 35 pp.<br />

Falkner, G.: The Institutional Framework of Labour Relations<br />

at the EU-Level: Provisions and Historical Background. In:<br />

Transnational Industrial Relations in Europe, (Eds.) R. Hoffmann,<br />

O. Jacobi, B. Keller, M. Weiss. Hans-Böckler-Stiftung,<br />

Düsseldorf 2000, 11–28.<br />

Falkner, G.: How Intergovernmental Are Intergovernmental<br />

Conferences? An Example from the Maastricht Treaty Reform.<br />

Journal of European Public Policy 9, 98–119 (2002).<br />

Falkner, G.: Korporatismus auf österreichischer und europäischer<br />

Ebene: Verflechtung ohne Osmose? In: Zukunft der Sozialpartnerschaft:<br />

Veränderungsdynamik und Reformbedarf,<br />

(Eds.) F. Karlhofer, E. Tálos. Signum, Vienna 1999, 215–240.<br />

Falkner, G.: “Neues Regieren” und Soziales Europa: Theorie<br />

und Praxis von Mindestharmonisierung und “Soft Law” im<br />

Mehrebenensystem. In: Max-Planck-Jahrbuch. (Ed.) Max-<br />

Planck-Gesellschaft. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen<br />

2001, 760–762.<br />

Falkner, G.: Österreich als Mitglied der EU. In: Das politische<br />

System in Österreich, (Ed.) E. Tálos. Österreichischer Bundespressedienst,<br />

Vienna 2000, 29–32.<br />

79


80<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Falkner, G.: How Pervasive are Euro-Politics? Effects of EU<br />

Membership on a New Member State. Journal of Common<br />

Market Studies 38, 223–250 (2000).<br />

Falkner, G.: Policy Networks in a Multi-Level System: Converging<br />

Towards Moderate Diversity? West European Politics<br />

23, 94–120 (2000).<br />

Falkner, G.: Policy Networks in a Multi-Level System: Convergence<br />

Towards Moderate Diversity? In: Europeanised Politics?<br />

European Integration and National Political Systems. (Eds.)<br />

K.H. Goetz, S. Hix. Frank Cass, London/Portland 2001, 94–<br />

120.<br />

Falkner, G.: Problemlösungsfähigkeit im europäischen Mehrebenensystem:<br />

Die soziale Dimension. In: Wie problemlösungsfähig<br />

ist die EU? Regieren im europäischen Mehrebenensystem,<br />

(Eds.) E. Grande, M. Jachtenfuchs. Nomos, Baden-Baden<br />

2000, 283–311.<br />

Falkner, G.: Rappresentanza degli interessi e politiche pubbliche<br />

nell’Unione Europea. Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica<br />

30, 3–41 (2000).<br />

Falkner, G.: The Treaty on European Union and its Revision:<br />

Sea Change or Empty Shell for European Social Policies? In:<br />

Survival of the European Welfare State, (Ed.) S. Kuhnle.<br />

Routledge, London 2000, 185–201.<br />

Falkner, G.: Auf dem Weg zu einer “Europäischen Sozialpolitik”:<br />

Was leistet die EU? In: Auf dem Weg zu einem europäischen<br />

Sozialmodell, (Ed.) F. Verzetnitsch. Zukunfts- und<br />

Kulturwerkstätte, Vienna 2000, 28–34.<br />

Falkner, G.: Zwischen Recht und Vertrag: Innovative Regulierungsformen<br />

im EG-Arbeitsrecht. Zeitschrift für Europäisches<br />

Privatrecht 2, 222–235 (2002).<br />

Falkner, G., T. Christiansen and K.E. Jorgensen: Theorising EU<br />

Treaty Reform: Beyond Diplomacy and Bargaining. Journal of<br />

European Public Policy 9, 12–32 (2002).<br />

Falkner, G., M. Hartlapp, S. Leiber and O. Treib: Opposition<br />

through the Backdoor? The Case of National Non-Compliance<br />

with European Directives. Reihe Politikwissenschaft 83.<br />

Institut für Höhere Studien, Wien 2002, 27 pp.<br />

Falkner, G., W.C. Müller, M. Eder, K. Hiller, G. Steiner and R.<br />

Trattnigg: The Impact of EU Membership on Policy Networks<br />

in Austria: Creeping Chance Beneath the Surface. Journal of<br />

European Public Policy 6, 496–516 (1999).<br />

Falkner, G. and M. Nentwich: The Amsterdam Treaty: The<br />

Blueprint for the Future Institutional Balance? In: European<br />

Integration after Amsterdam: Institutional Dynamics and<br />

Prospects for Democracy, (Eds.) K. Neunreither, A. Wiener.<br />

Oxford University Press, Oxford 1999, 15–35.<br />

Feick, J.: Arzneimittelzulassung: Nationale Regulierung, internationale<br />

Harmonisierung und europäische Integration. In:<br />

Die politische Konstitution von Märkten, (Eds.) R. Czada, S.<br />

Lütz. Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2000, 228–249.<br />

Feick, J.: Wissen, Expertise und regulative Politik – Das Beispiel<br />

der Arzneimittelkontrolle. In: Gesellschaftliche Komplexität<br />

und kollektive Handlungsfähigkeit, (Eds.) U. Schimank,<br />

R. Werle. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2000, 208–239.<br />

G<br />

Ganghof, S.: Adjusting National Tax Policy to Economic Internationalization.<br />

Strategies and Outcomes. In: Welfare and<br />

Work in the Open Economy, Vol. II: Diverse Responses to<br />

Common Challenges, (Eds.) F. W. Scharpf, V. A. Schmidt. Oxford<br />

University Press, Oxford 2000, 597–645.<br />

Ganghof, S.: Grüne Steuerpolitik: Überangepasst oder sachgerecht?<br />

Einkommensbesteuerung im internationalen Vergleich.<br />

Kommune 20, 5, 43–46 (2002).<br />

Ganghof, S.: Steuerwettbewerb und Vetospieler: Stimmt die<br />

These der blockierten Anpassung? Politische Vierteljahresschrift<br />

40, 458–472 (1999).<br />

Genschel, P.: Globalization, Tax Competition and the Welfare<br />

State. Politics and Society 30, 245–272 (2002).<br />

Genschel, P.: Die Grenzen der Problemlösungsfähigkeit der<br />

EU. In: Wie problemlösungsfähig ist die EU? Regieren im<br />

europäischen Mehrebenensystem, (Eds.) E. Grande, M.<br />

Jachtenfuchs. Nomos, Baden-Baden 2000, 191–207.<br />

Genschel, P.: Tax Competition in the Single Market: A Policy<br />

Constraint for the European Welfare State. In: Work and<br />

Welfare in the Enlarging Euroland. (Eds.) M. Dauderstädt, L.<br />

Witte. Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Bonn 2002, 75–98.<br />

Genschel, P.: Der Wohlfahrtsstaat im Steuerwettbewerb. Zeitschrift<br />

für Internationale Beziehungen 7, 267–296 (2000).<br />

Genschel, P. and V. Dehejia: Tax Competition in the European<br />

Union. Politics and Society 27, 403–430 (1999).<br />

Genschel, P. and T. Plümper: Wettbewerb und Kooperation in<br />

der internationalen Finanzmarktregulierung. In: Nationaler<br />

Staat und internationale Wirtschaft. Anmerkungen zum<br />

Thema Globalisierung, (Eds.) A. Busch, T. Plümper. Nomos,<br />

Baden-Baden 1999, 251–275.<br />

Glassmann, U.: Der Einfluß von Internationalisierungsstrategien<br />

auf die baden-württembergische Zulieferindustrie: Das<br />

Beispiel Mercedes-Benz. In: Global Players in lokalen Bindungen.<br />

Unternehmensglobalisierung in soziologischer Perspektive,<br />

(Eds.) A. Eckardt, H.-D. Köhler, L. Pries. Edition sigma,<br />

Berlin 1999, 189–209.<br />

H<br />

Hassel, A.: Die aktuelle Tarifpolitik – Gift für die Gesamtwirtschaft?<br />

Rhein-Zeitung, 6.7.2002.


Hassel, A.: Bündnisse für Arbeit. Nationale Handlungsfähigkeit<br />

im europäischen Regimewettbewerb. Politische Vierteljahresschrift<br />

41, 498–524 (2000).<br />

Hassel, A.: The Erosion Continues. Reply. British Journal of<br />

Industrial Relations 40, 309–317 (2002).<br />

Hassel, A.: The Erosion of the German System of Industrial<br />

Relations. British Journal of Industrial Relations 37, 484–505<br />

(1999).<br />

Hassel, A.: Gewerkschaften und sozialer Wandel. Mitgliederrekrutierung<br />

und Arbeitsbeziehungen in Deutschland und<br />

Großbritannien. Nomos, Baden-Baden 1999, 266 pp.<br />

Hassel, A.: The Governance of the Employment-Welfare Relationship:<br />

The Cases of Germany and the UK. In: Comparing<br />

Welfare Capitalism. Social Policy and Political Economy in<br />

Europe, Japan and the USA. (Eds.) B. Ebbinghaus, P. Manow.<br />

Routledge, London 2001, 146–170.<br />

Hassel, A.: From Means to Ends: Linking Wage Moderation<br />

and Social Policy Reform. In: Social Pacts in Europe: New<br />

Dynamics, (Eds.) P. Pochet, G. Fajertag. European Union<br />

Trade Institute, Brussels 2000, 61–84.<br />

Hassel, A.: A New Going Rate? Co-ordinated Wage Bargaining<br />

in Europe. In: Wage Policy in the Eurozone. (Ed.) P. Pochet.<br />

PIE Lang, Brüssel 2002, 149–176.<br />

Hassel, A.: Un nouveau salaire de référence? La coordination<br />

de la négociation en Europe. In: Politique salariale dans la<br />

zone euro. (Ed.) P. Pochet. PIE Lang, Brüssel 2002, 161–190.<br />

Hassel, A.: Organisationsreform und Organisationsformen.<br />

Gewerkschaftliche Monatshefte 3/2000, 129–139 (2000).<br />

Hassel, A.: The Problem of Political Exchange in Complex<br />

Governance Systems: The Case of Germany’s Alliance for<br />

Jobs. European Journal of Industrial Relations 7, 305–323<br />

(2001).<br />

Hassel, A.: Reformfähige Gewerkschaften – Zum Zukunftsprozess<br />

der IG Metall (Kurzfassung). Frankfurter Rundschau,<br />

29.5.2002.<br />

Hassel, A.: The Role of Organised Labour in De-industrialising<br />

Economies. The European Journal of Social Quality 2, 2,<br />

87–119 (2001).<br />

Hassel, A.: Solidarität in internationalen Märkten. Gewerkschaftliche<br />

Monatshefte 52, 8–15 (2001).<br />

Hassel, A.: Sozialpakte – Die Gewerkschaften im Bündnis für<br />

Arbeit (Kurzfassung). Frankfurter Rundschau, 25.1.2002.<br />

Hassel, A.: Sozialpakte – Die Gewerkschaften im Bündnis für<br />

Arbeit. Forschungsjournal Neue soziale Bewegungen 2/2002,<br />

58–67 (2002).<br />

Hassel, A.: Die Tarifparteien im Bündnis für Arbeit. Die Mitbestimmung<br />

6/2000, 12–17(2000).<br />

Hassel, A. and J. Beyer: The Effects of Convergence: Internationalisation<br />

and the Changing Distribution of Net Value<br />

<strong>Publications</strong><br />

Added in Large German Firms. Economy and Society 31,<br />

309–332 (2002).<br />

Hassel, A. and B. Ebbinghaus: Soziale Pakte. Die Rolle der<br />

Konzertierung bei der Reform westeuropäischer Wohlfahrtsstaaten.<br />

In: Europäische Politikwissenschaft – Ein Blick in die<br />

Werkstatt, Mannheimer Jahrbuch für europäische Sozialforschung,<br />

(Eds.) J. Deth, T. König. Campus, Frankfurt a.M.<br />

1999, 418–445.<br />

Hassel, A. and B. Ebbinghaus: Striking Deals. The Role of Concertation<br />

in the Reform of the Welfare State. Journal of<br />

European Public Policy 7, 44–62 (2000).<br />

Hassel, A. and R. Hoffmann: Nationale Bündnisse für Arbeit<br />

und Perspektiven für einen europäischen Beschäftigungspakt.<br />

In: Bündnis für Arbeit. Konstruktion, Kritik und Karriere<br />

eines politischen Großprojekts, (Eds.) H.-J. Arlt, S. Nehls.<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 1999, 213–231.<br />

Hassel, A. and N. Kluge: Allemagne. La codétermination dans<br />

les établissements et l’avenir du modèle allemand des relations<br />

professionnelles. Chronique Internationale de l’IRES 59,<br />

26–32 (1999).<br />

Hassel, A., M. Höpner, A. Kurdelbusch, B. Rehder and R. Zugehör:<br />

Zwei Dimensionen der Internationalisierung. Eine empirische<br />

Analyse deutscher Großunternehmen. Kölner Zeitschrift<br />

für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie 52, 500–519<br />

(2000).<br />

Hassel, A. and T. Leif: Reformfähige Gewerkschaften – Zum<br />

Zukunftsprozess der IG Metall. Gewerkschaftliche Monatshefte<br />

6/2002, 298–304 (2002).<br />

Hassel, A. and B. Rehder: Warum Großunternehmen das deutsche<br />

Tarifsystem mögen. Die Mitbestimmung 10/2001, 10–15<br />

(2001).<br />

Hemerijck, A.: Innovation through Coordination: Two Decades<br />

of Social Pacts in the Netherlands. In: Social Pacts in<br />

Europe: New Dynamics, (Eds.) G. Fajertag, P. Pochet. European<br />

Trade Union Institute, Brussels 2000, 257–278.<br />

81


82<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Hemerijck, A.: Opties voor de arbeidsmarkt en een open economie.<br />

