Lukas Rudolph

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  • Quoß, Franziska; Rudolph, Lukas; Däubler, Thomas (2024): How does information affect vote choice in open-list PR systems? : Evidence from a survey experiment mimicking real-world elections in Switzerland
    Quoß, Franziska, Rudolph, Lukas, and Däubler, Thomas. 2024. “How does information affect vote choice in open-list PR systems? : Evidence from a survey experiment mimicking real-world elections in Switzerland.” Electoral Studies 91. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-ymgznwomhwgn6.

    How does information affect vote choice in open-list PR systems? : Evidence from a survey experiment mimicking real-world elections in Switzerland

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    List proportional representation with candidate voting can facilitate policy representation in multiple dimensions. However, candidates with deviating positions may not benefit if cues such as shared socio-demographics drive candidate choice instead. Does this use of cues reflect a lack of policy-related information or a preference for descriptive representation? We study this question in a real-world context, using a survey-embedded experiment that emulates actual vote choice shortly after the 2019 Swiss elections. We vary the level of information on candidates’ policy positions in zero, one or two dimensions (left–right, environment). Our results show that spatial proximity voting increases with better information on the secondary (but not the first) dimension, indicating that information can improve the alignment of (environmental) policy views between voters and candidates. In turn, same-gender and same-age voting slightly decreases when more information is available. The preference for local candidates remains strong. Our results inform debates regarding citizens’ preferences for different types of representation and how electoral systems moderate their expression.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Koubi, Vally; Freihardt, Jan (2024): COVID-19 vaccination uptake in remote areas : Evidence from a panel survey in Bangladesh
    Rudolph, Lukas, Koubi, Vally, and Freihardt, Jan. 2024. “COVID-19 vaccination uptake in remote areas : Evidence from a panel survey in Bangladesh.” PLOS ONE 19(8). http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-1m1gh5dnidh176.

    COVID-19 vaccination uptake in remote areas : Evidence from a panel survey in Bangladesh

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    Background:


    Vaccination has proven to be an essential strategy in combating the COVID-19 pandemic. This study aims to discern the factors influencing both the intentions for and actual behavior regarding COVID-19 vaccination among remote, rural populations in Bangladesh.



    Methods:


    The study utilized panel survey data comprising 1,698 randomly selected household heads. These are predominantly illiterate, of Muslim religion, middle-aged, and male, with agriculture or day labor as primary income source. They reside in 36 locations distributed along the whole 250 km length of the Jamuna River in Bangladesh. Data collection occurred through face-to-face and telephone interviews conducted between September 2021 and October 2022. Descriptive statistics and Ordinary Least Squares regression models were employed to assess influence factors for COVID-19 vaccination intentions and uptake. The analyses considered the constructs of the Health Belief Model alongside sociodemographic characteristics such as gender, age, religion, education, and income source.



    Results:


    Survey respondents showed a notably high willingness to receive the COVID-19 vaccine promptly upon its availability. However, the effectiveness of the Health Belief Model in elucidating COVID-19 vaccination uptake was limited, except for its availability component. Older individuals, those with higher levels of education, and individuals employed in government or formal sector occupations were prompt in receiving the COVID-19 vaccine as it became available. Gender, religion, and the presence of dependents in the household did not exert a significant influence on vaccination uptake.



    Conclusions:


    The results indicate that a strong willingness to receive the COVID-19 vaccine correlated with an increased likelihood of vaccine uptake once it was available. These findings suggest that a widespread distribution of COVID-19 vaccines to low-income and remote areas could have served as a vital strategy in mitigating the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Freitag, Markus; Thurner, Paul W. (2024): Deontological and consequentialist preferences towards arms exports : A comparative conjoint experiment in France and Germany
    Rudolph, Lukas, Freitag, Markus, and Thurner, Paul W. 2024. “Deontological and consequentialist preferences towards arms exports : A comparative conjoint experiment in France and Germany.” European Journal of Political Research 63(2): 705–728. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-2jkpyx23qnrn5.