In: De beleidsagenda 2000: Strijdpunten op het<br />

breukvlak van twee eeuwen, (Ed.) P.B. Lehning. Uitgeverij<br />

Coutinho, Bussum 2000, 220–234.<br />

Hemerijck, A.: Prospects for Basic Income in an Age of Inactivity?<br />

In: Basic Income on the Agenda: Policy Objectives<br />

and Political Changes, (Eds.) R. van der Veen, L. Groot. Amsterdam<br />

University Press, Amsterdam 2000, 137–154.<br />

Hemerijck, A.: Welfare Without Work? Divergent Experiences<br />

of Reform in Germany and the Netherlands. In: Survival of<br />

the European Welfare State, (Ed.) S. Kuhnle. Routledge, London<br />

2000, 106–127.<br />

Hemerijck, A., M. Ferrera and M. Rhodes: Il futuro dell’Europa<br />

sociale. Il Mulino 49, 730–741 (2000).<br />

Hemerijck, A., M. Ferrera and M. Rhodes: De herijking van<br />

sociaal Europa. Beleid en Maatschappij 27, 233–248 (2000).<br />

Hemerijck, A. and R. Kuin: Entrepreneurship Policy in an<br />

“Employment Friendly” Welfare State: The Case of the<br />

Netherlands. In: Entrepreneurship in the European Employment<br />

Strategy, (Eds.) D. Foden, L. Magnusson. European<br />

Trade Union Institute, Brussels 1999, 98–131.<br />

Hemerijck, A., M. Rhodes and M. Ferrera: The Future of Social<br />

Europe: Recasting Work and Welfare in the New Economy.<br />

Celta Editora, Oeiras 2000, 132 pp.<br />

Hemerijck, A., M. Rhodes and M. Ferrera: O futuro da Europa<br />

social: repensar o trabalho e a protecção social na nova economia.<br />

Celta Editora, Oeiras 2000, 150 pp.<br />

Hemerijck, A., M. Rhodes and M. Ferrera: Recasting European<br />

Welfare States for the 21st Century. European Review 8, 427–<br />

446 (2000).<br />

Hemerijck, A., M. Rhodes and M. Ferrera: La refonte des étatsprovidence<br />

européens. Pouvoirs: Revue Française d’Études<br />

Constitutionelles et Politiques 94, 103–119 (2000).<br />

Hemerijck, A. and M. Schludi: Sequences of Policy Failures<br />

and Effective Policy Responses. In: Welfare and Work in the<br />

Open Economy, Vol. I: From Vulnerability to Competitiveness,<br />

(Eds.) F.W. Scharpf, V.A. Schmidt. Oxford University<br />

Press, Oxford 2000, 125–228.<br />

Hemerijck, A., B. Unger and J. Visser: How Small Countries<br />

Negotiate Change: Twenty-Five Years of Policy Adjustment in<br />

Austria, the Netherlands, and Belgium. In: Welfare and Work<br />

in the Open Economy, Vol. II: Diverse Responses to Common<br />

Challenges, (Eds.) F.W. Scharpf, V.A. Schmidt. Oxford University<br />

Press, Oxford 2000, 175–263.<br />

Hohn, H.-W.: Bericht über die Konferenz: Strukturen, Funktionen<br />

und institutioneller Wandel nationaler Innovationssysteme.<br />

Soziologie – Mitteilungsblatt der Deutschen Gesellschaft<br />

für Soziologie 1/2000, 72–81 (2000).<br />

Hohn, H.-W.: Big Science als angewandte Grundlagenforschung.<br />

Probleme der informationstechnischen Großforschung<br />

im Innovationssystem der “langen” siebziger Jahre. In:<br />

Großforschung und angewandte Forschung in den “langen”<br />

siebziger Jahren, (Eds.) M. Szöllösi-Janze, H. Trischler.<br />

Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 1999, 50–80.<br />

Höpner, M.: Die Arbeitgeber und der Wohlfahrtsstaat. Die<br />

Mitbestimmung 5/2002, 52–55 (2002).<br />

Höpner, M.: Die Börse ignoriert Betriebsräte. Unternehmen,<br />

die Mitbestimmungsgremien einführen, werden dafür am<br />

Kapitalmarkt nicht abgestraft. Financial Times Deutschland,<br />

6.4.2001, 30.<br />

Höpner, M.: Ist es egal, wer regiert? Die Mitbestimmung<br />

7/2002, 33–36 (2002).<br />

Höpner, M.: Ende der Deutschland AG? Die Mitbestimmung<br />

11/2000, 12–16 (2000).<br />

Höpner, M.: Der Euro und die Lohnpolitik. Die Mitbestimmung<br />

2/2002, 46–49 (2002).<br />

Höpner, M.: Mehr Mitbestimmung durch Shareholder-Value?<br />

Die Mitbestimmung 6/2002, 21–24 (2002).<br />

Höpner, M.: Nachholende Modernisierung? Die Mitbestimmung<br />

5/2000, 24–26 (2000).<br />

Höpner, M.: Sozialabbau – ein Reformprojekt? Die Mitbestimmung<br />

10/2002, 50–53 (2002).<br />

Höpner, M.: Unternehmensverflechtung im Zwielicht. Hans<br />

Eichels Plan zur Auflösung der Deutschland AG. WSI-<br />

Mitteilungen 53, 655–663 (2000).<br />

Höpner, M. and G. Jackson: Das deutsche System der<br />

Corporate Governance zwischen Persistenz und Konvergenz.<br />

Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie 54,<br />

362–368 (2002).<br />

Höpner, M. and G. Jackson: Entsteht ein Markt für Unternehmenskontrolle?<br />

Der Fall Mannesmann. Leviathan 29,<br />

544–563 (2001).<br />

Höpner, M., G. Jackson and S. Leiber: The Battle over the Takeovers<br />

Directive. Die Mitbestimmung 8/2002, 22–26 (2002).<br />

Höpner, M., G. Jackson and S. Leiber: Übernahmerichtlinie gestoppt.<br />

Die Mitbestimmung 10/2001, 44–47 (2001).<br />

J<br />

Jackson, G.: Between Financial Commitment, Market Liquidity<br />

and Corporate Governance: Occupational Pensions in<br />

Britain, Germany, Japan and the USA. In: Comparing Welfare<br />

Capitalism: Social Policy and Political Economy in Europe,<br />

Japan and the USA. (Eds.) B. Ebbinghaus, P. Manow.<br />

Routledge, London 2001, 171–189.<br />

Jackson, G.: La compétitivité et l’égalitarisme allemands et japonais<br />

à l’épreuve. Critique Internationale 8, 133–147 (2000).<br />

Jackson, G.: The Origins of Nonliberal Corporate Governance<br />

in Germany and Japan. In: The Origins of Nonliberal Capital-


ism: Germany and Japan Compared. (Eds.) W. Streeck, K. Yamamura.<br />

Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY 2001, 121–170.<br />

K<br />

Kaiser, A.: Abschied von Westminster? Die Verfassungsreformen<br />

der Regierung Blair. PIN – Politik im Netz 3, 12 (2002).<br />

Online: .<br />

Kaiser, A.: Alternation, Inclusion and the European Union.<br />

European Union Politics 3, 445–458 (2002).<br />

Kaiser, A.: Gemischte Wahlsysteme. Ein Vorschlag zur typologischen<br />

Einordnung. Zeitschrift für Politikwissenschaft 12,<br />

1547–1574 (2002).<br />

Kaiser, A., M. Lehnert, B. Miller and U. Sieberer: The Democratic<br />

Quality of Institutional Regimes: A Conceptual Framework.<br />

Political Studies 50, 313–331 (2002).<br />

Kittel, B.: Austria in the 1990s: The Routine of Social Partnership<br />

in Question? In: Social Partnership in Europe. (Eds.) S.<br />

Berger, H. Compston. Berghahn, Oxford 2001, 35–50.<br />

Kittel, B.: EMU, Enlargement, and the European Social Model:<br />

Trends, Challenges, and Questions. Central European Political<br />

Science Review 2, 6, 34–56 (2001).<br />

Kittel, B. and E. Tálos: Gesetzgebung in Österreich. Akteure,<br />

Netzwerke und Interaktionen in politischen Entscheidungsprozessen.<br />

Wiener Universitätsverlag, Wien 2001, 268 pp.<br />

Kittel, B. and F. Traxler: Lohnverhandlungssysteme und Geldpolitik.<br />

Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft 27, 11–40 (2001).<br />

Kittel, B. and F. Traxler: Lohnverhandlungssysteme und wirtschaftliche<br />

Leistungseffekte im internationalen Vergleich, Teil<br />

II: Die Rekonzeptualisierung des Problems und die Effekte<br />

lohnpolitischer Koordinierung. Wirtschaftspolitische Blätter<br />

48, 1–6 (2001).<br />

Kittel, B., F. Traxler and S. Blaschke: National Labour Relations<br />

in Internationalized Markets. A Comparative Study of Institutions,<br />

Change and Performance. Oxford University Press,<br />

Oxford 2001, 339 pp.<br />

Krempel, L.: Visualizing Networks with Spring Embedders:<br />

Two-Mode and Valued Data. In: 1999 Proceedings of the<br />

Section on Statistical Graphics, (Ed.) American Statistical<br />

Association. ASA, Alexandria/VA 2000, 36–45.<br />

Krempel, L., G. Ganchev and M. Shivergeva: Rubrika Metodologija<br />

“Visualisatzija na strukturnite izmenenija: Prehodut<br />

v Bulgarija i roljata na finansovija sektor”. (Visualization of<br />

Structural Changes: Transition in Bulgaria and the Role of the<br />

Financial Sector.) Banki investizii i pari 3, 3–8 (2002).<br />

Krempel, L. and C. Lipp: Petitions and the Social Context of<br />

Political Mobilization in the Revolution of 1848/49: A Microhistorical<br />

Actor-Centered Network Analysis. In: Petitions in<br />

Social History. International Review of Social History, Special<br />

Issue (Vol. 46, Supplement 9). (Ed.) L.H. van Voss. Cambridge<br />

University Press, Cambridge 2001, 151–170.<br />

Krempel, L. and T. Plümper: International Division of Labor<br />

and Global Economic Processes: An Analysis of the International<br />

Trade in Automobiles. Journal of World Systems Research<br />

5/3, 487–498 (1999). Online: .<br />

Kurdelbusch, A.: The Rise of Variable Pay in Germany: Evidence<br />

and Explanations. European Journal of Industrial Relations<br />

8, 325–350 (2002).<br />

Kurdelbusch, A.: Variable Vergütung bedeutet Wettbewerb<br />

und Risiko. Die Mitbestimmung 6/2001, 22–25 (2001).<br />

L<br />

<strong>Publications</strong><br />

Leib, V.: Bürger mit Netzanschluß. Über Partizipation, Internet<br />

und “elektronische Demokratie”. In: Demokratie und<br />

Technik – (k)eine Wahlverwandtschaft? (Eds.) R. Martinsen,<br />

G. Simonis. Leske + Budrich, Opladen 2000, 363–386.<br />

Leib, V.: Das Doppelgesicht ICANNs: Koordination und<br />

Regulierung des Internet. In: Internet@Future. Jahrbuch Telekommunikation<br />

und Gesellschaft 2001. (Eds.) H. Kubicek, D.<br />

Klumpp, G. Fuchs, A. Roßnagel. Hüthig, Heidelberg 2001,<br />

124–126.<br />

Leib, V.: ICANN – EU Can’t: Internet Governance and Europe’s<br />

Role in the Formation of the Internet Corporation for<br />

Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). Telematics and<br />

Informatics 19, 2, 159–171 (2002).<br />

Leib, V.: The Internet Society and its Struggle for Recognition<br />

and Influence. In: Private Organizations in Global Politics,<br />

(Eds.) K. Ronit, V. Schneider. Routledge, London 2000,<br />

102–123.<br />

Lütz, S.: Der deutsche Finanzsektor im Zeichen von Europäisierung<br />

und Internationalisierung. In: Entgrenzte Märkte<br />

– grenzenlose Bürokratie? Europäisierung in Wirtschaft,<br />

Recht und Politik. (Ed.) V.H. Schneider. Campus, Frankfurt<br />

a.M. 2002, 144–156.<br />

Lütz, S.: Finanzmärkte brauchen staatliche Aufsicht. Entwicklungsmuster<br />

nationaler und internationaler Finanzmarktregulierung.<br />

E&Z (Entwicklung und Zusammenarbeit) 40,<br />

76–79 (1999).<br />

Lütz, S.: Globalisierung und die politische Regulierung von<br />

Finanzmärkten. PROKLA 118, 30, 61–83 (2000).<br />

Lütz, S.: Globalisierung und der regulative Umbau des Modells<br />

Deutschland – Das Beispiel der Bankenregulierung. In:<br />

Institutioneller Kontext wirtschaftlichen Handelns und<br />

Globalisierung, (Eds.) H.-G. Brose, H. Voelzkow. Metropolis,<br />

Marburg 1999, 205–233.<br />

Lütz, S.: Globalisierung und die Regulierung von Finanzmärkten<br />

im internationalen Mehrebenensystem. In: Politik<br />

83


84<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

im 21. Jahrhundert. (Eds.) C. Leggewie, R. Münch. Edition<br />

Suhrkamp, Frankfurt a.M. 2001, 443–458.<br />

Lütz, S.: Vom koordinierten zum marktorientierten Kapitalismus?<br />

Der deutsche Finanzsektor im Umbruch. Polis-Arbeitspapiere<br />

44. Institut für Politikwissenschaft der FernUniversität<br />

Hagen, Hagen 1999, 22 pp.<br />

Lütz, S.: Vom koordinierten zum marktorientierten Kapitalismus?<br />

Der deutsche Finanzsektor im Umbruch. In: Von der<br />

Bonner zur Berliner Republik. 10 Jahre deutsche Einheit.<br />

Leviathan, Sonderheft 19, (Eds.) R. Czada, H. Wollmann.<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 1999, 651–670.<br />

Lütz, S.: Learning through Intermediaries: The Case of Inter-<br />

Firm Research Collaborations. In: The Formation of Inter-<br />

Organizational Networks, (Ed.) M. Ebers. Oxford University<br />

Press, Oxford 1999, 220–238.<br />

Lütz, S.: From Managed to Market Capitalism? German Finance<br />

in Transition. German Politics 9, 149–171 (2000).<br />

Lütz, S.: Die politische Architektur von Finanzmärkten. In:<br />

Politik in einer entgrenzten Welt. 21. Wissenschaftlicher Kongress<br />

der Deutschen Vereinigung für Politische Wissenschaft.<br />

(Ed.) C. Landfried. Wissenschaft und Politik, Köln 2002,<br />

119–131.<br />

Lütz, S.: Die politische Regulierung globaler Finanzrisiken. In:<br />

Die politische Konstitution von Märkten, (Eds.) R. Czada, S.<br />

Lütz. Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2000, 250–264.<br />

Lütz, S.: Der regulative Staat in Zeiten der Globalisierung. In:<br />

Blick auf die Weltgesellschaft – Globalisierung als Chance (II),<br />

(Ed.) Landeszentrale für politische Bildung Baden-<br />

Württemberg. Landeszentrale für politische Bildung Baden-<br />

Württemberg, Stuttgart 1999, 71–77.<br />

Lütz, S.: Der regulative Staat in Zeiten der Globalisierung. In:<br />

Politik und Weltgesellschaft. Globalisierung als Chance,<br />

(Eds.) G. Böttger, K. Götz, W. Hesse, M. Hug. Rainer Hampp,<br />

Munich 2000, 119–129.<br />

Lütz, S.: Zwischen Markt und Mehr-Ebenen-System. Der<br />

regulative Staat im Zeichen von Internationalisierung. In:<br />

Politik, Technik, Medien. Festschrift für Heribert Schatz zum<br />

65. Geburtstag. (Eds.) H. Abromeit et. al. Westdeutscher<br />

Verlag, Wiesbaden 2001, 109–121.<br />

Lütz, S.: Zwischen “Regime” und “kooperativem Staat” – Bankenregulierung<br />

im internationalen Mehr-Ebenen-System.<br />

Zeitschrift für Internationale Beziehungen 6, 9–40 (1999).<br />

Lütz, S. and R. Czada: Marktkonstitution als politische Aufgabe:<br />

Problemskizze und Theorieüberblick. In: Die politische<br />

Konstitution von Märkten, (Eds.) R. Czada, S. Lütz. Westdeutscher<br />

Verlag, Wiesbaden 2000, 9–38.<br />

Lütz, S., R. Czada and S. Mette: Regulative Politik. Zähmungen<br />

von Markt und Technik. Reihe Grundwissen Politik, Band<br />

28. Leske + Budrich, Opladen 2002, 284 pp.<br />

M<br />

Manow, P.: The Comparative Institutional Advantages of Welfare<br />

State Regimes and New Coalitions in Welfare State Reforms.<br />

In: The New Politics of the Welfare State, (Ed.) P.<br />

Pierson. Oxford University Press, New York 2000, 146–164.<br />

Manow, P.: Interessenausgleich durch Reziprozität, Vorwärtsinduktion<br />

und Zwei-Ebenen-Spiele. Transnationale Verhandlungssysteme<br />

und Konkordanzdemokratien im Vergleich. In:<br />

Kontext, Akteur und strategische Interaktion. Untersuchungen<br />

zur Organisation politischen Handelns in modernen Gesellschaften,<br />

(Eds.) U. Druwe, S.-M. Kühnel, V. Kunze. Leske +<br />

Budrich, Opladen 1999, 131–162.<br />

Manow, P.: Kapitaldeckung oder Umlage? Die Geschichte einer<br />

anhaltenden Debatte. In: Vom bloßen Unterhaltszuschuß<br />

zur dynamischen Rente. Geschichte der Altersversicherung in<br />

Deutschland, (Eds.) S. Fisch, U. Haerendel. Duncker &<br />

Humblot, Berlin 2000, 145–168.<br />

Manow, P.: “Modell Deutschland” as an Interdenominational<br />

Compromise. Program for the Study of Germany and Europe<br />

Working Paper 00.3. Center for European Studies, Harvard<br />

University, Cambridge/MA 2000, 35 pp.


Manow, P.: Reziproker Interessenausgleich in transnationalen<br />

Verhandlungssystemen und in Konkordanzdemokratien.<br />

Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Politische Wissenschaft 5, 2,<br />

5–37 (1999).<br />

Manow, P.: Sozialstaatliche Kompensation außenwirtschaftlicher<br />

Öffnung? In: Nationaler Staat und internationale Wirtschaft.<br />

Anmerkungen zum Thema Globalisierung, (Eds.) A.<br />

Busch, T. Plümper. Nomos, Baden-Baden 1999, 197–222.<br />

Manow, P.: The Uneasy Compromise of Liberalism and Corporatism<br />

in Postwar Germany. CGES Working Paper 5/88.<br />

University of California, Center for German and European<br />

Studies, Berkeley 1999.<br />

Manow, P. and S. Giaimo: Adapting the Welfare State. The<br />

Case of Health Care Reform in Britain, Germany and the<br />

United States. Comparative Political Studies 32, 1002–1033<br />

(1999).<br />

Manow, P. , A. Hemerijck and K. van Kersbergen: Welfare Without<br />

Work? Divergent Experiences of Reform in Germany and<br />

the Netherlands. In: The Survival of the European Welfare<br />

State, (Ed.) S. Kuhnle. Routledge, London 2000, 106–127.<br />

Manow, P. and E. Seils: The Employment Crisis of the German<br />

Welfare State. In: Recasting European Welfare States. Special<br />

Issue of West European Politics, (Eds.) M. Rhodes, M. Ferrera.<br />

Cass, London 2000, 138–160.<br />

Manow, P. and E. Seils: Adjusting Badly: The German Welfare<br />

State, Structural Change, and the Open Economy. In: Welfare<br />

and Work in the Open Economy, Vol. II: Diverse Responses to<br />

Common Challenges, (Eds.) F.W. Scharpf, V.A. Schmidt.<br />

Oxford University Press, Oxford 2000, 264–307.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Common Goods and Governance. In: Common<br />

Goods. Reinventing European and International Governance.<br />

(Ed.) A. Héritier. Rowman and Littlefield, Lanham 2002,<br />

15–27.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Decision Making and Institutionalized Cognition:<br />

Comment. In: Cognition, Rationality, and Institutions,<br />

(Eds.) M.E. Streit, U. Mummert, D. Kiwit. Springer Verlag,<br />

Berlin 2000, 181–186.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Die dynamische Gesellschaft. In: In welcher<br />

Gesellschaft leben wir eigentlich? Gesellschaftskonzepte im<br />

Vergleich. Bd. 2, (Ed.) A. Pongs. Dilemma, Munich 2000,<br />

219–240.<br />

Mayntz, R.: El Estado y la sociedad civil en la gobernanza<br />

moderna. Revista del CLAD, Reforma y Democracia 21, 7–22<br />

(2001).<br />

Mayntz, R.: Los Estados nacionales y la gobernanza global.<br />

Revista del CLAD. Reforma y Democracia 24, 29–44 (2002).<br />

Mayntz, R.: Individuelles Handeln und gesellschaftliche Ereignisse<br />

– Zur Mikro-Makro-Problematik in den Sozialwissenschaften.<br />

In: Wie entstehen neue Qualitäten in komplexen<br />

<strong>Publications</strong><br />

Systemen? 50 Jahre Max-Planck-Gesellschaft 1948–1998. Dokumentation<br />

des Symposiums zum 50jährigen Gründungsjubiläum<br />

der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft am 18.12.1998 in Berlin,<br />

(Ed.) Max-Planck-Gesellschaft. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht,<br />

Göttingen 2000, 95–104.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Internationale Organisationen im Prozess der<br />

Globalisierung. In: Globalisierung des Rechts II. Internationale<br />

Organisationen und Regelungsbereiche. (Eds.) P. Nahamowitz,<br />

R. Voigt. Nomos, Baden-Baden 2002, 85–100.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Das Menschenbild in der Soziologie. Gerda-Henkel-Vorlesung<br />

in der Vortragsreihe “Das Menschenbild in der<br />

Wissenschaft”. Rhema, Münster 2001, 16 pp.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Multi-Level Governance: German Federalism and<br />

the European Union. In: Governing Beyond the Nation-State.<br />

Global Public Policy, Regionalism or Going Local? AICGS<br />

Research Report No. 11, (Ed.) C. Lankowski. American Institute<br />

for Contemporary German Studies, The Johns Hopkins<br />

University, Washington 1999, 1–124.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Nieuwe uitdagingen voor de governance theory.<br />

Tijdschrift voor beleid, politiek en maatschappij 26, 2–12<br />

(1999).<br />

Mayntz, R.: Niklas Luhmann: Die Person. Zum Tode von N.<br />

Luhmann (8.12.1927–6.11.1998). Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie<br />

und Sozialpsychologie 51, 186–188 (1999).<br />

Mayntz, R.: Organizational Coping, Failure, and Success:<br />

Academies of Sciences in Central and Eastern Europe. In:<br />

When Things Go Wrong. Organizational Failures and<br />

Breakdowns, (Ed.) H.K. Anheier. Sage, London 1999, 71–88.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Organizations, Agents and Representatives. In:<br />

Organizing Political Institutions. Essays for Johan P. Olsen.<br />

(Eds.) E. Morten, P. Laegreid. Scandinavian University Press,<br />

Oslo 1999, 81–91.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Political Context and Scientific Cognition. In:<br />

L’acteur et ses raisons. Mélanges en l’honneur de Raymond<br />

Boudon, (Ed.) Jean Baechter. Presses Universitaires de France,<br />

Paris 2000, 258–271.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Politikwissenschaft in einer entgrenzten Welt. In:<br />

Politik in einer entgrenzten Welt. 21. Wissenschaftlicher Kongress<br />

der Deutschen Vereinigung für Politische Wissenschaft.<br />

(Ed.) C. Landfried. Wissenschaft und Politik, Köln 2002,<br />

29–47.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Gibt es eine politische Klasse in Deutschland? In:<br />

Demokratie in Ost und West. Für Klaus von Beyme, (Eds.) W.<br />

Merkel, A. Busch. Suhrkamp, Frankfurt a.M. 1999, 425–434.<br />

Mayntz, R.: “Politische Steuerung” und “Kritische Würdigung<br />

der bisherigen Diskussion”. In: Politische Steuerung der Stadtentwicklung:<br />

das Programm “Die soziale Stadt” in der Diskussion.<br />

(Ed.) Schader-Stiftung. Schader-Stiftung, Darmstadt<br />

2001, 37–43, 70–74.<br />

85


86<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Mayntz, R.: Rationalität in sozialwissenschaftlicher Perspektive.<br />

Lectiones Jenenses 18. Max-Planck-Institut zur Erforschung<br />

von Wirtschaftssystemen, Jena 1999, 22 pp.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Tecnica e tecnologia. In: Enciclopedia delle scienze<br />

sociali, Vol. 8, (Ed.) Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana.<br />

Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, Rome 1999, 513–527.<br />

Mayntz, R.: La teoria della governance: sfide e prospettive.<br />

Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica 29, 3–21 (1999).<br />

Mayntz, R.: Triebkräfte der Technikentwicklung und die Rolle<br />

des Staates. In: Politik und Technik. Politische Vierteljahresschrift,<br />

Sonderheft 31. (Eds.) G. Simonis, R. Martinsen,<br />

T. Saretzki. Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2001, 3–18.<br />

Mayntz, R.: University Councils: An Institutional Innovation<br />

in German Universities. European Journal of Education:<br />

Research, Development and Policies 37, 21–28 (2002).<br />

Mayntz, R.: Wissenschaft, Politik und die politischen Folgen<br />

kognitiver Ungewißheit. In: Eigenwilligkeit und Rationalität<br />

sozialer Prozesse. Festschrift zum 65. Geburtstag von Friedhelm<br />

Neidhardt, (Eds.) J. Gerhards, R. Hitzler. Westdeutscher<br />

Verlag, Wiesbaden 1999, 30–45.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Wissenschaftliches Fehlverhalten: Formen, Faktoren<br />

und Unterschiede zwischen Wissenschaftsgebieten. In:<br />

Max-Planck-Forum 2: Ethos der Forschung, Ringberg-Symposium<br />

Oktober 1999, (Ed.) Max-Planck-Gesellschaft. Max-<br />

Planck-Gesellschaft, Munich 2000, 57–72.<br />

Mayntz, R.: Wohlfahrtsökonomische und systemtheoretische<br />

Ansätze zur Bestimmung von Gemeinwohl. In: Gemeinwohl<br />

und Gemeinsinn. Rhetoriken und Perspektiven sozial-moralischer<br />

Orientierung. (Eds.) H. Münkler, K. Fischer. Akademie-Verlag,<br />

Berlin 2002, 111–126.<br />

Mayntz, R. and F. W. Scharpf: L’institutionnalisme centré sur<br />

les acteurs. In: Politix. Revue des sciences sociales du politique<br />

55, 95–123 (2001). (Übersetzung von Kap. 2 “Der Ansatz des<br />

akteurzentrierten Institutionalismus” aus Mayntz/Scharpf<br />

“Gesellschaftliche Selbstregelung und politische Steuerung”,<br />

1995.)<br />

Metzler, G.: Begegnungen mit einer anderen Moderne. Deutsche<br />

Physiker und die USA von der Jahrhundertwende bis<br />

1933. In: Technologie und Kultur. Europas Blick auf Amerika<br />

vom 18. bis zum 20. Jahrhundert, (Eds.) M. Wala, U. Lehmkuhl.<br />

Böhlau, Cologne 2000, 97–120.<br />

N<br />

Nentwich, M.: The European Research Papers Archive:<br />

Quality Filters in Electronic Publishing. Journal of Electronic<br />

Publishing, 5/1 (Sept. 1999). Online: .<br />

Nentwich, M.: ITA-Projekt: Cyberscience: Die Zukunft der<br />

Wissenschaft im Zeitalter der Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologien.<br />

TA-Datenbank-Nachrichten 8, 58–60<br />

(1999).<br />

Nentwich, M. and M. Gagliardi: Cyberscience – a Multimedia<br />

Feature. Bundesministerium für Bildung, Wissenschaft und<br />

Kultur (1999).<br />

P<br />

Pioch, R.: Gerechtigkeitsvorstellungen in der Sozialpolitik –<br />

die untere Grenze sozialer Sicherung. In: Die Zukunft des<br />

Sozialen. Solidarität im Wettbewerb. (Ed.) K.D. Hildemann.<br />

Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, Leipzig 2001, 89–104.<br />

Pioch, R.: Ideas of Social Justice in the Welfare State in Germany<br />

and the Netherlands. In: Social Exclusion in Europe.<br />

Problems and Paradigms, (Eds.) P. Littlewood et al. Ashgate,<br />

Aldershot 1999, 135–156.<br />

Pioch, R.: Religion und Moral. Entkoppelt oder verknüpft?<br />

In: Veröffentlichungen der Sektion “Religionssoziologie” der<br />

deutschen Gesellschaft für Soziologie, Band 6. (Eds.) G.<br />

Pickel, M. Krüggeler. Leske + Budrich, Opladen 2001, 213–<br />

230.<br />

Pioch, R.: Soziale Gerechtigkeit in der aktuellen Sozialpolitik<br />

– auch für Frauen? Femina politica. Zeitschrift für feministische<br />

Politikwissenschaft 9, 120–126 (2000).<br />

Pioch, R.: Soziale Gerechtigkeit in der Politik. Orientierungen<br />

von Politikern in Deutschland und den Niederlanden.<br />

Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2000, 470 pp.<br />

Pioch, R.: Zuwanderung, Staatsbürgerschaft und Sozialstaatsreform<br />

in Europa. Möglichkeiten transnationaler Sozialpolitik.<br />

Schweizer Monatshefte für Politik, Wirtschaft, Kultur 82,<br />

11, 28–31 (2002).


Pioch, R.: Zwischen Reziprozität und universeller Teilhabe –<br />

der normative Handlungszusammenhang von Beschäftigungs-<br />

und Sozialpolitik. Zeitschrift für Sozialreform 45,<br />

970–982 (1999).<br />

R<br />

Rabe, B.: Implementation Structures for Cooperative Labour<br />

Market Policy: A Bargaining Theory Approach. In: Labour<br />

Markets, Gender, and Institutional Change. (Eds.) H. Mosley,<br />

J. O’Reilly, K. Schömann. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham 2002,<br />

88–107.<br />

Rehder, B.: Abweichung als Regel? Die Mitbestimmung<br />

4/2000, 12–16 (2000).<br />

Rehder, B.: Industrial Relations in the Rail Sector: German<br />

Case Study on Employment Pacts at Deutsche Bahn AG.<br />

Dublin: European Foundation for the Improvement of Living<br />

and Working Conditions 2002, 30 pp.<br />

Rehder, B.: Wettbewerbskoalitionen oder Beschäftigungsinitiativen?<br />

Vereinbarungen zur Standort- und Beschäftigungssicherung<br />

in deutschen Großunternehmen. In: Betriebliche<br />

Bündnisse für Arbeit. Rahmenbedingungen – Praxiserfahrungen<br />

– Zukunftsperspektiven. (Ed.) H. Seifert. Edition sigma,<br />

Berlin 2002, 87–102.<br />

S<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Der Arbeitsmarkt im internationalen Wettbewerb.<br />

Gewerkschaftliche Monatshefte 50, 459–464 (1999).<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Basic Income and Social Europe. In: Basic Income<br />

on the Agenda. Policy Objectives and Political Chances,<br />

(Eds.) R. van der Veen, L. Groot. Amsterdam University Press,<br />

Amsterdam 2000, 155–160.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Comunidad y autonomía: formulación de políticas<br />

en niveles múltiples en la Unión Europea. Gestión y<br />

Política Pública 8, 169–199 (1999).<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Demokratieprobleme in der europäischen<br />

Mehrebenenpolitik. In: Demokratie in Ost und West, (Eds.)<br />

W. Merkel, A. Busch. Suhrkamp, Frankfurt a.M. 1999,<br />

672–695.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Democratic Legitimacy under Conditions of<br />

Regulatory Competition: Why Europe Differs from the<br />

United States. In: The Federal Vision. Legitimacy and Levels<br />

of Governance in the United States and the European Union.<br />

(Eds.) K. Nicolaidis, R. Howse. Oxford University Press, New<br />

York 2001, 355–374.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Democratic Legitimacy under Conditions of<br />

Regulatory Competition. Why Europe Differs from the<br />

<strong>Publications</strong><br />

United States. Centro de Estudios Avanzados en Ciencias<br />

Sociales WP 2000/145. Instituto Juan March de Estudios y de<br />

Investigaciones, Madrid 2000, 24 pp.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Economic Changes, Vulnerabilities, and Institutional<br />

Capabilities. In: Welfare and Work in the Open Economy,<br />

Vol. I: From Vulnerability to Competitiveness, (Eds.) F.W.<br />

Scharpf , V.A. Schmidt. Oxford University Press, Oxford 2000,<br />

21–124.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Employment and the Welfare State. A Continental<br />

Dilemma. In: Comparing Welfare Capitalism. Social<br />

Policy and Political Economy in Europe, Japan and the USA.<br />

(Eds.) B. Ebbinghaus, P. Manow. Routledge, London 2001,<br />

270–283.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Employment and the Welfare State in the Open<br />

Economy. In: European Social Democracy Facing the Twin<br />

Revolution of Globalisation and the Knowledge Society.<br />

(Eds.) R. Cuperus, K. Duffek, J. Kandel. Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung/Wiardi<br />

Beckmann Stiftung/Renner Institut, Amsterdam/Berlin/Wien<br />

2001, 65–76.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Europe, Democracy, and the Welfare State. A<br />

Reply. Journal of European Public Policy 7, 323–325 (2000).<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: The European Social Model: Coping with the<br />

Challenges of Diversity. Journal of Common Market Studies<br />

40, 645–670 (2002).<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Föderale Politikverflechtung: Was muß man ertragen?<br />

Was kann man ändern? In: Reform des Föderalismus.<br />

Beiträge zu einer gemeinsamen Tagung von Frankfurter<br />

Institut und Institut der deutschen Wirtschaft Köln, (Ed.) K.<br />

Morath. Frankfurter Institut, Bad Homburg 1999, 23–36.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Gegen die Diskriminierung einfacher Arbeitsplätze.<br />

Wirtschaftsdienst. Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftspolitik 79,<br />

455–462 (1999).<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Der globale Sozialstaat. Die Zeit, 15.6.2000,<br />

26–27.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Globalization and the Welfare State: Constraints,<br />

Challenges, and Vulnerabilities. In: Social Security in<br />

the Global Village. (Eds.) R. Sigg, C. Behrendt. Transaction<br />

Publishers, New Brunswick 2002, 85–116.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Gouverner L’Europe. Presses de la Fondation<br />

Nationale des Sciences Politiques, Paris 2000, 238 pp.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Governare l’Europa: Legittimità democratica ed<br />

efficacia delle politiche nell’Unione Europea. Società editrice<br />

il mulino, Bologna 1999, 228 pp.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Governing in Europe: Effective and Democratic?<br />

Oxford University Press, Oxford 1999, 243 pp.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Institutions in Comparative Policy Research.<br />

Comparative Political Studies 33, 762–790 (2000).<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Interdependence and Democratic Legitimation.<br />

In: Disaffected Democracies. What’s Troubling the Trilateral<br />

Countries? (Eds.) S.J. Pharr, R.D. Putnam. Princeton University<br />

Press, Princeton 2000, 101–120.<br />

87


88<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Legitimacy in the Multi-Actor European Polity.<br />

In: Organizing Political Institutions. Essays for Johan P. Olsen,<br />

(Eds.) M. Egeberg, P. Laegreid. Scandinavian University Press,<br />

Oslo 1999, 261–288.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Mehr Freiheit für die Bundesländer. Der deutsche<br />

Föderalismus im europäischen Standortwettbewerb.<br />

Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 7.4.2001, 15.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Notes Toward a Theory of Multilevel Governing<br />

in Europe. Scandinavian Political Studies 24, 1–26 (2001).<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Sozialstaaten in der Globalisierungsfalle? Lehren<br />

aus dem internationalen Vergleich. In: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft<br />

Jahrbuch 2000, (Ed.) Max-Planck-Gesellschaft.<br />

Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2000, 59–73.<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: Regieren im europäischen Mehrebenensystem.<br />

Ansätze zu einer Theorie. Leviathan 30, 65–92 (2002).<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: The Viability of Advanced Welfare States in the<br />

International Economy. Vulnerability and Options. Journal of<br />

European Public Policy 7, 190–228 (2000).<br />

Scharpf, F.W.: The Viability of Advanced Welfare States in the<br />

International Economy. Vulnerabilities and Options. In: Welfare<br />

State Futures. (Ed.) S. Leibfried. Cambridge University<br />

Press, Cambridge 2001, 123–170.<br />

Scharpf, F.W. and V.A. Schmidt: Conclusions. In: Welfare and<br />

Work in the Open Economy, Vol. I: From Vulnerability to<br />

Competitiveness, (Eds.) F.W. Scharpf, V.A. Schmidt. Oxford<br />

University Press, Oxford 2000, 229–309.<br />

Scharpf, F.W. and V.A. Schmidt: Introduction. In: Welfare and<br />

Work in the Open Economy, Vol. I: From Vulnerability to<br />

Competitiveness, (Eds.) F.W. Scharpf, V.A. Schmidt. Oxford<br />

University Press, Oxford 2000, 1–20.<br />

Scharpf, F.W. and V.A. Schmidt: Introduction. In: Welfare and<br />

Work in the Open Economy, Vol. II: Diverse Responses to<br />

Common Challenges, (Eds.) F.W. Scharpf, V.A. Schmidt.<br />

Oxford University Press, Oxford 2000, 1–18.<br />

Schmidt, S.K.: A Constrained Commission: Informal Practices<br />

of Agenda Setting in the Council. In: The Rules of Integration.<br />

The Institutionalist Approach to European Studies.<br />

(Eds.) M. Aspinwall and G. Schneider. Manchester University<br />

Press, Manchester 2001, 125–146.<br />

Schmidt, S.K.: Die Einflussmöglichkeiten der Europäischen<br />

Kommission auf die europäische Politik. Politische Vierteljahresschrift<br />

42, 173–192 (2001).<br />

Schmidt, S.K.: The Impact of Mutual Recognition: Inbuilt<br />

Limits and Domestic Responses to the Single Market. Journal<br />

of European Public Policy 9, 935–953 (2002).<br />

Schmidt, S.K.: Mastering Differences: The Franco-German Alliance<br />

and the Liberalisation of European Electricity Markets.<br />

In: The Franco-German Relationship in the European Union,<br />

(Ed.) D. Webber. Routledge, London 1999, 58–74.<br />

Schmidt, S.K.: Only an Agenda Setter? The European Commission’s<br />

Power over the Council of Ministers. European<br />

Union Politics 1, 37–61 (2000).<br />

Schmidt, S.K. and A. Héritier: After Liberalization: Public-<br />

Interest Services and Employment in the Utilities. In: Welfare<br />

and Work in the Open Economy, Vol. II: Diverse Responses to<br />

Common Challenges, (Eds.) F.W. Scharpf, V.A. Schmidt. Oxford<br />

University Press, Oxford 2000, 554–596.<br />

Schmidt, V.A.: The Changing Dynamics of State–Society Relations<br />

in the Fifth Republic. West European Politics 22,<br />

141–165 (1999).<br />

Schmidt, V.A.: Democracy and Discourse in an Integrating<br />

Europe and a Globalizing World. European Law Journal 6,<br />

277–300 (2000).<br />

Schmidt, V.A.: Democrazia e discorso pubblico: Le nuove<br />

sfide. Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica 29, 207–241 (1999).<br />

Schmidt, V.A.: Discorso politico e legitimazzione del cambiamento<br />

delle politiche economiche e sociali in Europa. Europa/Europe<br />

9, 113–138 (2000).<br />

Schmidt, V.A.: The Impact of European Integration on National<br />

Patterns of Industrial Policy-Making: The Cases of France,<br />

Great Britain, and Germany. Current Politics and Economics<br />

in Europe 9, 1–18 (1999).<br />

Schmidt, V.A.: Values and Discourse in the Politics of Adjustment.<br />

In: Welfare and Work in the Open Economy, Vol. I:<br />

From Vulnerability to Competitiveness, (Eds.) F.W. Scharpf,<br />

V.A. Schmidt. Oxford University Press, Oxford 2000, 229–309.<br />

Streeck, W.: Betriebsrat light für Kleinunternehmen? Arbeit<br />

und Arbeitsrecht: Monatszeitschrift für die betriebliche Praxis<br />

54, 369–370 (1999).<br />

Streeck, W.: Competitive Solidarity: Rethinking the “European<br />

Social Model”. In: Kontingenz und Krise: Institutionenpolitik


in kapitalistischen und postsozialistischen Gesellschaften,<br />

(Eds.) K. Hinrichs, H. Kitschelt, H. Wiesenthal. Campus,<br />

Frankfurt a.M. 2000, 245–261.<br />

Streeck, W.: Ist die Einrichtung eines “Niedriglohnsektors” die<br />

letzte Beschäftigungschance für gering qualifizierte Arbeitnehmer?<br />

In: Niedriglohnsektor und Lohnsubventionen im<br />

Spiegel des Arbeits- und Sozialrechts, (Ed.) Otto-Brenner-<br />

Stiftung. Bund Verlag, Frankfurt a.M. 2000, 11–23.<br />

Streeck, W.: Entstaatlichte Wirtschaft, vermarktete Demokratie?<br />

Spekulationen über demokratische Beteiligung in expandierenden<br />

Märkten. In: Politische Teilhabe und politische<br />

Entfremdung im Zeitalter der Internationalisierung, (Ed.)<br />

H.G. Zilian. Nausner und Nausner, Graz 2000, 53–68.<br />

Streeck, W.: Europäische? Sozialpolitik? Vorwort zu: Werner<br />

Eichhorst, Europäische Sozialpolitik zwischen nationaler Autonomie<br />

und Marktfreiheit: Die Entsendung von Arbeitnehmern<br />

in der EU. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2000, 19–35.<br />

Streeck, W.: Die Gewerkschaften im Bündnis für Arbeit. Gewerkschaftliche<br />

Monatshefte 50, 797–802 (1999).<br />

Streeck, W.: Die Gewerkschaften im Bündnis für Arbeit. In:<br />

Umbrüche und Kontinuitäten: Perspektiven nationaler und<br />

internationaler Arbeitsbeziehungen. Walther Müller-Jentsch<br />

zum 65. Geburtstag. (Eds.) J. Abel, H.-J. Sperling. Rainer<br />

Hampp, München 2001, 271–279.<br />

Streeck, W.: High Equality, Low Activity: The Contribution of<br />

the Social Welfare System to the Stability of the German<br />

Collective Bargaining Regime. Industrial and Labor Relations<br />

Review 54, 698–706 (2001).<br />

Streeck, W.: High Equality, Low Activity: The Contribution of<br />

the Social Welfare System to the Stability of the German<br />

Collective Bargaining Regime. EUI Working Paper RSC No.<br />

2001/6. European University Institute – Robert Schuman<br />

Centre for Advanced Studies, Florenz 2001, 13 pp.<br />

Streeck, W.: Institutionelle Modernisierung und Öffnung des<br />

Arbeitsmarktes: Für eine neue Beschäftigungspolitik. In:<br />

Geschichte und Zukunft der Arbeit, (Eds.) J. Kocka, C. Offe.<br />

Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2000, 243–261.<br />

Streeck, W.: International Competition, Supranational Integration,<br />

National Solidarity: The Emerging Constitution of<br />

“Social Europe”. In: Will Europe Work? Integration, Employment<br />

and the Social Order. (Eds.) M. Kohli, M. Novak.<br />

Routledge, London 2001, 21–34.<br />

Streeck, W.: Karl Polanyi: The Great Transformation. In:<br />

Hauptwerke der Soziologie, (Eds.) D. Kaesler, L. Voigt.<br />

Kröner, Stuttgart 2000, 359–361.<br />

Streeck, W.: Kontinuität und Wandel im deutschen System der<br />

industriellen Beziehungen: Offene Fragen. Zeitschrift für<br />

Arbeitsforschung, Arbeitsgestaltung und Arbeitspolitik 10,<br />

299–313 (2001).<br />

<strong>Publications</strong><br />

Streeck, W.: Korporatismus in Deutschland: Zwischen Nationalstaat<br />

und Europäischer Union. Theorie und Gesellschaft.<br />

Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 1999, 324 pp.<br />

Streeck, W.: Labor Unions. In: Encyclopedia of the Social and<br />

Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 12. (Eds.) N. Smelser, P. Baltes. Amsterdam,<br />

Elsevier 2001, 8214–8220.<br />

Streeck, W.: Mitbestimmung in der Industriegesellschaft. In:<br />

Unternehmensethik in der Wirtschaftspraxis, (Eds.) T.<br />

Bausch, A. Kleinfeld, H. Steinmann. Rainer Hampp, Munich<br />

2000, 21–32.<br />

Streeck, W.: Mitbestimmung als Selbstorganisation: Bewährung<br />

und Herausforderung. In: 50 Jahre Soziale Marktwirtschaft:<br />

Eine Erfolgsstory vor dem Ende? (Eds.) P. Hampe, J.<br />

Weber. Olzog, Munich 1999, 151–162.<br />

Streeck, W.: Mitbestimmung als Selbstorganisation: Der Bericht<br />

der “Kommission Mitbestimmung”. In: Das Arbeitsrecht<br />

der Gegenwart. Jahrbuch für das gesamte Arbeitsrecht und<br />

die Arbeitsgerichtsbarkeit, (Ed.) T. Dieterich. Erich Schmidt,<br />

Berlin 1999, 21–35.<br />

Streeck, W.: Von Nutzen und Nutzung des Korporatismus in<br />

einer Gesellschaft im Wandel. In: Unternehmerverbände und<br />

Staat in Deutschland, (Eds.) W. Bührer, E. Grande. Nomos,<br />

Baden-Baden 2000, 53–61.<br />

Streeck, W.: Preface. In: Comparing Welfare Capitalism. Social<br />

Policy and Political Economy in Europe, Japan and the USA.<br />

(Eds.) B. Ebbinghaus, P. Manow. Routledge, London 2001,<br />

xiv–xx.<br />

Streeck, W.: Über Renate Mayntz, “Soziologie der Organisation”.<br />

In: Schlüsselwerke der Soziologie. (Eds.) S. Papcke, G.<br />

W. Oesterdieckhoff. Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2001,<br />

320–323.<br />

Streeck, W.: Tarifautonomie und Politik: Von der Konzertierten<br />

Aktion zum Bündnis für Arbeit. In: Die deutschen<br />

Arbeitsbeziehungen am Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts. (Ed.)<br />

Gesamtverband der metallindustriellen Arbeitgeberverbände.<br />

Deutscher Institutsverlag, Köln 2001, 76–103.<br />

Streeck, W.: La transformation de l’organisation de l’entreprise<br />

en Europe: une vue d’ensemble. In: Institutions et croissance:<br />

les chances d’un modèle économique européen. (Ed.)<br />

R.M. Solow. Bibliothèque Albin Michel Economie, Paris 2001,<br />

175–230.<br />

Streeck, W.: Unternehmensstruktur und Betriebsverfassung:<br />

Probleme der Praxis. In: Arbeitsrecht 1999, (Eds.) W. Küttner,<br />

H. Schliemann. RWS, Cologne 2000, 37–47.<br />

W. Streeck, B. Frick and N. Kluge: Die wirtschaftlichen Folgen<br />

der Mitbestimmung. Kommission Mitbestimmung. Campus,<br />

Frankfurt a.M. 1999, 277 pp.<br />

Streeck, W. and R.G. Heinze: Runderneuerung des deutschen<br />

Modells. Aufbruch für mehr Jobs. In: Bündnis für Arbeit:<br />

89


90<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Konstruktion, Kritik, Karriere, (Eds.) H.-J. Arlt, S. Nehls.<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 1999, 147–163.<br />