    Deontological and consequentialist preferences towards arms exports : A comparative conjoint experiment in France and Germany

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    Despite fierce politicization in arms‐exporting democracies, we lack systematic research on mass public preferences on arms transfers. We propose that citizens either apply a deontologist (rejecting transfers categorically) or consequentialist (trading‐off economic, strategic and normative aspects) calculus of preference formation. Conducting population‐representative survey experiments () in Germany and France, two global top‐five major arms exporters, we find that 10–15 per cent of respondents follow deontologist considerations, a preference structure potentially relevant for all foreign policies involving the use of military force. Still, a majority shows differentiated preferences, giving largest weight to normative considerations, with assessments affected by moderating features (e.g., scenarios of just war). Principled rejection of arms trade and a large consequentialist weight for normative factors are more pronounced in Germany compared to France, indicating that public opinion might pose a stronger constraint for government policy in this country. Respondents' preferences match opinion polls on post‐Russian invasion Ukraine armament, indicating high external validity of our experiments.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Gomm, Sarah (2024): How does an economic shock affect environmental attitudes, preferences and issue importance? Evidence from Switzerland
    Rudolph, Lukas, and Gomm, Sarah. 2024. “How does an economic shock affect environmental attitudes, preferences and issue importance? Evidence from Switzerland.” Climatic Change 177(4). http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-etatc9mv1k0x1.

    How does an economic shock affect environmental attitudes, preferences and issue importance? Evidence from Switzerland

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    How do economic shocks affect pressure by the mass public for pro-environmental political action? If democratic systems are to develop and sustain ambitious environmental policy over several decades, this question is important to answer. Theoretically, we argue to look beyond changes in attitudes such as environmental concern, and trace whether and how citizen's policy preferences, and the political importance they attach to environment-related issues change when experiencing a deterioration of their personal economic situation. Empirically, we draw on high-quality population-representative panel survey data for an affluent country, Switzerland, combining tailored survey measures for quasi-random Corona-related employment and income losses, nuanced measures of environmental attitudes and policy preferences, and recently developed measures for issue importance. We neither find a decline of environmental policy support among economically affected individuals compared to the rest of the population (a population wide drop, however), nor lower importance given to environment related relative to economic issues in voting decisions. While this suggests that politicians need not fear electoral losses when pursuing environmental policies in times of economic crisis, we note that the severe extent of the Covid-induced recession, coupled with a rapid recovery, is peculiar to this economic crisis and warrants further research regarding the generalizability of our findings to economic shocks of longer duration.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Kolcava, Dennis; Bernauer, Thomas (2023): Public Demand for Extraterritorial Environmental and Social Public Goods Provision
    Rudolph, Lukas, Kolcava, Dennis, and Bernauer, Thomas. 2023. “Public Demand for Extraterritorial Environmental and Social Public Goods Provision.” British Journal of Political Science 53(2): 516–535. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-18rgtn64ashk65.

    Public Demand for Extraterritorial Environmental and Social Public Goods Provision

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    Vastly increased transnational business activity in recent decades has been accompanied by controversy over how to cope with its social and environmental impacts. The most prominent policy response thus far consists of international guidelines. We investigate to what extent and why citizens in a high-income country are willing to restrain companies to improve environmental and social conditions in other countries. Exploiting a real-world referendum in Switzerland, we use choice and vignette experiments with a representative sample of voters ( N = 3,010) to study public demand for such regulation. Our results show that citizens prefer strict and unilateral rules (with a substantial variation of preferences by general social and environmental concern) while correctly assessing their consequences. Moreover, exposure to international norms increases demand for regulation. These findings highlight that democratic accountability can be a mechanism that motivates states to contribute to collective goods even if not in their economic interest and that awareness of relevant international norms among citizens can enhance this mechanism.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Quoß, Franziska; Buchs, Romain; Bernauer, Thomas (2023): Environmental Concern Leads to Trade Skepticism on the Political Left and Right
    Rudolph, Lukas, Quoß, Franziska, Buchs, Romain, and Bernauer, Thomas. 2023. “Environmental Concern Leads to Trade Skepticism on the Political Left and Right.” International Studies Quarterly 66(5). https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66499.

    Environmental Concern Leads to Trade Skepticism on the Political Left and Right

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    The environmental implications of international trade appear to be associated with public backlash against trade liberalization and efforts at greening international trade. Because public support is essential to environmental and trade policy-making alike, we examine the trade–environment nexus from a public opinion perspective. We investigate whether negative attitudes toward trade are in fact fueled by concern over its environmental consequences. We argue that environmental concern affects how citizens evaluate the costs and benefits of trade, and that such evaluation is moderated by political ideology. The empirical analysis relies on a large representative survey and a population-based survey experiment in Switzerland, a small open economy. We show that environmental concern leads to decreasing appreciation of and support for international trade, with different manifestations of trade skepticism on the political left and right. This suggests (i) that policy-makers should focus more on greening global supply chains, and thus trade, if they wish to sustain public support for liberal international trade policy; and (ii) that the public follows informational cues on the environmental impacts of trade.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Wagner, Markus (2022): Europe's migration crisis : Local contact and out‐group hostility
    Rudolph, Lukas, and Wagner, Markus. 2022. “Europe’s migration crisis : Local contact and out‐group hostility.” European Journal of Political Research 61(1): 268–280. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-5astonurt0iu5.

    Europe's migration crisis : Local contact and out‐group hostility

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    Does a large influx of asylum seekers in the local community lead to a backlash in public opinion towards foreign populations? We assess the effects of asylum seeker presence using original survey and macro-level municipality data from Austria, exploiting exogenous elements of the placement of asylum seekers on the municipality level. Methodologically, we draw on entropy balancing for causal identification. Our findings are threefold. First, respondents in municipalities receiving asylum seekers report substantially higher exposure on average, but largely without the stronger contact that would allow for meaningful interaction. Second, hostility towards asylum seekers on average increased in areas that housed them. Third, this backlash spilt over: general attitudes towards Muslims and immigrants are less favourable in contexts with local asylum seeker presence, while vote intention for the main anti-immigration party is higher. Our findings go beyond existing work by examining contact directly as a mechanism, by showing a backlash effect in the medium term, and by focusing on a broad set of attitudinal and behavioural measures. Our results point to a need to design policy interventions that minimise citizen backlash against rapid migration inflows.

  • Bräuninger, Thomas; Däubler, Thomas; Huber, Robert; Rudolph, Lukas (2022): How Open Lists Undermine the Electoral Support of Cohesive Parties
    Bräuninger, Thomas, Däubler, Thomas, Huber, Robert, and Rudolph, Lukas. 2022. “How Open Lists Undermine the Electoral Support of Cohesive Parties.” British Journal of Political Science 52(4): 1931–1943. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-u9smpy2flbk35.

    How Open Lists Undermine the Electoral Support of Cohesive Parties

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    How does ballot structure affect party choice? We argue that open lists undermine the electoral support of cohesive parties, to the benefit of internally divided parties. We conduct a survey-embedded experiment in the aftermath of the European migrant crisis, presenting German voters with real parties but fictitious politicians. A crossover design varies ballot type and exposure to candidate positions on immigration. We find that the internally divided Christian Democrats gain votes at the expense of the cohesive Alternative for Germany when open lists are used and candidate positions are known. For individuals who are equally attracted to both parties, switching is most likely if their immigration preferences lie near the midpoint between the two parties. Overall, our analysis establishes conditions under which ballot structure can affect the electoral performance of parties in general, and that of the populist right in particular.

  • Brugger, Fritz; Bernauer, Thomas; Burlando. Paolo; Cabernard, Livia; Günther, Isabel; Hellweg, Stefanie; Kolcava, Dennis; Rudolph, Lukas; Ruppen, Désirée; Sui, Chunming (2022): Swiss Minerals Observatory : Synthesis report and policy implications
    Brugger, Fritz et al. 2022. “Swiss Minerals Observatory : Synthesis report and policy implications.” https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66486.

    Swiss Minerals Observatory : Synthesis report and policy implications

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    dc.title:


    dc.contributor.author: Brugger, Fritz; Bernauer, Thomas; Burlando. Paolo; Cabernard, Livia; Günther, Isabel; Hellweg, Stefanie; Kolcava, Dennis; Ruppen, Désirée; Sui, Chunming

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Däubler, Thomas; Menzner, Jan (2022): Das Potenzial offener Listen für die Wahl von Frauen zum Bundestag : Ergebnisse eines Survey-Experiments
    Rudolph, Lukas, Däubler, Thomas, and Menzner, Jan. 2022. “Das Potenzial offener Listen für die Wahl von Frauen zum Bundestag : Ergebnisse eines Survey-Experiments.” Politische Vierteljahresschrift 63(3): 441–468. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-yfss5b1fimdw5.