Streeck, W. and B. Rehder: 5000 mal 5000 wird kommen.<br />

Weder die IG Metall noch der Volkswagen-Konzern kann sich<br />

ein Scheitern des Projekts erlauben. Financial Times Deutschland,<br />

16.7.2001.<br />

T<br />

Tesoka, S.: L’impact différencié de la politique judiciaire européenne<br />

dans le domaine de l’égalité entre les genres. Trois cas<br />

nationaux à l’épreuve. In: L’Année sociale 1998. Université<br />

Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels 1999, 405–423.<br />

Tesoka, S.: The Differential Impact of Judicial Politics in the<br />

Field of Gender Equality. Three National Cases Under<br />

Scrutiny. RSC Working Paper No. 99/18. EUI, Florence 1999,<br />

31 pp.<br />

Teuber, J.: Interessenverbände und Lobbying in der Europäischen<br />

Union. Peter Lang, Frankfurt 2001, 167 pp.<br />

Teuber, J.: Interessenvertretung bei der Europäischen Union.<br />

In: Jahrbuch der Europäischen Integration 2000/2001. (Eds.)<br />

W. Weidenfeld, W. Wessels. Europa Union Verlag, Bonn 2001,<br />

295–302.<br />

Teuber, J.: Interessenvertretungen bei der Europäischen<br />

Union. In: Jahrbuch der Europäischen Integration. (Eds.) W.<br />

Weidenfeld, W. Wessels. Europa Union Verlag, Bonn 2002,<br />

285–291.<br />

V<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Angleichung und Differenzierung in der Europäischen<br />

Strukturpolitik: Deutschland und Großbritannien<br />

im Vergleich. In: Die Europäische Integration im Spannungsfeld<br />

zwischen Angleichung und Differenzierung. (Ed.) I.<br />

Tömmel. Leske + Budrich, Opladen 2001, 187–210.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Europäische Regionalpolitik zwischen Brüssel,<br />

Bonn und den Bundesländern. In: Der Politikzyklus zwischen<br />

Bonn und Brüssel, (Eds.) H.-U. Derlien, A. Murswieck. Leske<br />

+ Budrich, Opladen 1999, 105–120.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Funktionale Differenzierung und Globalisierung<br />

als Herausforderungen für die Demokratietheorie. In:<br />

Gesellschaftliche Komplexität und kollektive Handlungsfähigkeit,<br />

(Eds.) R. Werle, U. Schimank. Campus, Frankfurt<br />

a.M. 2000, 270–296.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: The Governance of Local Economies in Germany.<br />

In: Local Production Systems in Europe: Rise or Demise?<br />

(Eds.) C. Crouch, P. Le Galès, C. Trigilia, H. Voelzkow.<br />

Oxford University Press, Oxford 2001, 79–116.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Die Governance regionaler Ökonomien im internationalen<br />

Vergleich: Deutschland und Italien. In: Die Bin-<br />

dungen der Globalisierung. Interorganisationsbeziehungen<br />

im regionalen und globalen Wirtschaftsraum, (Eds.) G.<br />

Fuchs, G. Krauss, H.-G. Wolf. Metropolis, Marburg 1999, 48–<br />

91.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Introduction: The Governance of Local Economies.<br />

In: Local Production Systems in Europe: Rise or Demise?<br />

(Eds.) C. Crouch, P. Le Galès, C. Trigilia, H. Voelzkow.<br />

Oxford University Press, Oxford 2001, 1–24.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Interessengruppen. In: Handwörterbuch des<br />

politischen Systems der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, (Eds.)<br />

U. Andersen, W. Woyke. Leske + Budrich, Opladen 2000,<br />

242–247.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Korporatismus in Deutschland: Chancen, Risiken<br />

und Perspektiven. In: Zwischen Wettbewerbs- und Verhandlungsdemokratie.<br />

Analysen zum Regierungssystem der<br />

Bundesrepublik Deutschland, (Eds.) E. Holtmann, H. Voelzkow.<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2000, 185–212.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Die “neue Kultur der Selbständigkeit” und ihr<br />

institutionelles Umfeld: Erfahrungen aus der Medienwirtschaft<br />

in Köln. In: Unternehmensgründungen – Zwischen<br />

Inszenierung, Anspruch und Realität. (Eds.) R.G. Heinze, F.<br />

Schulte. Westdeutscher Verlag, Opladen 2002, 130–148.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Neokorporatismus. In: Handwörterbuch des<br />

politischen Systems der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, (Eds.)<br />

U. Andersen, W. Woyke. Leske + Budrich, Opladen 2000,<br />

404–406.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Reform der europäischen Produktnormung. In:<br />

Stoffstromsteuerung durch Produktregulierung. Rechtliche,<br />

ökonomische und politische Fragen, (Ed.) M. Führ. Nomos,<br />

Baden-Baden 2000, 129–142.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Das Regierungssystem der Bundesrepublik<br />

Deutschland zwischen Wettbewerbs- und Verhandlungsdemokratie:<br />

Einführung. In: Zwischen Wettbewerbs- und Verhandlungsdemokratie.<br />

Analysen zum Regierungssystem der<br />

Bundesrepublik Deutschland, (Eds.) E. Holtmann, H. Voelzkow.<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2000, 9–21.<br />

Voelzkow, H.: Wirtschaft und Arbeit. In: Lehrbuch der Soziologie.<br />

(Ed.) H. Joas. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2001, 389–416.<br />

Voelzkow, H. and H.-G. Brose (Eds.): Institutioneller Kontext<br />

wirtschaftlichen Handelns und Globalisierung. Metropolis,<br />

Marburg 1999, 354 pp.<br />

Voelzkow, H. and H.-G. Brose: Globalisierung und institutioneller<br />

Wandel der Wirtschaft – Eine Einführung. In: Institutioneller<br />

Kontext wirtschaftlichen Handelns und Globalisierung,<br />

(Eds.) H.-G. Brose, H. Voelzkow. Metropolis, Marburg<br />

1999, 9–23.<br />

Voelzkow, H., C. Crouch, P. Le Gales and C. Trigilia (Eds.): Local<br />

Production Systems in Europe: Rise or Demise? Oxford<br />

University Press, Oxford 2001, 272 pp.<br />

Voelzkow, H. and E. Holtmann (Eds.): Zwischen Wettbewerbsund<br />

Verhandlungsdemokratie. Analysen zum Regierungssy-


stem der Bundesrepublik Deutschand. Westdeutscher Verlag,<br />

Wiesbaden 2000, 221 pp.<br />

Voelzkow, H. and A. Hoppe: Kooperation im Schatten der<br />

Hierarchie. Handlungsalternativen in der Strukturpolitik im<br />

deutsch-britischen Vergleich. In: Kooperation im Prozess des<br />

räumlichen Strukturwandels. Wissenschaftliche Plenarsitzung<br />

1999. Forschungs- und Sitzungsberichte der Akademie für<br />

Raumforschung und Landesplanung Nr. 210. Akademie für<br />

Raumforschung und Landesplanung, Hannover 2000, 16–30.<br />

Voelzkow, H. and A. Hoppe: Raumordnungs- und Regionalpolitik:<br />

Rahmenbedingungen, Entwicklungen, Perspektiven. In:<br />

50 Jahre Bundesrepublik Deutschland. Rahmenbedingungen<br />

– Entwicklungen – Perspektiven, (Eds.) T. Ellwein, E. Holtmann.<br />

Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 1999, 279–296.<br />

Voelzkow, H. and D. Jansen: Umwelt- und sozialverträgliches<br />

Wirtschaften im vereinten Europa. Zeitschrift für Rechtssoziologie<br />

20, 191–205 (1999).<br />

W<br />

Werle, R.: Conflict or Peaceful Co-Existence? Standards Organizations<br />

on a Global Scope. In: Standardization – Challenges<br />

for the Next Millenium. Proceedings of the Second Interdisciplinary<br />

Workshop on Standardization Research. Hamburg,<br />

24.–27. Mai 1999, (Ed.) W. Hesser. Hochschule der Bundeswehr,<br />

Hamburg 1999, 40–60.<br />

Werle, R.: Einleitung: Gesellschaftliche Komplexität und kollektive<br />

Handlungsfähigkeit. In: Gesellschaftliche Komplexität<br />

und kollektive Handlungsfähigkeit, (Eds.) R. Werle, U. Schimank.<br />

Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2000, 9–20.<br />

Werle, R.: The Impact of Information Networks on the Structure<br />

of Political Systems. In: Understanding the Impact of<br />

Global Networks on Local Social, Political and Cultural<br />

Values, (Eds.) C. Engel, K.H. Keller. Nomos, Baden-Baden<br />

2000, 159–185.<br />

Werle, R.: Innovationspotenziale im Internet. Selbstregelung<br />

auf Strukturebene. In: Innovation und Telekommunikation.<br />

Rechtliche Steuerung von Innovationsprozessen in der Telekommunikation,<br />

(Ed.) W. Hoffmann-Riem. Nomos, Baden-<br />

Baden 2000, 141–160.<br />

Werle, R.: Das “Gute” im Internet und die Civil Society als globale<br />

Informationsgesellschaft. In: Gute Gesellschaft? (Ed.) J.<br />

Allmendinger. Leske + Budrich, Opladen 2001, 454–474.<br />

Werle, R.: Institutional Aspects of Standardization – Jurisdictional<br />

Conflicts and the Choice of Standardization Organizations.<br />

Journal of European Public Policy 8, 392–410 (2001).<br />

Werle, R.: Internet and Culture: The Dynamics of Interdependence.<br />

In: Innovations for an e-Society. Challenges for Technology<br />

Assessment. (Eds.) G. Banse, A. Grunwald, M. Rader.<br />

Edition sigma, Berlin 2002, 243–259.<br />

<strong>Publications</strong><br />

Werle, R. and B. Holznagel (eds.): Schwerpunktheft “Internet<br />

Regulation.” Zeitschrift für Soziologie 23, 1-156 (2002)<br />

Werle, R.: Internet @ Europe: Overcoming Institutional Fragmentation<br />

and Policy Failure. European Integration online<br />

Papers (EIoP) 5, No. 7 (2001). Internet: .<br />

Werle, R.: Internet @ Europe: Overcoming Institutional Fragmentation<br />

and Policy Failure. In: Governing Telecommunications<br />

and the New Information Society in Europe. (Ed.) J.<br />

Jordana. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham 2002, 137–158.<br />

Werle, R.: The Internet Society and its Struggle for Recognition<br />

and Influence. In: Private Organizations in Global Politics,<br />

(Eds.) K. Ronit, V. Schneider. Routledge, London 2000,<br />

102–123.<br />

Werle, R.: Der Kampf um den Markt. Technische Konvergenz,<br />

institutionelle Heterogenität und die Entwicklung von Märkten<br />

in der technischen Kommunikation. In: Die politische<br />

Konstitution von Märkten, (Eds.) R. Czada, S. Lütz. Westdeutscher<br />

Verlag, Wiesbaden 2000, 264–285.<br />

Werle, R.: Lessons Learnt from the Internet. Hands Off, Hands<br />

On, or What Role of Public Policy in Europe. Druzboslovne<br />

Razprave (Journal of Social Science Studies) 18, 40, 63–82<br />

(2002).<br />

Werle, R.: Liberalisierung und politische Techniksteuerung.<br />

In: Politik und Technik. Analysen zum Verhältnis von technologischem,<br />

politischem und staatlichem Wandel am Anfang<br />

des 21. Jahrhunderts. Politische Vierteljahresschrift, Sonderheft<br />

31. (Eds.) G. Simonis, R. Martinsen, T. Saretzki. Westdeutscher<br />

Verlag, Wiesbaden 2001, 407–424.<br />

Werle, R.: Liberalisation of Telecommunications in Germany.<br />

In: European Telecommunications Liberalisation, (Eds.) K.A.<br />

Eliassen, M. Sjøvaag. Routledge, London 1999, 110–127.<br />

Werle, R.: Wie viel Recht braucht die Technik? Das Beispiel<br />

technischer Standards. In: Empirische Rechtssoziologie.<br />

(Eds.) D. Strempel, T. Rasehorn. Nomos, Baden-Baden 2002,<br />

337–347.<br />

Werle, R.: Zwischen Selbstorganisation und Steuerung. Geschichte<br />

und aktuelle Probleme des Internet. In: Massenmedien<br />

und Zeitgeschichte, (Ed.) J. Wilke. UVK Medien,<br />

Konstanz 1999, 499–517.<br />

Werle, R.: Standards in the International Telecommunications<br />

Regime. HWWA Discussion Paper 157. Hamburgisches Welt-<br />

Wirtschafts-Archiv, Hamburg 2001, 45 pp.<br />

Werle, R.: Standards in the International Telecommunications<br />

Regime. In: Trade, Investment and Competition Policies in<br />

the Global Economy: The Case of the International Telecommunications<br />

Regime. (Eds.) P. Guerrieri, H.-E. Scharrer.<br />

Nomos, Baden-Baden 2002, 243–282.<br />

Werle, R.: Technik als Akteur? In: Gesellschaftliche Komplexität<br />

und kollektive Handlungsfähigkeit, (Eds.) R. Werle, U.<br />

Schimank. Campus, Frankfurt a.M. 2000, 74–94.<br />

91


92<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Werle, R.: Technik als Akteurfiktion. In: Können Maschinen<br />

handeln? Soziologische Beiträge zum Verhältnis Mensch und<br />

Technik. (Eds.) W. Rammert, I. Schulz-Schaeffer. Campus,<br />

Frankfurt a.M. 2002, 119–139.<br />

Werle, R.: 20 Jahre Internet. Entwicklungspfad und Entwicklungsperspektiven.<br />

In: Kommunikation in Geschichte und<br />

Gegenwart. (Ed.) K. Handel. Georg-Agricola-Gesellschaft,<br />

Freiberg 2002, 143–159.<br />

Werle, R. and U. Holtgrewe: De-Commodifying Software?<br />

Open Source Software between Business Strategy and Social<br />

Movement. Science Studies 14, 2, 43–65 (2001).<br />

Werle, R. and B. Holznagel: Sectors and Strategies of Global<br />

Communications Regulation. Zeitschrift für Rechtssoziologie.<br />

Forum Internet Regulation 23, 3–23 (2002).<br />

Werle, R. and U. Schimank (Eds.): Gesellschaftliche Komplexität<br />

und kollektive Handlungsfähigkeit. Campus, Frankfurt<br />

a.M. 2000, 319 pp.<br />

Werle, R. (Ko-Autor als Mitglied der Arbeitsgruppe “Globale<br />

Netze und Lokale Werte”): Globale Netze und lokale Werte.<br />

Eine vergleichende Studie zu Deutschland und den Vereinigten<br />

Staaten. Nomos, Baden-Baden 2002, 273 pp.<br />

Z<br />

Zagelmeyer, S.: Bargaining on Employment in the European<br />

Union: The Example of the European Car Industry. In: Proceedings<br />

of the 12th World Congress, Vol. 2: The Impact of<br />

Globalization on National and Regional Systems of Industrial<br />

Relations and Employment Relations, (Ed.) William Brown.<br />

International Industrial Relations Association, Tokyo 2000,<br />

111–125.<br />

Zagelmeyer, S.: Innovative Agreements on Employment and<br />

Competitiveness in the European Union and Norway. European<br />

Foundation for the Improvement of Living and<br />

Working Conditions, Office for Official <strong>Publications</strong> of the<br />

European Communities, Luxembourg 2000, 196 pp.<br />

Zagelmeyer, S.: Tarifverhandlungen in Euroland – Entwicklungen<br />

und Perspektiven. IW-Gewerkschaftsreport 34, 3–22<br />

(2000).<br />

Zagelmeyer, S.: Zur Zukunft von Kollektivverhandlungen in<br />

Euroland. Industrielle Beziehungen 6, 427–454 (1999).<br />

Zagelmeyer, S. and C. Schnabel: Beschäftigungspolitik<br />

und Beschäftigungspakte in der Europäischen<br />

Union. List Forum für Wirtschafts- und<br />

Finanzpolitik 26, 147–164 (2000).<br />

Ziltener, P.: EC Regional Policy: Monetary<br />

Lubricant for Economic Integration? In: State-<br />

Building in Europe. The Revitalization of<br />

Western European Integration, (Ed.)<br />

V. Bornschier. Cambridge University Press,<br />

Cambridge 2000, 122–151.<br />

Ziltener, P.: EC Social Policy: The Defeat of the Delorist Project.<br />

In: State-Building in Europe. The Revitalization of Western<br />

European Integration, (Ed.) V. Bornschier. Cambridge<br />

University Press, Cambridge 2000, 152–186.<br />

Ziltener, P.: European Integration after the Single Act: Changing<br />

and Persisting Patterns. In: State-Building in Europe. The<br />

Revitalization of Western European Integration, (Ed.) V.<br />

Bornschier. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000,<br />

244–263.<br />

Ziltener, P.: Europäische Integration: Hatte der Neofunktionalismus<br />

doch recht? Schweizerische Zeitschrift für<br />

Soziologie 27, 475–503 (2001).<br />

Ziltener, P.: Interaktion und Integration: Das europäische<br />

Mehrebenensystem als Handlungsfeld der Schweizer Gewerkschaften.<br />

Stand und Perspektiven trans- und supranationaler<br />

gewerkschaftlicher Politik. In: Die Gewerkschaften in der<br />

Schweiz, (Eds.) K. Armingeon, S. Geissbühler. Seismo, Zurich<br />

2000, 219–289.<br />

Ziltener, P.: Japanese Business in Germany. In: Encyclopedia<br />

of Japanese Business and Management. (Ed.) Allan Bird.<br />

Routledge, London 2002, 229–232.<br />

Ziltener, P.: Zur “Renaissance” der neofunktionalistischen Integrationstheorie.<br />

Aussenwirtschaft: Schweizerische Zeitschrift<br />

für internationale Wirtschaftsbeziehungen 55, 1–4<br />

(2000).<br />

Ziltener, P.: Tying up the Luxembourg Package – Prerequisites<br />

and Problems of its Constitution. In: State-Building in Europe.<br />

The Revitalization of Western European Integration,<br />

(Ed.) V. Bornschier. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge<br />

2000, 38–72.<br />

Ziltener, P.: Die Veränderung von Staatlichkeit in Europa – regulations-<br />

und staatstheoretische Überlegungen. In: Die Konfiguration<br />

Europas – Dimensionen einer kritischen Integrationstheorie,<br />

(Eds.) H.-J. Bieling, J. Steinhilber. Westfälisches<br />

Dampfboot, Münster 2000, 73–101.<br />

Ziltener, P.: Wirtschaftliche Effekte des EU-Binnenmarktprogramms.<br />

CeGE Discussion Paper 15. Center for Globalization<br />

and Europeanization of the Economy (CeGE), Göttingen<br />

2002, 26 pp.<br />

Zugehör, R.: Mitbestimmt ins Kapitalmarktzeitalter? Restrukturierung<br />

bei Veba AG und Siemens AG. Die Mitbestimmung<br />

5/2001, 38–42 (2001).