    Das Potenzial offener Listen für die Wahl von Frauen zum Bundestag : Ergebnisse eines Survey-Experiments

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    Frauen sind im Bundestag unterrepräsentiert, insbesondere unter Parteien in und rechts der Mitte. Quotenregeln als vieldiskutierte Lösung greifen jedoch stark in die Freiheiten von Parteien, Kandidat*innen und Wähler*innen ein. Die Option offener Wahllisten hingegen findet wenig Aufmerksamkeit, obwohl sie verfassungsrechtliche Grundsatzprobleme vermeiden würde. Wir untersuchen daher, wie viele Wählerinnen und wie viele Wähler – insgesamt und nach Partei – in Deutschland auf offenen Listen für Kandidatinnen stimmen würden. Theoretisch erwarten wir, dass insbesondere Wählerinnen, Wähler*innen linker Parteien und Wähler*innen mit hoher Themensalienz bezüglich Geschlechtergerechtigkeit Präferenzen für Kandidatinnen ausdrücken. Zudem erwarten wir, dass Wähler*innen ungleich besetzte Listen tendenziell in Richtung Parität ausgleichen. Unser Forschungsdesign basiert auf einem Online-Umfrageexperiment (N=2640) mit einer quotenrepräsentativen Stichprobe der deutschen Wahlbevölkerung. Befragte wählten zwischen Listen der im Bundestag vertretenen Parteien, mit je vier fiktiven Kandidat*innen. Der Frauenanteil auf jeder Liste variierte zufällig zwischen 25 und 75 %, ebenso ob Listen geschlossen oder offen präsentiert wurden. Wir zeigen, dass Wähler wie Wählerinnen das Kandidat*innengeschlecht gemäß oben genannter theoretischer Erwartungen in ihre Wahlentscheidung einfließen lassen. Unsere Ergebnisse lassen damit vermuten, dass Kandidatinnen aufgrund ihres Geschlechts wohl insgesamt kaum benachteiligt würden, es aber Subgruppen in der Bevölkerung gibt, die sich bewusst für männliche Politiker entscheiden (Wähler der FDP, Wählerinnen der AfD). Insgesamt zeigt unser Beitrag, dass offene Listenwahlsysteme es Wähler*innen nicht nur ermöglichen, ihre Präferenzstimme im Sinne von Geschlechterrepräsentation einzusetzen, sondern dass Wähler*innen diese Möglichkeit auch nutzen. Hervorzuheben ist dabei auch die Tendenz, dass Wähler*innen über Parteielektorate hinweg ungleiche Listenvorschläge der Selektorate ausbalancieren. Die Debatte zur Reform des Wahlrechts sollte einer Einführung offener Listen deshalb mehr Beachtung schenken.

  • Fesenfeld, Lukas; Rudolph, Lukas; Bernauer, Thomas (2022): Policy framing, design and feedback can increase public support for costly food waste regulation
    Fesenfeld, Lukas, Rudolph, Lukas, and Bernauer, Thomas. 2022. “Policy framing, design and feedback can increase public support for costly food waste regulation.” Nature Food 3(3): 227–235. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66573.

    Policy framing, design and feedback can increase public support for costly food waste regulation

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    Stricter regulation of food waste reduction is widely presumed to increase food prices, which could render its implementation politically unfeasible. Here we empirically tested whether specific policy framing, design and feedback could help ensure public support despite potential food price increases. We used survey experiments with 3,329 citizens from a high-income country, Switzerland. A combined framing and conjoint experiment shows that messages emphasizing national or international social norms in favour of reducing food waste (policy framing) can increase public support for more ambitious reduction targets. Also, most citizens support food waste regulation even if this leads to substantial increases in food prices, but only if such policies set stringent reduction targets and are transparently monitored (policy design). Finally, a vignette experiment reveals that voluntary industry initiatives do not crowd out individuals’ support for stricter governmental regulation, but potentially crowd in support if industry initiatives are unambitious (policy feedback).

  • Kolcava, Dennis; Rudolph, Lukas; Bernauer, Thomas (2021): Citizen preferences on private-public co-regulation in environmental governance : Evidence from Switzerland
    Kolcava, Dennis, Rudolph, Lukas, and Bernauer, Thomas. 2021. “Citizen preferences on private-public co-regulation in environmental governance : Evidence from Switzerland.” Global Environmental Change 68. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-19i8iym5ym8dm8.