Relations to the Scientific Community and the Public<br />

The Institute in the Scientific Community<br />

Conferences at the <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 28 January 1999<br />

The Origins of Nationally Organized Capitalism<br />

in Germany and Japan<br />

Organizers: Gregory Jackson and Wolfgang Streeck<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Final conference, 17–20 February 1999<br />

The Adjustment of National Employment and<br />

Social Policy Systems to Economic Internationalization<br />

Organizers: Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

and Vivien A. Schmidt (Boston University)<br />

Host: Ringberg Castle on Tegernsee<br />

(MPG Conference Center)<br />

Workshop, 20 April 1999<br />

Public Interest and the Company in Britain and Germany<br />

Organizer: Gregory Jackson<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Autorenkonferenz anlässlich der Vollendung des<br />

70. Lebensjahres von Prof. Dr. Renate Mayntz,<br />

30 April–1 May 1999<br />

Kollektive Handlungsfähigkeit als theoretisches Problem<br />

93


94<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Organizers: Raymund Werle<br />

and Uwe Schimank (FernUniversität Hagen)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Conference, 10–11 June 1999<br />

The Political Economy of Corporate Governance<br />

in Japan and Europe<br />

Organizers: Martin Rhodes (EUI),<br />

Gregory Jackson and Sigurt Vitols (WZB)<br />

Host: European University Institute, Florence<br />

Conference, Germany-Japan Project, 23–26 June 1999<br />

Germany and Japan: The Future of Nationally Embedded<br />

Capitalism in a Global Economy<br />

Organizers: Wolfgang Streeck and Kozo Yamamura<br />

(University of Washington–Seattle) with Gregory Jackson<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Conference, 19–20 July 1999<br />

Strukturen, Funktionen und institutioneller Wandel<br />

nationaler Innovationssysteme<br />

Organizers: Rebecca Harding (University of Brighton),<br />

Hans-Willy Hohn and Raymund Werle,<br />

Sektion Wissenschafts- und Technikforschung der<br />

Deutschen Gesellschaft für Soziologie<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Conference, 8 October 1999<br />

Unternehmen und öffentliches Interesse<br />

in Deutschland und Großbritannien<br />

Organizers: Gregory Jackson and Andrew Gamble<br />

(Political Economy Research Centre, University of Sheffield)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 18–19 October 1999<br />

Europeanization of Organized Interests<br />

Organizer: Wolfgang Streeck<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Tagung der Sektion Wirtschaftssoziologie der Deutschen<br />

Gesellschaft für Soziologie, 29–30 October 1999<br />

Perspektiven der Wirtschaftssoziologie<br />

Organizer: Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 16–17 December 1999<br />

Dimensionen der Internationalisierung von Unternehmen<br />

Organizer: Anke Hassel<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 17–18 December 1999<br />

The Governance of Local Economies<br />

Organizers: Helmut Voelzkow and Colin Crouch (EUI)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

COST A 15 Conference, 6–8 October 2000<br />

European Welfare States: Domestic and<br />

International Challenges<br />

Organizers: COST Organizing Committee and Max Planck<br />

Institute for the Study of Societies: Denis Bouget, Bjoern<br />

Hvinden, Stephan Leibfried, Philip Manow, Bruno Palier,<br />

Jelle Visser<br />

Host: Maternushaus Conference Center, Cologne<br />

Conference, Sektion Politik und Ökonomie der Deutschen<br />

Vereinigung für Politische Wissenschaft (DVPW), 24–26<br />

March 2000<br />

Ökonomische Entgrenzung und politisches Handeln<br />

Organizers: Roland Czada (FernUniversität Hagen)<br />

and Susanne Lütz<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Wissenschaftliches Kolloquium, 27 October 2000<br />

Bestandsaufnahme: Die Deutschen Arbeitsbeziehungen<br />

am Anfang des 21. Jahrhunderts<br />

Organizers: Wolfgang Streeck and Martin Höpner,<br />

Arbeitgeberverband Gesamtmetall<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 17–18 November 2000<br />

Database “Europeanization of Organized Interests”<br />

Organizers: Jörg Teuber, Stefanie Schramm and<br />

Claudius Wagemann (EUI)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 1–2 December 2000<br />

Politik und Recht unter den Bedingungen der<br />

Globalisierung und Dezentralisierung<br />

Organizer: Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 8–9 December 2000<br />

Institutioneller Wandel in den industriellen Beziehungen<br />

Organizers: Anke Hassel and Rainer Zugehör<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Conference, 15–16 December 2000<br />

Building and Sustaining Trust and Trustworthiness<br />

Organizer: Margaret Levi (University of Washington–Seattle)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong>


Workshop, 4 May 2001<br />

Wer beherrscht das Unternehmen? Corporate Governance<br />

in Deutschland im Licht von Fallstudien und Unternehmensvergleichen<br />

Organizer: Martin Höpner<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Authors’ Conference, 5–6 May 2001<br />

How Intergovernmental Are Intergovernmental<br />

Conferences?<br />

Organizer: Gerda Falkner<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 12–13 July 2001<br />

Rentenpolitische Entscheidungsprozesse<br />

Organizer: Martin Schludi<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Summer School, 10–21 September 2001<br />

Game Theory and Its Applications in Political Research<br />

Organizers: Henrik Enderlein and George Tsebelis<br />

(University of California-Los Angeles)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Joint Workshop, 13 November 2001<br />

Internet and Regulation – Globalisation and National<br />

Solo Runs<br />

Organizers: Raymund Werle, Bernd Holznagel (Institut für<br />

Informations-, Telekommunikations- und Medienrecht der<br />

Universität Münster)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 26–27 November 2001<br />

European Corporate Governance and Human Resource<br />

Management<br />

Organizers: Gregory Jackson, Andrew Pendleton<br />

(Manchester Metropolitan University)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong>, European Science Foundation<br />

In-house Workshop, 12 December 2001<br />

Konstitutionalisierung Europas<br />

Organizers: Wolfgang Streeck, Jürgen Habermas (Institut<br />

für Philosophie, Universität Frankfurt)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Relations to the Scientific Community and the Public<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Summer School, 3–14 June 2002<br />

Social Science Methodology<br />

Organizers: Wolfgang Streeck and Scott Eliason (University<br />

of Minnesota)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 13–14 September 2002<br />

Commercialization of Public Research and Higher<br />

Education<br />

Organizers: Raymund Werle and Franc Mali (Universität<br />

Ljubljana)<br />

Host: University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, Research Network<br />

“Sociology of Science and Technology” of the European<br />

Sociological Association<br />

Editors’ Conference, 4–5 October 2002<br />

Business Associations in the National, European and<br />

Global Political Economy<br />

Organizers: Jörg Teuber with Wolfgang Streeck<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 9 October 2002<br />

International Negotiation and National Interministerial<br />

Coordination<br />

Organizers: Bernhard Kittel, Fritz W. Scharpf and Paul<br />

Thurner, Michael Stoiber (Universität Mannheim)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Ad-hoc Group at the Congress of the German Sociological<br />

Association, 8–10 October 2002<br />

Modell Deutschland – eine nationale Wirtschaftsordnung<br />

vor der Auflösung?<br />

Organizer: Jürgen Beyer<br />

Host: Jahreskongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft für<br />

Soziologie, Leipzig<br />

Editors’ Conference, 11–12 October 2002<br />

“Germany Beyond the Stable State”: A Special Issue of<br />

West European Politics<br />

Organizers: Wolfgang Streeck and Herbert Kitschelt<br />

(Duke University)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 28–29 November 2002<br />

Politik und Recht unter den Bedingungen der<br />

Globalisierung und Dezentralisierung<br />

Organizer: Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Workshop, 12 December 2002<br />

Path Dependency in the Neo-institutional Analysis<br />

Organizers: Colin Crouch, EUI, and Helmut Voelzkow,<br />

Universität Osnabrück<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Conference, 12–14 December 2002<br />

Continuity and Discontinuity in Institutional Analysis<br />

Organizers: Wolfgang Streeck, Christine Trampusch and<br />

Kathleen Thelen (Northwestern University)<br />

Host: <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

95


96<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Guest Lectures at the <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

Heidrun Abromeit<br />

Föderalismustheoretische Überlegungen<br />

zur Europäischen Union<br />

Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany<br />

99/11/29<br />

Lucio Baccaro<br />

The Coming of ‘Democratic’ Corporatism? Labor Unions<br />

and Policy Reforms in Italy<br />

International Labour Organisation, Geneva, Switzerland<br />

01/03/23<br />

Lectures and Conference Participation<br />

From 1999 to 2002, <strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers gave 520 lectures<br />

at universities, research institutes, foundations,<br />

international symposiums, firms, research organizations,<br />

government offices, think tanks and high<br />

schools. They spoke at meetings of political parties,<br />

trade unions, employer associations and professional<br />

associations. They were also well represented at major<br />

national and international conferences in political<br />

science, sociology, socio-economics and European<br />

studies, and at workshops on such issues as social<br />

pacts, globalization, corporate governance, the internet,<br />

social policy, industrial relations, the EU stability<br />

and growth pact, transformation processes in postsocialist<br />

Europe and network visualization. The institute’s<br />

directors participated in debates at meetings of<br />

unions and political parties and gave lectures to audiences<br />

of government officials in Germany and<br />

abroad.<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> lecturers went to 50 German cities and 27 universities. They gave lectures<br />

in 50 European cities in 18 countries (including 16 in Amsterdam, 9 in Paris, 20<br />

in Florence and 8 in Brussels), and at 16 leading universities in the US and<br />

Canada. There were 12 lectures by <strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers at Harvard University alone.<br />

One PhD student spoke to the Ministry of International Trade in Tokyo, and three<br />

others presented their work at meetings of the American Political Science<br />

Association. 15 percent of all lectures were given by PhD students. <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

researchers also participated in many conferences and workshops, 125 of which<br />

were held in Germany and 65 abroad.<br />

Dirk Berg-Schlosser<br />

Makro-qualitative Ansätze in der Politikwissenschaft –<br />

am Beispiel des Zusammenbruchs von Demokratien<br />

in Europa in der Zwischenkriegszeit<br />

Phillips-Universität Marburg, Germany<br />

00/05/29<br />

Thomas Bernauer<br />

Playing Politics, Playing the Market: Why Do Regulations<br />

on Biotech Food Differ Across the EU, the United States,<br />

and Japan?<br />

Zürich, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule, Switzerland<br />

01/07/09


Joachim K. Blatter<br />

Politische Institutionenbildung in grenzüberschreitenden<br />

Regionen in Europa und Nordamerika<br />

Europäisches Zentrum für Staatswissenschaft<br />

und Staatspraxis, Berlin, Germany<br />

99/08/31<br />

Jozsef Böröcz<br />

What Is the EU? Questions for Theory<br />

Rutgers University, New Brunswick, USA<br />

02/04/29<br />

Tanja Börzel<br />

Positives Regieren jenseits des Nationalstaates<br />

und das Problem der ungewollten Nichteinhaltung:<br />

Zur Implementationslogik von EG-Regelungen<br />

Max Planck Project Group “Common Goods: Law, Politics<br />

and Economics,” Bonn, Germany<br />

00/09/20<br />

David R. Cameron<br />

The Europeanization of Employment Policy<br />

Yale University, New Haven, USA<br />

00/05/30<br />

Philip G. Cerny<br />

Political Agency in a Globalizing World:<br />

Toward a Structurational Approach<br />

University of Leeds, UK<br />

99/04/26<br />

Hugh Compston<br />

The Meaning of Social Partnership<br />

Cardiff University, UK<br />

99/06/29<br />

Colin Crouch<br />

Are We Entering a Post-Democratic Period?<br />

(Lecture at the Forschungsinstitut für Politische<br />

Wissenschaft und Europäische Fragen der Universität zu<br />

Köln)<br />

European University Institute, Florence, Italy<br />

02/12/12<br />

Roland Czada<br />

Transformation der Verhandlungsdemokratie<br />

FernUniversität Hagen, Germany<br />

01/03/01<br />

Lorraine Daston<br />

Wissenschaftliche Objektivität – historisch betrachtet<br />

(<strong>MPIfG</strong> Lecture Series “The Theoretical Potential of Macro-<br />

Social Analysis”)<br />

Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin,<br />

Germany<br />

01/09/27<br />

L. Grant Duncan<br />

An Antipodean Third Way: Recovering from Neo-Liberalism<br />

and Adapting to Globalisation in New Zealand<br />

Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand<br />

00/12/11<br />

Relations to the Scientific Community and the Public<br />

Thomas Ertmann<br />

Der Zusammenbruch der Weimarer Republik aus der<br />

Perspektive der vergleichenden Sozialwissenschaften<br />

Harvard University, Cambridge, USA<br />

99/02/24<br />

Hartmut Esser<br />

Was könnte man unter einer Theorie mittlerer Reichweite<br />

verstehen?<br />

(<strong>MPIfG</strong> Lecture Series “The Theoretical Potential of Macro-<br />

Social Analysis”)<br />

Universität Mannheim, Germany<br />

01/03/15<br />

Neil Fligstein<br />

Globalization or Europeanization: Changes in the Strategies<br />

of Large European Corporations<br />

University of California, Berkeley, USA<br />

99/05/10<br />

Andreas Follesdal<br />

The Legitimacy of Regulatory Comitology in the European<br />

Union<br />

ARENA, Oslo, Norway<br />

00/09/27<br />

Robert Geyer<br />

The Contradictions of Mainstreaming EU Social Policy<br />

and the Implications of Complexity Theory<br />

University of Liverpool, UK<br />

99/06/28<br />

Janine Goetschy<br />

The European Employment Strategy, Multi-level Governance<br />

and Policy Coordination: Past, Present and Future<br />

Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS),<br />

Nanterre, France and Free University of Brussels, Belgium<br />

02/01/22<br />

Michel Goyer<br />

Labor and Corporate Governance: An Institutionalist<br />

Perspective on France and Germany<br />

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA<br />

01/03/30<br />

Gernot Grabher<br />

Die Organisation von Kreativität:<br />

Heterarchien in der Werbeindustrie<br />

Universität Bonn, Germany<br />

00/03/22<br />

Rebecca Harding<br />

Financing the British Innovation System:<br />

From Policy to Venture Capital<br />

University of Brighton, UK<br />

99/11/16<br />

Gary Herrigel<br />

De-Regionalization, Re-Regionalization and the<br />

Transformation of Manufacturing Flexibility<br />

University of Chicago, USA<br />

99/07/06<br />

97


98<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Dr. Alex Hicks<br />

Globalization and the Size of the State<br />

Emory University, Atlanta, USA<br />

99/07/20<br />

Jolyon Howorth<br />

The Constitutional Implications of European Security<br />

Integration<br />

University of Bath, UK<br />

02/03/26<br />

Ellen Immergut<br />

The Shift from Bicameralism to Unicameralism in Sweden:<br />

Lessons for Institutionalist Analysis<br />

Universität Konstanz, Germany<br />

99/11/12<br />

Bill Jordan<br />

Improving Labour-Market Incentives<br />

in Recent UK Tax Benefit Reforms<br />

Exeter University, UK<br />

00/01/11<br />

André Kaiser<br />

Alternanz und Inklusion in den europäischen Demokratien<br />

1950–2000<br />

Universität Mannheim/Universität zu Köln, Germany<br />

02/02/04<br />

Achim Kemmerling<br />

Dynamische Indikatoren der vergleichenden<br />

Wohlfahrtsstaatenforschung als Determinanten<br />

für Dienstleistungsbeschäftigung<br />

Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB),<br />

Berlin, Germany<br />

00/09/14<br />

Lane Kenworthy<br />

Quantitative Indicators of Corporatism:<br />

A Survey and Assessment<br />

East Carolina University, Greenville, USA<br />

00/06/05<br />

Lane Kenworthy<br />

Do Affluent Countries Face an Incomes-Jobs Tradeoff?<br />

Emory University, Atlanta, USA<br />

01/05/29<br />

Herbert Kitschelt<br />

“Predatory States” und Globalisierung (Grundzüge einer<br />

politisch-ökonomischen Analyse von Terrorismus)<br />

Department of Political Science<br />

Duke University, Durham, USA<br />

02/07/02<br />

Christoph Knill<br />

Anpassung oder Persistenz? Die Europäisierung<br />

nationaler Verwaltungsmuster<br />

Max Planck Project Group “Common Goods: Law, Politics<br />

and Economics,” Bonn, Germany<br />

99/10/26<br />

Karl Lamers, MdB<br />

Die Deutsche Außenpolitik nach dem 11. September<br />

Deutscher Bundestag, Berlin, Germany<br />

01/11/22<br />

Gerhard Lehmbruch<br />

Spielräume für eine Reform des Bundesstaats<br />

(Lecture on Occasion of Presentation of <strong>MPIfG</strong> Paper Prize<br />

2001)<br />

Universität Konstanz, Germany<br />

01/06/01<br />

Margaret Levi<br />

Analytic Narratives: History and Theory<br />

in the Service of Comparative Research<br />

University of Washington–Seattle, USA<br />

00/12/07<br />

Isabela Mares<br />

Negotiated Risks: Employers’ Role in<br />

Social Policy Development<br />

Stanford University, Stanford, USA<br />

99/04/23<br />

Andy Martin<br />

The EMU Macroeconomic Policy Regime<br />

and the European Model of Society<br />

Harvard University, Cambridge, USA<br />

99/05/11<br />

Cathie Jo Martin<br />

Stuck in Neutral: Business and the Politics of Human<br />

Capital Investment Policy<br />

Boston University, USA<br />

01/03/19<br />

Peter McLaughlin<br />

Functional Explanations in Biology and Social Science<br />

(<strong>MPIfG</strong> Lecture Series “The Theoretical Potential of Macro-<br />

Social Analysis”)<br />

Universität Konstanz, Germany<br />

01/05/17<br />

David Miliband, MP<br />

Perspectives on European Integration – A British View<br />

(Hosted jointly by the <strong>MPIfG</strong> and the Friedrich-Ebert-<br />

Stiftung )<br />

South Shields, UK<br />

02/02/19<br />

Sandra Mitchell<br />

Contingent Generalizations: Lessons from Biology<br />

(<strong>MPIfG</strong> Lecture Series “The Theoretical Potential of Macro-<br />

Social Analysis”)<br />

University of Pittsburgh, USA<br />

01/07/05<br />

Lars Mjoset<br />

Welfare States, European Integration and Unemployment<br />

University of Oslo, Norway<br />

99/05/31


Jonathan Moses<br />

A Methodological Critique<br />

of Statistical Studies of<br />

Globalization<br />

Norwegian University of<br />

Science and Technology,<br />

Trondheim, Norway<br />

01/06/07<br />

Jim Mosher<br />

Internal Union Distributive<br />

Conflict and Wage Equality<br />

University of Wisconsin,<br />

Madison, USA<br />

01/06/26<br />

Richard Münch<br />

Soziale Integration diesseits<br />

und jenseits des<br />

Nationalstaats<br />

Universität Bamberg, Germany<br />

00/07/13<br />

Frank Nullmeier<br />

Überlegungen zur politikwissenschaftlichen<br />

Wettbewerbsanalyse<br />

Universität Konstanz, Germany<br />

00/05/22<br />

Herbert Obinger<br />

Politik und Wirtschaftswachstum. Empirische Befunde des<br />

internationalen Vergleichs<br />

Zentrum für Sozialpolitik, Universität Bremen, Germany<br />

01/09/25<br />

Elinor Ostrom<br />

Redundancy: How Does It Influence Optimal Management?<br />

(Lecture given at the Max Planck Project Group “Common<br />

Goods: Law, Politics and Economics,” Bonn)<br />

Indiana University, Bloomington, USA<br />

01/03/28<br />

Bruno Palier<br />

Comparing Social Insurance Reforms in Continental<br />

Europe: Analytical Framework and Hypotheses<br />

CEVIPOF, CNRS, Paris, France<br />

01/01/31<br />

T.J. Pempel<br />

Regime Shift: Changes in Capitalist Systems<br />

University of Washington–Seattle, USA<br />

00/01/25<br />

Roswitha Pioch<br />

Gerechtigkeitsvorstellungen als normativer<br />

Handlungskontext der Sozialpolitik: Ein Vergleich<br />

zwischen Deutschland und den Niederlanden<br />

Universität Leipzig, Germany<br />

99/04/14<br />

Relations to the Scientific Community and the Public<br />

E.J. Rasmussen<br />

The New Zealand Transformation:<br />

Reform Trends and Issues<br />

University of Auckland, New Zealand<br />

00/09/28<br />

Gerd Roellecke<br />

Zur Unterscheidung und Kopplung von Recht<br />

und Wirtschaft<br />

Max Planck Project Group “Common Goods: Law, Politics<br />

and Economics,” Bonn, Germany<br />

99/10/25<br />

Charles F. Sabel<br />

Pragmatism and Democracy:<br />

The Case of Environmental Regulation<br />

Columbia University, New York, USA<br />

99/05/28<br />

Uwe Schimank<br />

Gesellschaftstheoretische Konzepte und die Erforschung<br />

politischer Steuerung, steuerungstheoretische<br />

Implikationen von Konzepten wie: polykontexturale<br />

Gesellschaft, Organisationsgesellschaft, Risikogesellschaft<br />

FernUniversität Hagen, Germany<br />

99/12/01<br />

Uwe Schimank<br />

Theoretische Modelle sozialer Strukturdynamiken:<br />

Möglichkeiten und Arten der Generalisierbarkeit<br />

von Erkenntnissen<br />

FernUniversität Hagen, Germany<br />

00/10/26<br />

Manfred G. Schmidt<br />

Vier Hochzeiten und ein Todesfall:<br />

Zur Interaktion von Lohnverhandlungssystemen<br />

und Zentralbanken im internationalen Vergleich<br />

99


100<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Universität Heidelberg, Germany<br />