    Citizen preferences on private-public co-regulation in environmental governance : Evidence from Switzerland

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    Environmental policy is touching on ever more aspects of corporate and individual behavior, and there is much debate over what combinations of top-down (government-imposed) and bottom-up (voluntary private sector) measures to use. In democratic societies, citizens’ preferences over such combinations are crucial because they shape the political mandates based on which policymakers act. We argue that policy designs that involve private-public co-regulation receive more citizen support if they are based on inclusive decision-making, use strong transparency and monitoring mechanisms, and include a trigger for government intervention in case of ineffectiveness. Survey experiments in Switzerland (N = 1941) provide strong support for these arguments. Our research demonstrates that differences in co-regulation design have major implications for public support. Another key finding is that there seems to be a contradiction between inclusiveness and democratic accountability for policy outcomes. The findings are surprisingly consistent across two very different green economy issues we focus on empirically (decarbonization of finance, pesticides). This suggests that our study design offers a useful template for research that explores public opinion on green economy policy designs for other issues and in other countries.

  • Quoss, Franziska; Rudolph, Lukas; Gomm, Sarah; Wäger, Patricia; Bruker, Janek; Walder, Colin; Wehrli, Stefan; Bernauer, Thomas (2021): Schweizer Umweltpanel : Fünfte Erhebungswelle : 5G
    Quoss, Franziska et al. 2021a. “Schweizer Umweltpanel : Fünfte Erhebungswelle : 5G.” https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66524.

    Schweizer Umweltpanel : Fünfte Erhebungswelle : 5G

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    Im Folgenden werden die Ergebnisse der fünften Welle des Schweizer Umweltpanels präsentiert, die von Mai bis Juli 2020 durchgeführt wurde. Das Schweizer Umweltpanel ist eine Panelbefragung (die gleichen Personen werden wiederholt befragt), die die ETH in Kooperation mit dem Bundesamt für Umwelt (BAFU) zwei Mal im Jahr durchführt. In der fünften Welle beantworteten die Teilnehmenden Fragen zum Themenbereich «5G». Insgesamt haben fast alle Befragten schon einmal von dem Begriff gehört. Sobald es jedoch darum geht, sich stärker mit dem Thema auseinanderzusetzen oder es anderen Personen zu erklären, sehen wir eine deutlich höhere Varianz: über die Hälfte der Befragten gibt an, sich bisher gar nicht oder kaum mit dem Thema beschäftigt zu haben. Bei vielen Fragen ist die Meinung der Bevölkerung gespalten. Bei der Frage, ob sie für oder gegen einen Ausbau von 5G in der Schweiz sind, antworten beispielsweise jeweils ein Drittel der Befragten mit «dagegen», «teils/teils» und «dafür». Ungefähr die Hälfte der Befragten findet, dass die Strahlung von 5G-Antennen ihre Gesundheit im Vergleich zu 3G/4G-Antennen stärker belasten, während die andere Hälfte glaubt, die Belastung ist gleich hoch oder bei beiden Antennenformen nicht vorhanden.


    Bei der Frage nach verschiedenen Politikoptionen sind sich die Befragten hingegen relativ einig: der Mittelweg mit gleich bleibenden Grenzwerten für Strahlung und einem relativ langsamen Ausbau von 5G in der Schweiz findet die stärkste Zustimmung. Nach der Auflistung der einzelnen Fragen zeigen wir in einem zusätzlichen Kapitel für einige Fragen auf, welche Unterschiede innerhalb der Befragten basierend auf Sprache, Alter, und Geschlecht bestehen.

  • Däubler, Thomas; Quoß, Franziska; Rudolph, Lukas (2021): Do Citizens use Sociodemographic Characteristics as Cues to Infer Candidate Issue Positions?
    Däubler, Thomas, Quoß, Franziska, and Rudolph, Lukas. 2021. “Do Citizens use Sociodemographic Characteristics as Cues to Infer Candidate Issue Positions?” Swiss Political Science Review 27(4): 731–753. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-ztuioigh2blr1.

    Do Citizens use Sociodemographic Characteristics as Cues to Infer Candidate Issue Positions?

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    In open-list proportional representation systems, choosing candidates based on issue proximity can improve policy congruence. However, in practice, voters may not know enough about individual candidates to do so. Hence, we examine whether voters infer individual positions from cues provided on ballots, namely age and residence. Studying the Swiss parliamentary elections of 2019, we focus on environmental policy, both a very salient issue and featuring considerable intra-party heterogeneity of positions. We combine comprehensive candidate data with a representative voter survey and conduct a survey-embedded experiment (N = 10,758). We find that citizens have indeed little knowledge of candidate positions. However, ballot cues predict policy differences among candidates within parties only to a limited extent, and the experiment does not suggest that voters use ballot information to predict positions directly. Instead, as suggested by additional analyses, citizens may perceive candidates who resemble their own sociodemographic profile as having positions closer to their own.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Leininger, Arndt (2021): Coattails and spillover-effects : Quasi-experimental evidence from concurrent executive and legislative elections
    Rudolph, Lukas, and Leininger, Arndt. 2021. “Coattails and spillover-effects : Quasi-experimental evidence from concurrent executive and legislative elections.” Electoral Studies 70. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-2-lfysxcqchjg65.

    Coattails and spillover-effects : Quasi-experimental evidence from concurrent executive and legislative elections

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    Concurrent elections are widely used to increase turnout. We theorize and show empirically how concurrency affects electoral outcomes. First, concurrency increases turnout and thereby the participation of peripheral voters. Second, in combined elections, one electoral arena affects the other. In our case of majoritarian executive elections concurrent to proportional representation (PR) legislative elections, the centripetal tendency of majoritarian elections colors off to the concurrent PR race. Third, concurrency also entails spillovers of the incumbency advantage of executive officeholders to the concurrent legislative race. Drawing on quasi-random variation in local election timing in Germany, we show that concurrency increases turnout as well as council votes for the incumbent mayor's party and centrist parties more generally, with slightly more pronounced gains for the political left. As a consequence, concurrent elections consolidate party systems and political power by leading to less fragmented municipal councils and more unified local governments.

  • Quoss, Franziska; Rudolph, Lukas; Gomm, Sarah; Wäger, Patricia; Bruker, Janek; Walder, Colin; Wehrli, Stefan; Bernauer, Thomas (2021): Schweizer Umweltpanel : Vierte Erhebungswelle : Basisbefragung
    Quoss, Franziska et al. 2021b. “Schweizer Umweltpanel : Vierte Erhebungswelle : Basisbefragung.” https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66521.

    Schweizer Umweltpanel : Vierte Erhebungswelle : Basisbefragung

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    Im Folgenden werden die Ergebnisse der vierten Welle des Schweizer Umweltpanels präsentiert. Das Schweizer Umweltpanel ist eine Panelbefragung (die gleichen Personen werden wiederholt befragt), die die ETH Zürich in Kooperation mit dem Bundesamt für Umwelt (BAFU) zwei Mal im Jahr durchführt. Die vierte Welle ist die zweite Basisbefragung des Schweizer Umweltpanels und enthält eine Reihe ökologischer und gesellschaftlicher Themen, zu denen Daten bereits in der ersten Panelwelle behandelt wurden. Dabei geht es in erster Linie darum zu erfassen, wie die Schweizer Bevölkerung Lebens- und Umweltbedingungen sowie Umwelttrends wahrnimmt, was sie über umweltpolitische Themen und Massnahmen denkt und wie sich diese Einstellungen über Zeit verändern.


    Insgesamt zeigt sich, dass ein grosser Anteil der Studienteilnehmer/innen Umweltund Klimaschutz als zentrales Problem der Schweiz wahrnimmt. Die in Welle 4 (2019) wahrgenommene Dringlichkeit der Umweltthematik übersteigt die vom GfS-Forschungsinstitut gemessenen Werte im selben Jahr. Zudem äussert eine deutliche Mehrheit der Befragten hohe Besorgnis gegenüber Umweltproblemen und erachtet vor diesem Hintergrund politisches Handeln als notwendig. Während sich die Umwelteinstellungen der Befragten im Vergleich zum vergangenen Jahr kaum verändert haben, ist die 2019 gemessene Besorgnis über Umweltprobleme immer noch etwas geringer als 1994 und 2007 erhobene Werte der «ETH-Studie Schweizer Umweltsurvey». Insgesamt zeichnet sich ab, dass die Befragten diverse geplante oder bereits durchgeführte umweltpolitische Massnahmen in der Schweiz unterstützen. Das spiegelt sich auch im persönlichen umweltfreundlichen Verhalten wieder. Allerdings fällt die Zustimmung für Massnahmen und Verhaltensweisen, die auf eine direkte Beschränkung des eigenen Lebensstils abzielen kontinuierlich am geringsten aus. Die Befürwortung einer steuerlichen Regulierung von Flugzeugtreibstoffen und Fleischproduktion hat im Vergleich zum vergangenen Jahr sogar etwas zugenommen. Auch wenn die Befragten ein ausgeprägtes Problembewusstsein für globale Umweltereignisse vorweisen, fühlt sich die Mehrheit nicht direkt von verschiedenen Umweltein üssen belastet. Unterschiede werden jedoch mit Blick auf den sozioökonomischen Status der Befragten deutlich, der zeigt, dass weniger wohlhabende Befragte subjektiv höher belastet sind. Die umweltpolitischen Positionierungen von politischen Kandidat/innen sind für die meisten Befragten für ihre Wahlentscheidung relevant.