00/05/15<br />

Michael Shalev<br />

“Taming the Globalization Beast”–<br />

Some Failures of the Comparative Political Economy<br />

Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel<br />

99/03/10<br />

Marc Smyrl<br />

Actors, Ideas and Institutions<br />

University of Denver, USA<br />

99/11/23<br />

Arndt Sorge<br />

Organizing Societal Space within Globalization:<br />

Bringing Society Back In<br />

Universität Tilburg, Netherlands<br />

99/01/18<br />

Guy Standing<br />

Global Labour Flexibility – Seeking Distributive Justice<br />

International Labour Organisation, Geneva<br />

99/11/24<br />

Sven Steinmo<br />

The New Political Economy of Taxation –<br />

Policies, Ideas and Change<br />

University of Colorado, Boulder, USA<br />

00/06/15<br />

Robin Stryker<br />

Legitimacy Processes as Institutional Politics<br />

University of Iowa, Iowa City, USA<br />

99/09/15<br />

Robin Stryker and Scott R. Eliason<br />

Political Partisanship and European Welfare States<br />

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA<br />

02/06/05<br />

Kathleen Thelen<br />

The Explanatory Power of Historical Institutionalism<br />

(<strong>MPIfG</strong> Lecture Series “The Theoretical Potential of Macro-<br />

Social Analysis”)<br />

Northwestern University, Evanston, USA<br />

01/01/18<br />

Ingeborg Tömmel<br />

Systementwicklung und Integrationsdynamik der EU<br />

Universität Osnabrück, Germany<br />

00/02/15<br />

George Tsebelis<br />

Veto Players and Decisionmaking in the EU after Nice:<br />

Legislative Gridlock und Bureaucratical/Judicial Discretion<br />

University of California, Los Angeles, USA<br />

01/09/18<br />

Frank Vandenbroucke (Minister for Social Affairs, Belgium)<br />

The Debate on the European Constitution and Its Impact<br />

on the European Social Model<br />

Brussels, Belgium<br />

02/06/17<br />

Jelle Visser<br />

Learning and Mimicking: How European Welfare States<br />

Reform<br />

Amsterdam School for Social Science, Amsterdam,<br />

Netherlands<br />

01/11/15<br />

Eskil Wadensjö<br />

Current Public and Private Pension Reform in Industrial<br />

Countries<br />

Stockholm University, Sweden<br />

00/12/20<br />

Uwe Wagschal<br />

Deutschlands Steuerstaat und die vier Welten der<br />

Besteuerung<br />

Zentrum für Sozialpolitik, Universität Bremen, Germany<br />

00/07/26<br />

Thomas Welskopp<br />

Von der Historik zur historischen Gesellschaftsanalyse<br />

(<strong>MPIfG</strong> Lecture Series “The Theoretical Potential of Macro-<br />

Social Analysis”)<br />

Freie Universität Berlin, Germany<br />

01/04/04<br />

Wolfgang Wessels<br />

Wachstums- und Differenzierungstrends der EU –<br />

Befunde und Erklärungsansätze<br />

Universität zu Köln, Germany<br />

00/11/22


Jonathan Zeitlin<br />

Americanization and Its Limits – Reworking US Technology<br />

and Management in Postwar Europe and Japan<br />

European University Institute, Florence<br />

99/06/07<br />

Patrick Ziltener<br />

Strukturwandel der europäischen Integration<br />

Universität Zürich, Switzerland<br />

00/01/10<br />

Michael Zürn<br />

Compliance innerhalb und außerhalb des Nationalstaats<br />

Universität Bremen, Germany<br />

00/07/06<br />

Michael Zürn<br />

Forschungsperspektiven: Institutionen jenseits des<br />

Nationalstaats<br />

Universität Bremen, Germany<br />

02/11/04<br />

Committee Memberships and<br />

Editorships<br />

Jürgen Beyer<br />

Program Committee (Programmkommission) of 31st<br />

Meeting of the German Sociological Association,<br />

“Entstaatlichung und Soziale Sicherheit,” Leipzig<br />

Jury (Kommission), René-König-Lehrbuchpreis<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

Co-Chair, Organizing Committee, German-American<br />

Frontiers of Social and Behavioral Sciences (GAFOSS),<br />

1999/2000<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

Steering Committee, Standing Group on the European<br />

Union of the European Consortium for Political Research<br />

(ECPR)<br />

Executive Committee (Vorstandsmitglied), interdisziplinäre<br />

österreichische Europaforschungsgesellschaft ECSA-Austria<br />

Expert Panel of the European Commission for the<br />

Evaluation of Projects in the EU’s Fifth Framework for<br />

Research, Brussels<br />

Research Council, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven<br />

Österreichische Gesellschaft für Europaforschung (ECSA-<br />

Austria)<br />

Relations to the Scientific Community and the Public<br />

Österreichische Forschungsgemeinschaft<br />

Schweizerische Akademie für Geistes- und<br />

Sozialwissenschaften<br />

External member, Search committee<br />

(Berufungskommission) for professor of “International vergleichende<br />

Gesellschaftsanalyse,” Universität Osnabrück<br />

Equal Opportunity Committee (Arbeitskreis für<br />

Gleichbehandlungsfragen), Sozial- und wirtschaftswissenschaftliche<br />

Fakultät der Universität Wien<br />

Volkswagenstiftung<br />

Editorial Boards<br />

Current Politics and Economics of Europe<br />

EUI Working Papers, Florence<br />

“Europe in Change” Series, Manchester University Press<br />

European Integration online Papers (EIoP), Vienna<br />

European Union Politics<br />

Journal of European Public Policy<br />

Journal of Common Market Studies<br />

Journal of European Integration<br />

Österreichische Zeitschrift für Politikwissenschaft<br />

Regional and Federal Studies<br />

Anke Hassel<br />

Committee on Future Perspectives (Arbeitskreis Zukunft),<br />

Otto-Brenner-Stiftung<br />

Advisory Committee (Wissenschaftlerkreis), Otto-Brenner-<br />

Stiftung<br />

Executive Council, Society for the Advancement of Socio-<br />

Economics (SASE)<br />

Co-Chair, Program Committee, Society for the<br />

Advancement of Socio-Economics (SASE)<br />

Hans-Willy Hohn<br />

Sektion Wissenschafts- und Technikforschung, Deutsche<br />

Gesellschaft für Soziologie<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

Fellow, International Institute for Corporate Governance<br />

and Accountability, Washington, DC<br />

Network Organizer “Markets and Institutions,” Society for<br />

the Advancement of Socio-Economics (SASE)<br />

101


102<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Bernhard Kittel<br />

Editorial Board<br />

Österreichische Zeitschrift für Politikwissenschaft<br />

Lothar Krempel<br />

Methodensektion, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie<br />

Sektion für Modellbildung und Simulation, Deutsche<br />

Gesellschaft für Soziologie<br />

International Network for the Analysis of Social Networks<br />

(INSNA)<br />

Research Committee “Logic and Methodology,”<br />

International Sociological Association<br />

Editorial Boards<br />

“Historical Atlas of Globalization,” International Networks<br />

Archive, Department of Sociology, Princeton University<br />

Journal of Social Structures<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Co-Chair (Sprecherin), Sektion Politik und Ökonomie,<br />

Deutsche Vereinigung für Politische Wissenschaft (DVPW)<br />

Member, International Research Network “Globalization,<br />

Autonomy and the Human Condition” headed by Prof.<br />

William D. Coleman, Canada Research Chair in Global<br />

Governance and Public Policy, McMaster University,<br />

Hamilton/Ontario, Canada<br />

Project Advisory Board (Projektbeirat) “Regulierung von<br />

Finanzmärkten,” Nell-Breuning-Institut für Wirtschafts- und<br />

Gesellschaftsethik, Frankfurt a.M.<br />

Member, Center for Interdisciplinary Research, Universität<br />

Bielefeld<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Managing Committee, COST Action 15<br />

Renate Mayntz<br />

BBAW-AAAS Project “Universities between Autonomy and<br />

Responsibility,” Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der<br />

Wissenschaften, Berlin<br />

External Member, Selection Committee for the Chair in<br />

Governance, Science and Technology, Robert Schuman<br />

Centre for Advanced Studies, European University Institute,<br />

Florence<br />

Advisory Board (Wissenschaftlicher Beirat), Institut für<br />

Wissenschafts- und Technikforschung, Universität Bielefeld<br />

Committee on Political Sociology, International Sociological<br />

Association<br />

Schloeßmann-Seminar, Max-Planck-Institut für<br />

Bildungsforschung, Berlin<br />

Kommission, Max-Planck-Institut für Demografische<br />

Forschung, Berlin<br />

Board of Trustees (Universitätsrat), University of Konstanz<br />

Arbeitskreis “Verantwortliches Handeln in der Wissenschaft”<br />

Learned Societies<br />

Academia Europaea<br />

Foreign Honorary Member, American Academy of Arts and<br />

Sciences<br />

Außerordentliches Mitglied, Berlin-Brandenburgische<br />

Akademie der Wissenschaften<br />

Editorial Boards<br />

Governance: An International Journal of Policy and<br />

Administration<br />

Interdisciplinary Science Reviews<br />

Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Soziologie<br />

“Staatlichkeit im Wandel” Series, Institut für<br />

Staatswissenschaften, Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaften,<br />

Universität der Bundeswehr, Munich<br />

Zeitschrift für Soziologie<br />

Roswitha Pioch<br />

Sektion Sozialpolitik, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Committee on International Political Science, American<br />

Political Science Association (APSA)<br />

Secretary, American Political Science Association (APSA)<br />

Strategiegruppe Europa, Bertelsmann Stiftung, Gütersloh<br />

Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy<br />

Ethics Council (Ehrenrat), City of Cologne


Expert Referee (Fachgutachter), Deutsche<br />

Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)<br />

Expertenkommission “Entflechtung 2005: Fragen der<br />

Zukunft des deutschen Föderalismus”<br />

International Advisory Board (Internationaler Beirat),<br />

Europäisches Zentrum für Staatswissenschaft und<br />

Staatspraxis, Berlin<br />

Research Council, European University Institute, Florence<br />

Zukunftskommission der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Bonn<br />

Advisory Panel, German Marshall Fund, Berlin<br />

Advisory Board (Beirat) of the Hans-Böckler-Stiftung<br />

project “Institutionen, Wirtschaftswachstum und Beschäftigung<br />

in der EWU – Institutionelle Bedingungen für die<br />

Koordination der Finanzpolitik einerseits sowie der<br />

Lohnpolitik andererseits”<br />

Learned Societies<br />

Foreign Honorary Member, American Academy of Arts and<br />

Sciences<br />

Corresponding Fellow, British Academy<br />

Editorial Boards<br />

European Law Journal<br />

International Organization<br />

Internationale Politik<br />

Journal of European Public Policy<br />

Journal of Public Policy<br />

Journal of Theoretical Politics<br />

Organization Science<br />

“Themes in European Governance,” Cambridge University<br />

Press<br />

Susanne K. Schmidt<br />

Editorial Board<br />

European Union Politics<br />

Wolfgang Streeck<br />

Benchmarking Committee, Alliance for Employment<br />

(Bündnis für Arbeit)<br />

Executive Board (Mitglied des Vorstands),<br />

Arbeitsgemeinschaft Sozialwissenschaftlicher Institute e.V.<br />

Honorary President, Association for the Study of German<br />

Politics<br />

Relations to the Scientific Community and the Public<br />

Scientific Advisory Committee (Wissenschaftlicher Beirat),<br />

Centre Saint-Gobain pour la recherche en économie<br />

Konzil, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie<br />

Advisory Committee (Beirat), Deutsches Institut für<br />

Japanforschung, Tokyo (DIJT)<br />

Advisory Board (Wissenschaftlicher Beirat), Hans-Böckler-<br />

Stiftung, Düsseldorf<br />

Board of Trustees (Kuratorium), Hans-Böckler-Stiftung,<br />

Düsseldorf<br />

Advisory Board (Wissenschaftlicher Beirat), Institut Arbeit<br />

und Technik, Gelsenkirchen<br />

Advisory Board, Institute of Governance, Queens University,<br />

Belfast<br />

President, Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics<br />

(SASE)<br />

Executive Council, Society for the Advancement of Socio-<br />

Economics (SASE)<br />

Executive Board, Society for Comparative Research<br />

Learned Societies<br />

Academia Europaea<br />

Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften<br />

Editorial Boards<br />

Comparative European Politics<br />

Economic and Industrial Democracy<br />

European Journal of Industrial Relations<br />

European Sociological Review<br />

Industrielle Beziehungen<br />

Journal of Public Policy<br />

Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie<br />

Socio-Economic Review<br />

Stato e Mercato<br />

Work, Employment and Society<br />

Zeitschrift für Soziologie, Co-editor 1995–1999<br />

Sabrina Tesoka<br />

Scientific collaborator at the Forward Studies Unit of the<br />

European Commission (project on Women and<br />

Governance)<br />

Christine Trampusch<br />

Representative for the researchers of the <strong>MPIfG</strong> in the<br />

Humanities Section of the Max Planck Society<br />

103


104<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Executive Committee (Vorstand), Sektion<br />

Wirtschaftssoziologie, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie<br />

(DGS)<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Verbund Sozialwissenschaftliche Technikforschung beim<br />

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF)<br />

Working Group 5 “Regulation and Control” of COST (Cooperation<br />

in the Field of Scientific and Technical Research)<br />

Action 14 “Government and Democracy in the Information<br />

Age”<br />

Executive Committee (Vorstand), Sektion Wissenschaftsund<br />

Technikforschung, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie<br />

(DGS)<br />

Executive Committee (Sprechergremium), Arbeitskreis<br />

Politik und Technik, Deutsche Vereinigung für Politische<br />

Wissenschaft (DVPW)<br />

Chairman, Coordination Committee of the Research<br />

Network “Sociology of Science and Technology” (SSTNET)<br />

of the European Sociological Association (ESA)<br />

Project group “Trade, Investment and Competition Policies<br />

in the Global Economy: The Case of the International<br />

Telecommunications Regime,” coordinated by Hamburger<br />

Weltwirtschaftsarchiv (HWWA) and Istituto Affari<br />

Internazionali (IAI), Rome<br />

Steering Committee, German American Academic Council’s<br />

Project “Global Networks and Local Values,” coordinated by<br />

the National Research Council’s Computer Science and<br />

Telecommunications Board and the Max Planck Project<br />

Group “Common Goods” (Bonn)<br />

Editorial Boards<br />

Associate Editor, Science Studies: An Interdisciplinary<br />

Journal for Science and Technology Studies, Associate Editor<br />

Zeitschrift für Rechtssoziologie<br />

Stefan Zagelmeyer<br />

Coordinator, Study Group 18 (Industrial Relations and<br />

Societal Transition), IIRA (International Industrial Relations<br />

Association)<br />

Patrick Ziltener<br />

Research Network European Integration of the European<br />

Sociological Association (ESA)<br />

Research committee on economic sociology<br />

(Forschungskomitee Wirtschaftssoziologie), Schweizerische<br />

Gesellschaft für Soziologie (SGS)<br />

Prizes and Honors<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

John F. Kennedy Memorial Fellowship (DAAD),<br />

September 1999–June 2000<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Bennigsen-Foerder-Preis des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen<br />

1999, 17 March 1999<br />

Grant funding for the research proposal “Democratic<br />

Politics in International Multilevel Governance Systems”<br />

Robert Bosch Fellowship for Comparative Public Policy and<br />

Institutions from the American Institute for Contemporary<br />

German Studies (AICGS), Washington DC, and the Robert-<br />

Bosch-Stiftung, 12 December 2001<br />

In March 1999<br />

Dr. Susanne Lütz (r.)<br />

was awarded the<br />

Bennigsen-Foerder<br />

Prize


In November<br />

1999 Prof.<br />

Renate<br />

Mayntz was<br />

awarded the<br />

Schader Prize<br />

for her exceptional<br />

role in<br />

the dialogue<br />

between<br />

social sciences<br />

and political<br />

practice<br />

Renate Mayntz<br />

Schader-Preis, Darmstadt, 4 November 1999<br />

Honorary doctorate from the European University Institute,<br />

Florence, Italy, 4 October 2002<br />

Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of<br />

Arts and Sciences, 5 October 2002<br />

Roswitha Pioch<br />

Lise-Meitner-Stipendium des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen.<br />

Fellowship for work on habilitation thesis, 26 November<br />

2002<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science, University of Uppsala,<br />

1 October 2000<br />

Relations to the Scientific Community and the Public<br />

Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of<br />

Arts and Sciences, 5 October 2002<br />

Schader-Preis 2002 for “making a contribution to solving<br />

social problems through pioneering scholarly work and<br />

exemplary dedication in dialog with practice,” 7 November<br />

2002<br />

Martin Schludi<br />

Future Prize 2002 in the category “Young Scientists” from<br />

the German Institute for Financial Retirement Planning<br />

(Zukunftspreis Altersvorsorge 2002 in der Kategorie Wissenschaftlicher<br />

Nachwuchs vom Deutschen Institut für Altersvorsorge)<br />

for <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Paper 01/11, The Politics of<br />

Pensions in European Social Insurance Countries,<br />

16 December 2002<br />

Wolfgang Streeck<br />

Honorary President, Association for the Study of German<br />

Politics (ASGP), 2000–2003<br />

Doctor of Science honoris causa, University of Birmingham,<br />

8 November 2000<br />

Christine Trampusch<br />

Wolfgang-Enke-Preis 2001 from the Faculty of Social<br />

Sciences at the Georg-August-University in Göttingen for<br />

the dissertation Arbeitsmarktpolitik, Gewerkschaften und<br />

Arbeitgeber. Ein Vergleich der Entstehung und Transformation<br />

öffentlicher Arbeitsverwaltungen in Deutschland, Großbritannien<br />

und den Niederlanden zwischen 1909 und 1999,<br />

30 January 2002<br />

In November 2000 Prof. Wolfgang Streeck (r.)<br />

was awarded the degree of Doctor of Science,<br />

honoris causa by the University of Birmingham,<br />

England<br />

105


106<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

The <strong>MPIfG</strong>’s information desk<br />

at the 2002 congress of the<br />

German Sociological Association<br />

in Leipzig attracted<br />

many visitors<br />

Public Relations<br />

Public relations at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> serve to promote the visibility of the institute’s work<br />

in the scientific community and to establish contact with people and institutions<br />

in the general public. The institute focuses on providing high-quality information<br />

for the general public and the wider scientific community to complement the<br />

scholarly articles and books its researchers publish for a worldwide – but smaller<br />

– circle of readers. This focus has been facilitated by a new corporate design (CD)<br />

created by students from the Department of Design at the University of Applied<br />

Sciences in Cologne and implemented by the <strong>MPIfG</strong>’s Editorial and Public<br />

Relations Unit in the institute’s publications, its website and its stationery.<br />

Providing Information about the <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

The new corporate design was first launched in May 2001 in a brochure describing<br />

the research program, research methods and organization of the institute to<br />

the general public. Also, the <strong>MPIfG</strong> had book stands at the biennial meetings of<br />

the German Sociological Association (2000 in Cologne and 2002 in Leipzig). Since<br />

the stand was well received, there will be similar promotional activities at major<br />

conferences in the future. In July 2002 an <strong>MPIfG</strong> research group compiled its findings<br />

in a new type of publication directly addressing practitioners and other readers<br />

outside the scientific community. Also, <strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers publish in the politics<br />

and business sections of news magazines and national newspapers. The public<br />

television stations ARD, 3sat and Phoenix broadcast interviews with <strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers<br />

as does Deutschlandfunk, the national public radio station, and other<br />

large radio stations.<br />

On its website the <strong>MPIfG</strong> offers a subscription to its e-mail newsletter, “Recent<br />

<strong>Publications</strong>,” which reports about new titles in its publication series. The institute<br />

also uses press releases and e-mail news flashes to inform about recent research.<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Website<br />