  • Däubler, Thomas; Rudolph, Lukas (2020): Cue-Taking, Satisficing, or Both? : Quasi-experimental Evidence for Ballot Position Effects
    Däubler, Thomas, and Rudolph, Lukas. 2020. “Cue-Taking, Satisficing, or Both? : Quasi-experimental Evidence for Ballot Position Effects.” Political Behavior 42(2): 625–652. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66590.

    Cue-Taking, Satisficing, or Both? : Quasi-experimental Evidence for Ballot Position Effects

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    Ballot position effects have been documented across a variety of political and electoral systems. In general, knowledge of the underlying mechanisms is limited. There is also little research on such effects in preferential-list PR systems, in which parties typically present ranked lists and thus signaling is important. This study addresses both gaps. Theoretically, we formalize four models of voter decision-making: pure appeal-based utility maximization, implying no position effects; rank-taking, where voters take cues from ballot position per se; satisficing, where choice is a function of appeal, but voters consider the options in the order of their appearance; and a hybrid “satisficing-with-rank-taking” variant. From these, we derive differential observable implications. Empirically, we exploit a quasi-experiment, created by the mixed-member electoral system that is used in the state of Bavaria, Germany. Particular electoral rules induce variation in both the observed rank and the set of competitors, and allow for estimating effects at all ranks. We find clear evidence for substantial position effects, which are strongest near the top, but discernible even for the 15th list position. In addition, a candidate’s vote increases when the average appeal of higher-placed (but not that of lower-placed) competitors is lower. Overall, the evidence is most compatible with the hybrid satisficing-with-rank-taking model. Ballot position thus affects both judgment and choice of candidates.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Fesenfeld, Lukas Paul; Quoss, Franziska; Weil, Leopold; Wäger, Patricia; Bruker, Janek; Walder, Colin; Wehrli, Stefan; Bernauer, Thomas (2020): Schweizer Umweltpanel : Dritte Erhebungswelle : Lebensmittelabfälle
    Rudolph, Lukas, Fesenfeld, Lukas Paul, et al. 2020. “Schweizer Umweltpanel : Dritte Erhebungswelle : Lebensmittelabfälle.” https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66522.

    Schweizer Umweltpanel : Dritte Erhebungswelle : Lebensmittelabfälle

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    Im Folgenden werden die Ergebnisse der dritten Welle des Schweizer Umweltpanels präsentiert. Das Schweizer Umweltpanel ist eine Panelbefragung (die gleichen Personen werden wiederholt befragt), die die ETH in Kooperation mit dem Bundesamt für Umwelt (BAFU) zwei Mal im Jahr durchführt. In der dritten Welle beantworteten die Teilnehmenden Fragen zum Themenbereich « Lebensmittelabfälle ». Insgesamt besteht ein breites Bewusstsein für die Thematik und viele staatliche Massnahmen


    finden Unterstützung. Zunächst berichten die meisten Befragten einen bewussten Umgang mit Lebensmitteln hinsichtlich Einkauf, Aufbewahrung und Entsorgung. Das Wegwerfen von Lebensmitteln wird beinahe unumstritten als moralische und wirtschaftliche sowie mehrheitlich auch als ökologische Problematik wahrgenommen. Zudem gaben die Befragten eine relativ präzise Schätzung zu Menge und Anteil der entsorgten Lebensmittel, wohingegen die Bevölkerung weniger informiert ist, in welchen Bereichen diese Lebensmittelabfälle anfallen. Befragungen zu politischen Massnahmen verdeutlichen, dass die Mehrheit der Schweizer/innen freiwillige Massnahmen von Unternehmen und Haushalten für unzureichend hält, und staatliche Massnahmen zur Reduktion von Lebensmittelabfällen als notwendig erachtet. Die Problemwahrnehmung und Einstellung zu staatlichen Massnahmen variiert mit der politischen Haltung der Befragten. Es besteht ein positiver Zusammenhang zwischen einer politisch linken Selbsteinschätzung und der Wahrnehmung einer ökologischen Problemdimension sowie der Zustimmung zu staatlichen Eingriffen.