The institute’s website is its most important means of communication<br />

with the scientific community around the world and with the<br />

general public. It is also vital to the flow of information within the<br />

institute. In the spring of 2001 the <strong>MPIfG</strong> relaunched its site, the<br />

layout of which conforms with the new corporate design. A color<br />

concept and an improved navigation structure make it easier for


visitors to find what they are looking for. The content was restructured, and the<br />

new “Service” section shows the services the <strong>MPIfG</strong> offers to researchers, the media<br />

and the interested public.<br />

Since the <strong>MPIfG</strong> website was established in 1996, the number of visitors has<br />

continually increased. In 1999, there were 393,129 queries, an average of 1,077 per<br />

day, compared to 260 queries per day in 1997. At present<br />

there is an average of about 2,500 queries per day.<br />

By the end of 2000 about half of the website visitors<br />

came from Germany, the rest mostly from other<br />

European countries and the United States. Today, over<br />

30 percent come from the United States and 20 percent<br />

from Germany, while the rest comes from the United<br />

Kingdom, other European countries, Canada and<br />

Japan. Visitors are based in universities and research<br />

institutes, government and policy-making institutions,<br />

and the national print media.<br />

Dialog with Decision-Makers<br />

The transfer of knowledge from the institute’s researchers to decision-makers in<br />

government, business, interest associations and the society at large is expedited by<br />

the lectures, workshops and discussion forums in which the researchers participate,<br />

and by their presence on various boards and committees involved in policymaking.<br />

In 1999 Wolfgang Streeck was appointed by the Office of the Federal Chancellor<br />

to the Benchmarking Group of the “Alliance for Jobs, Vocational Training<br />

and Competitiveness.”<br />

The Secretary of State in the Federal Ministry of Labor, Werner Tegtmeier,<br />

invited Fritz W. Scharpf and Wolfgang Streeck to talk to officials of the Ministry<br />

about the research at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>. In a series of four lectures in the fall of 2001, they<br />

spoke about the European welfare state and its prospects for reform, about<br />

European integration and social policy, “Benchmarking Germany,” and the relationship<br />

between shareholder value and codetermination.<br />

In November 2001 the foreign policy spokesman for the CDU/CSU parliamentary<br />

group in the Bundestag, Karl Lamers, MdB, gave an internal lecture on “German<br />

foreign policy after September 11.”<br />

In a lecture entitled “Perspectives on European Integration,” David Miliband,<br />

Member of the House of Commons, explained the British view of the European<br />

constitutional process in February 2002. Before being elected to the House of<br />

Commons in 2001, Miliband was a close aide to Prime Minister Tony Blair.<br />

When Germany’s President Johannes Rau made a state visit to Italy in the spring<br />

of 2002, Wolfgang Streeck was invited to accompany him as a special guest. Dur-<br />

Relations to the Scientific Community and the Public<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> library online services<br />

107


108<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

SDW scholarship holders<br />

joined in an afternoon<br />

discussion with researchers<br />

from the <strong>MPIfG</strong> in July 2001<br />

ing the visit, Streeck had discussions with the deputy general secretary of the CGIL<br />

trade union, Guglielmo Epifani, and with representatives of the Party of the Democratic<br />

Left (PDS), among them the former economics minister, Vincenzo Visco.<br />

Since September 11, 2001, a key question of European constitutional development<br />

has been the integration of security and defense policy of Member States.<br />

Researchers at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> discussed this issue in early 2002 with Jolyon Howorth<br />

from the University of Bath. Howorth is one of the leading authorities on the<br />

development of security cooperation in Europe and the relations between NATO,<br />

the WEU, and the European Union.<br />

In June 2002 Frank Vandenbroucke, Belgian Minister of Social Affairs, gave an<br />

internal talk on “The Debate on the European Constitution and Its Impact on the<br />

European ‘Social Model’.”<br />

Public Relations for Specific Target Groups<br />

In 2001 the <strong>MPIfG</strong> and the Stiftung der Deutschen<br />

Wirtschaft (SDW, German Business Foundation)<br />

jointly organized an afternoon discussion for SDW<br />

scholarship holders studying in the Aachen/Bonn/<br />

Cologne region. Eighteen participants had the opportunity<br />

to learn about the research program of the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> and about individual research projects at the<br />

interface of sociology, political science and economics.<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers are often invited to give lectures<br />

at schools. The <strong>MPIfG</strong> in turn invites groups of<br />

upper-class students from college-track German high<br />

schools to spend a day at the institute. Four classes took advantage of this opportunity<br />

between January 1999 and March 2001. The visits begin with an introduction<br />

to the Max Planck Society and its role in the German research system.<br />

Researchers then present their projects, describing the issues they work on and the<br />

methods they use. Students are encouraged to ask questions and participate in discussions.<br />

In January 2002 the <strong>MPIfG</strong> invited teachers from a local Gymnasium to<br />

a workshop on “European Welfare States under the Impact of Internationalization.”<br />

The <strong>MPIfG</strong>’s annual art exhibit is an occasion for the institute to open its doors<br />

to neighbors, friends and the general public. In 1999–2002, the institute hosted<br />

Gereon Heil, Carola Willbrand, Rune Mields and Ute Bartel, all artists that live<br />

and work in the Rhineland.<br />

Among the many in-house seminars the <strong>MPIfG</strong> organizes, a very popular series<br />

is one in which researchers present their current projects to the support staff. A<br />

media seminar on how to communicate with journalists took place for the first<br />

time in 2002.


Research Staff<br />

Bastiaan van Apeldoorn<br />

Postdoctoral fellow (PhD, Political and Social Sciences, 1999,<br />

European University Institute, Florence): Political economy of<br />

European integration; business elites in the European integration<br />

process; corporate governance; international political<br />

economy<br />

Jürgen Beyer<br />

Research fellow (Dr. phil., Sociology, 1997, Universität Trier):<br />

Comparative political economy; economic sociology; organizational<br />

sociology; transformation research<br />

Andreas Broscheid<br />

Postdoctoral fellow (PhD, Political Science, 2000, State<br />

University of New York at Stony Brook): Political system of<br />

the USA (role of the courts in the institutional framework of<br />

government, regulation within the states); interaction of institutions<br />

of the EU; formation and role of interest organizations<br />

in the EU; quantitative methods and positive theory<br />

(game theory)<br />

Colin Crouch<br />

External scientific member (Dr. phil., 1975, Nuffield College,<br />

Oxford University; Professor, European University Institute,<br />

Florence): Comparative European politics; social structures in<br />

Western Europe; comparative European industrial relations;<br />

occupational training; interest organizations; small business<br />

networks<br />

Ira Denkhaus<br />

Doctoral fellow (MA, Political Science, 1995, Universität Saarbrücken):<br />

Transportation policy; comparative politics; sociology<br />

of technology; organizational theory; theories of economic<br />

behavior; institutional theory<br />

Franciszek Draus<br />

Research fellow (Dr., Political Sociology, 1981, École des Hautes<br />

Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris): European Union (institutions,<br />

political integration, Eastern enlargement); politics<br />

and societies in Central and Eastern European countries (governments,<br />

political parties, interest organizations)<br />

Bernhard Ebbinghaus<br />

Research fellow (PhD, Political and Social Sciences, 1993,<br />

European University Institute, Florence): European labor<br />

relations and organized interests; European social policy and<br />

welfare-state regimes; comparative methods and multi-level<br />

analysis<br />

Werner Eichhorst<br />

Postdoctoral fellow (Dr. rer. soc., Political Science, 1998, Universität<br />

Konstanz): Social policy; employment policy; European<br />

integration; multilevel policy making; comparative politics<br />

Henrik Enderlein<br />

Doctoral fellow (Dr. phil., Economics, 2002, University of<br />

Bremen): Coordination of economic and monetary policy;<br />

international political economy; foreign policy<br />

Gerda Falkner<br />

Senior research fellow (Dr. phil., Political Science, 1992, Universität<br />

Wien; habil., Political Science, 1997, Universität<br />

Wien): European integration; social policy; industrial relations<br />

Jürgen Feick<br />

Research fellow (Dr. phil., Political Science, 1978, Universität<br />

Stuttgart): Policy research (national, comparative and Euro-<br />

109


110<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

pean); European integration; political and administrative culture;<br />

public and private organizations<br />

Steffen Ganghof<br />

Research fellow (Dr. rer. pol, Political Science, 2003, Universität<br />

Bremen): Comparative politics and political economy;<br />

institutional theory; European integration; social science<br />

methodology<br />

Philipp Genschel<br />

Research fellow (Dr. phil., Political Science, 1983, Universität<br />

zu Köln; habil., Political Science, 2001, Universität Konstanz):<br />

International politics; international political economy; European<br />

integration; institutional theory<br />

Ulrich Glassmann<br />

Doctoral fellow (MA, Political Science, 1997, Universität zu<br />

Köln): Comparative politics; comparative political economy;<br />

governance theory; training and innovation systems<br />

Ute Hartenberger<br />

Doctoral fellow (Dr. rer. soc., Political Science, 2000, Universität<br />

Tübingen): Institutions of the European Union; European<br />

social policy; history of European integration; multilevel<br />

governance; telecommunications policy; regulatory regimes<br />

Miriam Hartlapp<br />

Doctoral fellow (MRE/Master, European Studies, 2000, Universität<br />

Osnabrück; Maîtrise, International Affairs, 2000,<br />

École Supérieure de Commerce de Poitiers): Institutional theory;<br />

game theory; European integration; migration<br />

Anke Hassel<br />

Research fellow (Dr. rer. soc., Sociology, 1998, Ruhr-Universität<br />

Bochum): Collective action; voluntary organizations;<br />

economic sociology; comparative politics; German politics<br />

Axel Hauser-Ditz<br />

Research fellow (Diplom, Political Science, 1996, Universität<br />

Leipzig): Industrial relations; theories of individual action;<br />

multilevel governance<br />

Martin Heipertz<br />

Doctoral fellow (MA, Economics, 2001, College of Europe,<br />

Bruges): Political economy; applied game theory; European<br />

integration and European Monetary Union<br />

Anton Hemerijck<br />

Visiting professor from the University of Rotterdam (Dr.,<br />

Economics, 1990, Oxford University): Comparative social<br />

and economic policy; industrial relations; political economy<br />

Hans-Willy Hohn<br />

Research fellow (Dr. rer. soc., Sociology, 1985, Universität<br />

Bielefeld; habil., Sociology, 1997, Universität Bielefeld):<br />

Sociology of time; social policy; labor market policy; working-time<br />

policy; industrial relations; sociology of science and<br />

technology<br />

Martin Höpner<br />

Research fellow (Dr. phil., Political Science, 2002, FernUniversität<br />

Hagen): Varieties of capitalism; political economy; comparative<br />

policy research; industrial relations; corporate governance<br />

Gregory Jackson<br />

Doctoral fellow (PhD, Sociology, 2001, Columbia University,<br />

New York): Corporate governance; comparative and historical<br />

sociology; political economy; sociology of organizations; industrial<br />

relations; sociological theory<br />

Sigrun Kahl<br />

Doctoral fellow (M.A., History and Social Sciences, 2002,<br />

Humboldt-Universität Berlin): Comparative welfare states;<br />

comparative labor market and social policy (including family<br />

policy); social policy discourses; history of poverty and the<br />

welfare state<br />

Lothar Krempel<br />

Research fellow (Dr. sc. pol., Political Science, 1984, Universität<br />

Duisburg): Network analysis; dynamic modelling; interaction<br />

of organizations; visualization of social structures<br />

Antje Kurdelbusch<br />

Doctoral fellow (Dr. rer. soc., Sociology, 2003, Ruhr-Universität<br />

Bochum): Wage policy; company payment systems versus<br />

centralized collective bargaining<br />

Knut Lange<br />

Doctoral fellow (Diplom, Sociology, 1999, Humboldt-Universität<br />

Berlin): Organizational theory; comparative political<br />

economy; industrial sociology; sociology of technology<br />

Jürgen Lautwein<br />

Administrative director (Second State Examination for<br />

Teachers, Social Sciences, 1983, Universität zu Köln): Research<br />

management; research policy; organizational development<br />

Volker Leib<br />

Doctoral fellow (Dr. rer. soc., Political Science, 2002, Universität<br />

Konstanz): Sociology of technology; systems of innovation;<br />

telecommunications and new media; political theory


Simone Leiber<br />

Doctoral fellow (First State Examination for Teachers, Political<br />

Science, 2000, Universität Heidelberg): European integration;<br />

comparative policy research<br />

Marcus Leyrer<br />

Doctoral fellow (Deuxième Licence, Public Affairs and International<br />

Relations, 1995, Université Catholique de Louvain):<br />

Organized interests in the EU; European integration theory;<br />

sociology of organizations; lobbyism in democratic societies;<br />

transatlantic security policy after 1990; countries in development;<br />

international relations<br />

Susanne Lütz<br />

Research fellow (Dr. sc. pol., Political Science, 1992, Universität<br />

Duisburg; habil., Political Science, 2001, FernUniversität<br />

Hagen): International political economy; policy analysis;<br />

organized interests; political sociology; public policy; financial<br />

market regulation; research and industrial policy<br />

Philip Manow<br />

Research fellow (Dr. rer. pol., Political Science, 1994, Freie<br />

Universität Berlin; habil., Political Science, 2002, Universität<br />

Konstanz): Welfare states in international comparison; political<br />

economy; party patronage and political corruption; politics<br />

and religion; the nation-state<br />

Renate Mayntz<br />

Director emerita and founding director (Dr. phil., Sociology,<br />

1953, Freie Universität Berlin; habil., Sociology, 1957, Freie<br />

Universität Berlin): Sociological macro-theory; comparative<br />

social and political research; organizational and administrative<br />

sociology; sociology of technology<br />

Ulrich Müller<br />

Research fellow (MA, Political Science, 1991, Universität zu<br />

Köln): International political economy; regulation of biotechnology<br />

Till Müller-Schoell<br />

Doctoral fellow (MA, Political Science, 2001, Universität<br />

Bonn): Employment policy; industrial relations; government<br />

policy making; transformation research.<br />

Roswitha Pioch<br />

Postdoctoral fellow (Dr. rer. pol., Sociology, 1999, Universität<br />

Leipzig): Social theory; European social policy and welfare<br />

regimes; comparative analysis; qualitative methods<br />

Britta Rehder<br />

Postdoctoral fellow (Dr. phil., Political Science, 2002, Humboldt-Universität<br />

Berlin): Comparative industrial relations;<br />

corporatism and democracy; unions and the political system;<br />

institutional theory<br />

Armin Schäfer<br />

Doctoral fellow (MA, International Relations/International<br />

Conflict Analysis, 1998, University of Kent; Diplom, Political<br />

Science, 2000, Universität Marburg): European employment<br />

policy; theories of European integration; the international<br />

coordination of policy-making; welfare state reform<br />

Research Staff<br />

Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Director emeritus (Dr. jur., Law, 1964, Universität Freiburg;<br />

Full Professor, Political Science, 1968, Universität Konstanz):<br />

Organization problems and decision processes in government;<br />

multi-level governance in Germany; political economy<br />

of inflation and unemployment in Western Europe; federalism<br />

and European integration; applications of game theory;<br />

comparative political economy of welfare states<br />

Martin Schludi<br />

Doctoral fellow (Dr. phil., Political Science, 2003, Humboldt-<br />

Universität Berlin): Welfare states in international comparison<br />

Susanne K. Schmidt<br />

Research fellow (Dr. phil., Political Science, 1998, Universität<br />

Hamburg): Telecommunications policy; sociology of technology;<br />

European integration; comparative politics<br />

Vivien A. Schmidt<br />

Visiting professor from the University of Massachusetts,<br />

Boston (PhD, Political Science, 1981, University of Chicago):<br />

European political economy and public policy<br />

Eric Seils<br />

Doctoral fellow (Dr. phil., Political Science, 2003, FernUniversität<br />

Hagen): Comparative social and financial policy;<br />

Dutch politics; political economy<br />

Wolfgang Streeck<br />

Director (Dr. phil., Sociology, 1979, Universität Frankfurt;<br />

habil., Sociology, 1986, Universität Bielefeld): Comparative<br />

political economy; European integration; comparative industrial<br />

relations<br />

Sabrina Tesoka<br />

Postdoctoral fellow (Dr., 1998, European University Institute,<br />

Florence): European social law and policy; gender equality<br />

politics; European integration; comparative policy<br />

Jörg Teuber<br />

Research fellow (MA, Political Science, 2000, Universität Siegen):<br />

Organized interests in the European Union<br />

Christine Trampusch<br />

Research fellow (Dr. disc. pol., Social Sciences, 2000, Universität<br />

Göttingen): Comparative labor market policy and social<br />

policy; theories of institutional change and political governance;<br />

methods of comparative analyses; corporatism<br />

Oliver Treib<br />

Postdoctoral fellow (Dr. rer. pol., Political Science, 2002, Universität<br />

Köln): Comparative politics; European integration;<br />

EU social policy; policy implementation; Europeanization;<br />

institutional theory; game theory<br />

Jelle Visser<br />

Visiting professor from the University of Amsterdam (PhD,<br />

1987, University of Amsterdam): Transnational and European<br />

industrial relations; collective bargaining; multinational<br />

enterprises; European works councils<br />

111


112<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Helmut Voelzkow<br />

Senior research fellow (Dr. phil., Sociology, 1989, Universität<br />

Paderborn; habil., Social Science, 1995, Ruhr-Universität Bochum):<br />

Institutional economic sociology; economic effects of<br />

changes in social structures; structural policy; technological<br />

development; technology policy<br />

Raymund Werle<br />

Research fellow (Dr. phil., Political Science, 1977, Universität<br />

Mannheim): Institutional conditions and structural consequences<br />

of technological and scientific innovations, especially<br />

in the information and telecommunications technology<br />

industry<br />

Arnold Wilts<br />

Postdoctoral fellow (Dr., Economics, 1997, University of<br />

Amsterdam): Sociology of science; institutional dynamics of<br />

national research systems<br />

Markus Winnes<br />

Research fellow (MA, Political Science, 1997, Universität Heidelberg):<br />

European integration; political theory; sociology of<br />

science<br />

Cornelia Woll<br />

Doctoral fellow (MA, International Relations, 2000, University<br />

of Chicago; Diplôme d’études approfondies/DEA, Public<br />

Policy, 2000, Institut d’Etudes Politiques, Sciences Po, Paris):<br />

European integration; interest representation; trade policy<br />

and international political economy<br />

Stefan Zagelmeyer<br />

Research fellow (MSc econ, Industrial Relations and Personnel<br />

Management, 1995, London School of Economics and<br />

Political Science; Diplom, Economics, 1997, Universität zu<br />

Köln): Labor economics; labor relations; social policy<br />

Patrick Ziltener<br />

Postdoctoral fellow (Dr. phil., Sociology, 1999, Universität<br />

Zürich): Globalization; regional integration-theory and empirical<br />

research; international political economy; state theory;<br />

regulation theory; world-systems theory<br />

Rainer Zugehör<br />

Doctoral fellow (Dr. rer. pol., Sociology, 2002, Universität<br />

Trier): European industrial relations; wage coordination


Management and Budget<br />

Management<br />

The institute has adopted management methods that have enhanced its ability to<br />

stay at the forefront of international social research. Committees ensure that the<br />

service units – the administration, the computer department, the editorial and<br />

public relations unit, the library and the secretaries – stay in close touch with the<br />

researchers and their projects, and that the flow of information between research<br />

and service staff remains open.<br />

Functional Committees<br />

The directors, researchers, service staff and student assistants are all represented<br />

on the functional committees of the institute. The committees are chaired by<br />

researchers. Meetings are scheduled as needed.<br />

The Library Committee, which includes researchers, library staff and other staff<br />

members, discusses which journals and databases should be subscribed to or cancelled,<br />

and supports the library staff in adapting its classification system to<br />

research developments at the institute. The Computer Committee includes representatives<br />

from all research and service groups to ensure broad input and discussion<br />

on IT innovations. The <strong>Publications</strong> Committee is a forum in which<br />

researchers, the directors and the publication group discuss the institute’s publication<br />

policy and publication management. In addition, the committee chair<br />

organizes the internal and external peer review of the institute’s book series (published<br />

by Campus Verlag) and its Discussion Paper and Working Papers series. The<br />

113


114<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Organizational Structure of the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies<br />

Scientific<br />

Advisory Board<br />

Board of<br />

Trustees<br />

Administrative<br />

Director<br />

Administration<br />

Secretaries<br />

Library<br />

Computing<br />

Editorial and<br />

PR Unit<br />

Management<br />

Committee<br />

Library<br />

Committee<br />

Computer<br />

Committee<br />

<strong>Publications</strong><br />

Committee<br />

Website<br />

Committee<br />

Directors<br />

at the Institute<br />

Institutional Change<br />

in Advanced Political<br />

Economies<br />

Science, Technology<br />

and Systems<br />

of Innovation<br />

Website Committee takes a critical look<br />

at how the <strong>MPIfG</strong> presents itself on the<br />

internet, how the website can facilitate<br />

the dissemination and exchange of<br />

information about the institute’s research,<br />

and how the site can be used to<br />

enhance inhouse communication. In<br />

2000–2002, the relaunch of the external<br />

site was the focus of the committee’s<br />

work as was a substantial expansion<br />

and improvement of the intranet.<br />

Members of the service staff are in<br />

touch with their counterparts at MPG<br />

headquarters, other Max Planck institutes,<br />

and social research institutes in<br />

Germany and abroad. They are also in<br />

contact with research institutes and<br />

university departments in the Rhine-Ruhr region. The communication in these<br />

networks keeps growing and helps ensure that the support staff can continue to<br />

provide the <strong>MPIfG</strong> researchers with professional service.<br />

Managerial Committees<br />

The managerial committees at the institute, which are chaired by the managing<br />

director, meet regularly. Every two weeks, the heads of the service units meet with<br />

the managing director to discuss decisions that need to be made. Once a month,<br />

this group is expanded to include representatives of the researchers – the chairs of<br />

the functional committees. This Management Committee also has a planning session<br />

in December where the service units’ goals for the coming year are agreed<br />

upon and the previous year’s developments are discussed.<br />

Research Meeting<br />

Research Areas<br />

Research Meeting<br />

Research Group<br />

Democratic Government<br />

and Economic<br />

Governance<br />

Theories<br />

and Methods<br />

There are many informal opportunities for researchers to meet and exchange ideas<br />

at the institute (for more on research management, see Sections “Cooperation and<br />

Communication within the Institute” and “Doctoral Candidates”). In accordance<br />

with the bylaws of the institute, there is also a Research Meeting twice a year.<br />

Chaired by the managing director, this meeting brings together the directors and<br />

the research staff members to discuss how the project areas are developing and<br />

what the institute should concentrate on in the future.


Works Council<br />

In accordance with German labor law, the <strong>MPIfG</strong> has a works council. Elected<br />

every four years, the works council represents the interests of employees vis-à-vis<br />

the employer. It has an advisory role when new positions are to be filled, cooperates<br />

with the administrative director and the managing director in setting works<br />

rules (such as how to manage flex-time) and helps individual employees as needed.<br />

The works council meets regularly with the managing director and holds a<br />

works meeting, which all <strong>MPIfG</strong> employees are invited to attend, two or three<br />

times per year. The <strong>MPIfG</strong> works council sends a delegate to the central works<br />

council of the Max Planck Society.<br />

More Support for Visiting Researchers<br />

The institute has improved its support for visiting researchers. Close cooperation<br />

between the visitors’ liaison, the administration and prospective visitors ensures<br />

that the stays are carefully prepared, and any issues still open when a visitor arrives<br />

can be easily dealt with. Visiting researchers receive detailed information about the<br />

institute and the city of Cologne long before their arrival at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>, and the<br />

institute helps them find accommodations. Immediately upon arrival, they can<br />

start working. This procedure is very well received by the institute’s visiting<br />

researchers.<br />

Open Channels of Communication<br />

Improved communication at the institute reduces the amount of time the directors<br />

need to devote to management. The service units and the researchers each<br />

Management and Budget<br />

The <strong>MPIfG</strong> guest apartments<br />

on Paulstrasse 9a are popular<br />

with our visiting researchers<br />

115


116<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> service staff, June 2003: Jürgen Lautwein, Susanne Schwarz-Esser, Nadine Sadlowski, Ernst Braun, Brigitte Müller, Gabi Breunig, Mike<br />

Liebsch, Christel Schommertz (front row, left to right); Christina Glasmacher, Karin Spiegel, Elke Bürger, Gunar Barg, Markus Burtscheidt,<br />

Renate Blödorn, Susanne Hilbring, Manuel Schüren, Thomas Pott (back row, left to right)<br />

know what the other group is doing. The plans for administrative projects are discussed<br />

in the appropriate forums. Members of the service units and the research<br />

staff have a high degree of autonomy in organizing their work environment, so<br />

that the directors only have to get involved at critical phases of the decision-making<br />

process.


Service Units<br />

Service Units and Student Assistants,<br />

Spring 2003<br />

Administration<br />

Jürgen Lautwein (administrative director)<br />

Anne Baumanns<br />

Renate Blödorn*<br />

Ernst Braun<br />

Gabriele Breunig*<br />

Brigitte Müller*<br />

Manuela Schmitz (trainee)<br />

Secretaries<br />

Christina Glasmacher*<br />

Petra Küchenmeister*<br />

Karin Spiegel*<br />

Library<br />

Susanne Hilbring* (coordination)<br />

Cora Molloy*<br />

Elke Bürger<br />

Nadine Sadlowsky<br />

Computing Services<br />

Bruno Egger (coordination)<br />

Gunar Barg<br />

Markus Burtscheid<br />

Mike Liebsch (trainee)<br />

Dirk Prygoda*<br />

Manuel Schüren<br />

Susanne Schwarz-Esser*<br />

Editorial and Public Relations Unit<br />

Christel Schommertz (coordination)<br />

Astrid Dünkelmann*<br />

Cynthia Lehmann*<br />

Thomas Pott<br />

Trainees 1999–2002 at the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong>: Melanie Blum,<br />

Manuela Schmitz, Mike<br />

Liebsch<br />

Management and Budget<br />

Student Assistants<br />

19 part-time student assistants support the researchers and<br />

service units of the institute<br />

* part-time<br />

Vocational Training<br />

In Germany, firms and offices participate in a “dual system” of<br />

vocational education. Highschool age students who do not<br />

plan to go to college can qualify for a variety of occupations<br />

in three-year programs of on-the-job training accompanied<br />

by instruction at a vocational school. In 1999, the <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

began to participate in the dual system by hiring a trainee for<br />

the position of certified office communication specialist.<br />

Since this was a success for everybody involved, the program<br />

was expanded in 2001 when a second trainee for office communication<br />

was hired, as well as a trainee for information systems.<br />

In the future the <strong>MPIfG</strong> will have two IT trainees and<br />

one administrative trainee on a regular basis. Three <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

staff members are officially qualified to instruct trainees at the<br />

institute. The head of the computer group is a member of the<br />

Examination Board of the Cologne Chamber of Commerce.<br />

117


118<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Jürgen Lautwein, administrative<br />

director<br />

Administration and Personnel Development<br />

The <strong>MPIfG</strong> has some 30 permanently funded positions, 14 of<br />

which are for researchers. Other researchers at the institute are<br />

funded by grants from foundations, the German government and<br />

the European Union, and by doctoral and postdoctoral fellowships.<br />

The institute also hosts visiting researchers from Germany<br />

and abroad, whose stays last from one month to two years.<br />

Projects conducted jointly with scholars from other countries<br />

and with other institutions have increased in number and importance.<br />

The staffs of the administration, the computer department,<br />

the editorial and public relations unit, the library and the secretariats<br />

are the infrastructural backbone of the institute. They provide continual<br />

support for the research staff and contribute to the technical and organizational<br />

development of the institute.<br />

The institute encourages its employees to improve their professional skills by<br />

taking part in continuing education programs, including in-house seminars. Two<br />

female employees represent the interests of women at the institute. Student assistants<br />

provide support for researchers and staff members.<br />

The Max Planck Society (MPG) uses SAP, a commercial bookkeeping system,<br />

which has enabled it to develop a budgeting procedure that facilitates more financial<br />

flexibility for the institutes. This flexibility has been welcomed by the institutes,<br />

which are called upon to increase their efficiency and fine-tune their project<br />

planning in the face of decreasing funding for the Max Planck Society.<br />

In 2002 the MPG started using SAP’s personnel administration program, SAP<br />

Human Resources (SAP HR). Members of the <strong>MPIfG</strong>’s administrative staff cooperated<br />

with their counterparts at other MPIs and with the administrative headquarters<br />

of the Max Planck Society in Munich to customize SAP HR to meet the<br />

needs of Max Planck institutes and have continued to be involved in optimizing<br />

the program. In 2003, the new projects will be the implementation of cost<br />

accounting and rating, and launching e-commerce for the MPIs’ purchasing.<br />

The administration provides information and advice on project funding<br />

opportunities and project management for the researchers.<br />

Library<br />

The library supports the institute’s research by providing the researchers and staff<br />

with media and information and helping them find sources located outside the<br />

institute. The library’s services include purchasing, classifying and lending mono-


graphs and periodicals, providing an online catalog, processing interlibrary loans,<br />

excerpting tables of contents of selected journals, providing research tools in print<br />

and online, assisting users in finding specialized databases, and conducting online<br />

searches upon request.<br />

The Collection<br />

The library’s collection, which has grown to 43,000 items, emphasizes basic social<br />

science literature and project-specific holdings. Its data pool contains 180,000<br />

items, as large numbers of articles from edited volumes and journals are cataloged.<br />

The institute borrows some 2,500 titles a year from the Cologne University<br />

Library or via interlibrary loan. Subscriptions to 220 printed scholarly journals,<br />

access to 750 online journals and subscriptions to German, English and French<br />

news-papers enable the researchers and staff to keep up with what’s happening in<br />

their own fields and in the world of international politics and business. In<br />

2002–03, there was a special emphasis on completing the institute’s collection of<br />

classics on sociology and political thought.<br />

Online Catalog<br />

The library’s catalog, which has been online since 1999, can be accessed directly<br />

via the internet by employees and by anyone visiting the <strong>MPIfG</strong> website. In 2001,<br />

the library converted to a new library software system, Aleph500. In collaboration<br />

with several other Max Planck libraries, it has adapted the program to suit the<br />

institute’s needs. Library data is stored on a joint server at a Max Planck computer<br />

center. The joint use of a centrally administered server provides an optimal<br />

basis for the library’s information management.<br />

Online Information Services<br />

The library provides many online information services, such as databases<br />

located on the internet, on the institute’s CD-ROM server, or<br />

on CD-ROMs that can be used in the library. The databases include<br />

a wide range of bibliographies, newspaper archives, online journals,<br />

business, law and organization directories and statistical services.<br />

Database providers such as GENIOS or GBI can also be accessed. All<br />

the databases are available to <strong>MPIfG</strong> users in the virtual library on<br />

the institute’s website, along with a carefully edited selection of research<br />

links to other websites.<br />

Management and Budget<br />

Susanne Hilbring (front) and<br />

Nadine Sadlowski, Library<br />

119


120<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Bruno Egger, Computing<br />

Services<br />

Computing Services<br />

The computer group provides a modern computer infrastructure for<br />

the staff and researchers at the <strong>MPIfG</strong>. This includes planning and<br />

implementing an up-to-date communications infrastructure, installing<br />

efficient network printers, personal computers and workstations,<br />

and providing a software package tailored to the needs of the users.<br />

The group also offers advice and support on computer-related subjects<br />

ranging from how to use remote-access services to designing,<br />

programming and implementing solutions for classifying and processing<br />

complex data.<br />

The Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies has a homogeneous<br />

Windows 2000 server environment that provides a variety of<br />

services to the PCs via Fast Ethernet, including personal and group<br />

file accounts which are centrally stored in accordance with the German laws on<br />

data protection and confidentiality, information services, database services and<br />

client/server-based communication services such as computerized fax, e-mail and<br />

a connection to the internet.<br />

From 1999 until 2002, the computer group consolidated and redesigned the<br />

Windows-based network by installing a new file server and migrating all Unixbased<br />

services onto Windows-based application servers. Then the group began to<br />

organize its computer management more efficiently by installing software-distribution<br />

and hardware-inventory software. The group also focused on improving<br />

the performance and security of the <strong>MPIfG</strong> network and communication infrastructure.<br />

It established a collapsed Gigabit Backbone to enhance the network<br />

environment and installed a central firewall to ensure greater internet security for<br />

the institute’s staff. Between 1999 and 2002, the computer group created two<br />

apprenticeship positions.<br />

Editorial and Public Relations Unit<br />

The Institute’s Publication Series<br />

The main task of the editorial and public relations unit is to produce the institute’s<br />

publications: the <strong>MPIfG</strong> Books, the <strong>MPIfG</strong> Discussion Papers (DPs) and the<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Working Papers (WPs). The unit’s staff does editing, copy-editing and<br />

typesetting for all the series, manages the print production and distribution of the<br />

DPs and posts the online WPs on the <strong>MPIfG</strong> website. It also assists the institute’s<br />

researchers in putting together their own publications, by copy-editing and proof-


eading in German and English, doing German-English<br />

and English-German translations, typesetting<br />

books and papers, putting publications online, and<br />

helping monitor book production. The staff produces<br />

promotional material about the institute’s publication<br />

series, including brochures, flyers, online advertising<br />

and an e-mail newsletter.<br />

Documenting Research<br />

By compiling reports to the Max Planck Society<br />

(Yearbook, Guide to the MPIs), the <strong>MPIfG</strong> Scientific<br />

Advisory Board (evaluation report) and to the public (<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report), the group<br />

documents the research done at the institute. It gathers, organizes and archives the<br />

data, and it designs and produces the reports.<br />

Presenting the <strong>MPIfG</strong> to Different Audiences<br />

As the public’s understanding of science has become increasingly crucial for Max<br />

Planck Institutes, the unit’s public relations tasks have increased. It develops and<br />

produces printed and online information material about the institute, which<br />

includes an image brochure (2001) and research reports for target groups outside<br />

the scientific community (the first in 2002). It informs the media about selected<br />

publications and completed projects. It represents the <strong>MPIfG</strong> with a stand at<br />

major social science conferences. It designs and maintains the <strong>MPIfG</strong> website, and<br />

plans and organizes public relations events at the institute, such as seminars for<br />

visiting school classes and student groups, workshops for journalists and<br />

researchers, book presentations and art exhibits. It helps researchers and the directors’<br />

administrative assistants prepare for conferences and events. The unit is also<br />

involved in internal public relations, organizing in-house project presentations for<br />

the student assistants and administrative staff and coordinating the ongoing<br />

development of the <strong>MPIfG</strong> intranet for employees and visiting researchers.<br />

Management and Budget<br />

Cynthia Lehmann, Editorial<br />

and Public Relations Unit,<br />

with visitors<br />

121


122<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Report 1999–2002<br />

Facts and Figures<br />

Staff<br />

(21peoplein<br />

15 positions)<br />

Student assistants,<br />

Interns (19)<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> Personnel in February 2003<br />

Trainees (2)<br />

Directors (2)<br />

Research fellows (15)<br />

Doctoral fellows (13)<br />

Post-doctoral fellows (7)<br />

Visiting<br />

researchers (5)<br />

The Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies (<strong>MPIfG</strong>) is an institute of the<br />

Max Planck Society for the Advancement of the Sciences e.V. (MPS), an independent,<br />

non-profit organization that is largely publicly funded by the German<br />

federal government and the states. Five percent of the MPS budget stems from<br />

membership dues, donations, and the Society’s own earnings. By acquiring external<br />

grants, the MPS is able to match ten percent of its public funding with funds<br />

from the private sector. The institutional budget of the <strong>MPIfG</strong> is provided annually<br />

by the Max Planck Society (1999: 6.0 million DM; 2000: 6.1 million DM; 2001:<br />

3.4 million EUR; 2002: 3.6 million EUR). The institute’s budget covers personnel<br />

and operating costs, special funding for young German scientists and research<br />

cooperation with other countries.<br />

Visiting Researchers at the <strong>MPIfG</strong> since 1988<br />

6<br />

5<br />

12<br />

10<br />

1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002<br />

17<br />

25<br />

22<br />

18


Development of Total Expenditure of the <strong>MPIfG</strong><br />

1993-2002 by Type (in thousand EUR)<br />

2500<br />

2000<br />

1500<br />

1000<br />

500<br />

0<br />

2326<br />

2366<br />

The <strong>MPIfG</strong> has some 30 permanently funded positions, 14 of which are for<br />

researchers. Other researchers at the institute are funded by grants from foundations,<br />

the German government and the European Union, and by doctoral and<br />

postdoctoral fellowships. At the end of 2002, 38 researchers were working at the<br />

institute. The institute also hosts visiting researchers from Germany and abroad,<br />

whose stays last from one month to two years. Projects conducted jointly with<br />

scholars from other countries and with other institutions have increased in number<br />

and importance. In 2002, the institute hosted 18 visiting researchers. The<br />

<strong>MPIfG</strong> has trainee positions in office management and computing.<br />

External Grants in Percent of Total Expenditure<br />

1998-2002<br />

11<br />

2552<br />

15<br />

2768<br />

13<br />

2673<br />

1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002<br />

1998 1999 2000 2001 2002<br />

7<br />

3205 3106<br />

2<br />

Personnel<br />

Operating expenses<br />

Special funding for young scientists<br />

Cooperation with other countries<br />

Investment<br />

3382<br />

3436<br />

Management and Budget<br />

3608<br />

123


Directors<br />

Professor Dr. Dr. h.c. Wolfgang Streeck<br />

Co-director: To be determined<br />

Emeriti<br />

Professor Dr. Dr. h.c. mult. Renate Mayntz<br />

Director emerita and founding director<br />

Professor Dr. Fritz W. Scharpf<br />

Director emeritus (retired on 12 February 2003)<br />

External Scientific Member<br />

Professor Colin Crouch<br />

European University Institute (EUI)<br />

Scientific Advisory Board<br />

June 2003<br />

Prof. Dr. Klaus Armingeon<br />

Universität Bern<br />

Professor Robert Boyer<br />

CEPREMAP-ENS, Paris<br />

Professor Wyn Grant<br />

Department of Politics and International Studies, University<br />

of Warwick, Coventry, UK<br />

Professor Peter A. Hall<br />

Center for European Studies, Harvard University,<br />

Cambridge, MA<br />

Professor Torben Iversen<br />

Center for European Studies, Harvard University,<br />

Cambridge, MA<br />

Professor Herbert P. Kitschelt<br />

Department of Political Science, Duke University, Durham,<br />

NC<br />

Prof. Dr. Stephan Leibfried<br />

Universität Bremen, Zentrum für Sozialpolitik<br />

Prof. Dr. Richard Münch<br />

Universität Bamberg<br />

Prof. Dr. Manfred G. Schmidt<br />

Institut für politische Wissenschaft, Universität Heidelberg<br />

Professor Kathleen A. Thelen<br />

Department of Political Science, Northwestern University,<br />

Evanston, IL<br />

MPI für<br />

Gesellschaftsforschung


Board of Trustees<br />

June 2003<br />

Hermann-Josef Arentz<br />

Mitglied des nordrhein-westfälischen Landtags<br />

Volker Beck<br />

Mitglied des Bundestages<br />

Dr. Karlheinz Bentele<br />

Präsident des Rheinischen Sparkassen- und<br />

Giroverbandes<br />

Prof. Dr. Gerhard Fels<br />

Institut der Deutschen Wirtschaft, Köln<br />

Dr. Rainer Hank<br />

Der Tagesspiegel, Berlin<br />

Dr. Reiner Hoffmann<br />

Direktor des Europäischen Gewerkschaftsinstituts<br />

Dr. Gunter Hofmann<br />

Die Zeit, Berlin<br />

Professor Karl Kaiser<br />

Forschungsinstitut der Deutschen Gesellschaft für<br />

Auswärtige Politik<br />

Hartmut Krebs<br />

Staatssekretär im Ministerium für Schule und<br />

Weiterbildung, Wissenschaft und Forschung des Landes<br />

Nordrhein-Westfalen<br />

Professor Tassilo Küpper<br />

Rektor der Universität zu Köln<br />

Karl Lamers<br />

Kircheib<br />

Dr. Rolf Mützenich<br />

Mitglied des Bundestages<br />

Dr. Wolfgang Uellenberg-van Dawen<br />

Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund, Köln<br />

Herbert Winkelhog<br />

Stadtdirektor der Stadt Köln


The Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies is an<br />

institute for advanced research in the social sciences. It<br />

builds a bridge between theory and policy by conducting<br />

basic research on the self-organization and governance of<br />

modern societies.<br />

The <strong>MPIfG</strong> was founded in 1985. Today, some forty to fifty<br />

scholars from Germany and abroad, including research<br />

fellows, doctoral students, scholarship recipients, visiting<br />

researchers and grant-funded researchers work at the<br />

institute.<br />

The <strong>MPIfG</strong> is one of the smaller institutes in the Max<br />

Planck Society for the Advancement of Science (MPG),<br />

which is made up of some 80 research institutes. The MPG<br />

is an independent, non-profit research organization funded<br />

by public funds from the German federal and state<br />

governments.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!