  • Kolcava, Dennis; Rudolph, Lukas; Bernauer, Thomas (2020): Voluntary business initiatives can reduce public pressure for regulating firm behaviour abroad
    Kolcava, Dennis, Rudolph, Lukas, and Bernauer, Thomas. 2020. “Voluntary business initiatives can reduce public pressure for regulating firm behaviour abroad.” Journal of European Public Policy 28(4): 591–614. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66589.

    Voluntary business initiatives can reduce public pressure for regulating firm behaviour abroad

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    Almost all regulatory policy stops at the national border. Thus, when conducting business abroad, the behaviour of firms is regulated by their host, not their home country. Yet, international institutions have issued (non-binding) codes of conduct on social/environmental aspects of firm behaviour, and various high-income countries discuss how to improve extraterritorial firm behaviour – with high political contestation over the appropriate mix of state intervention and corporate self-regulation. Exploiting a unique national referendum on this issue in Switzerland, we investigate how these interact from a public opinion standpoint. Based on a nationally representative survey experiment (N=1564), we find that while baseline support for state intervention is high (approx. 60%), corporate self-regulation decreases such support. However, only credible voluntary business initiatives lead to substantial reductions. Our results speak to a broad policy debate in European countries and the EU on how to ensure compliance of firms with human rights and environmental standards.

  • Rudolph, Lukas (2020): Turning out to turn down the EU : the mobilisation of occasional voters and Brexit
    Rudolph, Lukas. 2020. “Turning out to turn down the EU : the mobilisation of occasional voters and Brexit.” Journal of European Public Policy 27(12): 1858–1878. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66608.

    Turning out to turn down the EU : the mobilisation of occasional voters and Brexit

    ×

    Large amounts of occasional voters participated in the Brexit referendum. Did the increase in turnout affect the referendum outcome? For an answer, we exploit exogenous variation in voting costs, as large amounts of rainfall made voting more inconvenient in some areas. With an instrumental variable approach, we show that citizens whose voting benefits just surpassed costs under normal circumstances predominantly supported Leave. Hence, the turnout increase likely led to a larger Leave vote share. Exploring the reason for this with survey data, we show that Leave support was not generally higher in the population of low-propensity voters. Rather, the mobilisation of Leave-leaning, compared to Remain-leaning occasional voters was lopsided: The former were more likely to turn out. Our research highlights that the issue-specific mobilisation of low-propensity voters helps to explain electoral outcomes. This is particularly so in referendums with weak partisan preferences, and where single issues dominate voter decision making.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Quoss, Franziska; Müller, Klara; Buchs, Romain; Bruker, Janek; Wäger, Patricia; Walder, Colin; Wehrli, Stefan; Bernauer, Thomas (2020): Schweizer Umweltpanel : Zweite Erhebungswelle : Klima
    Rudolph, Lukas, Quoss, Franziska, et al. 2020. “Schweizer Umweltpanel : Zweite Erhebungswelle : Klima.” https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66523.

    Schweizer Umweltpanel : Zweite Erhebungswelle : Klima

    ×

    Im Folgenden werden die Ergebnisse der zweiten Welle des Schweizer Umweltpanel präsentiert. Das Schweizer Umweltpanel ist eine Panelbefragung (die gleichen Personen werden wiederholt befragt), die die ETH in Kooperation mit dem BAFU zwei Mal im Jahr durchführt. In der zweiten Welle wurden die Themenbereiche Klima, Klimawandel und Klimapolitik abgefragt. Es zeigt sich, dass eine deutliche Mehrheit der Befragten von einer stattfindenden globalen Klimaerwärmung ausgeht und die Menschheit als deren Ursache betrachtet. Ebenso bewertet ein Grossteil der Studienteilnehmer/innen diese klimatischen Entwicklungen als Problem und sieht darin einen Umstand, der künftig die Lebensqualität in der Schweiz verringern wird. Insgesamt zeichnet sich ab, dass die Befragten der Studie die klimapolitische Linie und diverse geplante oder bereits durchgeführte Massnahmen in der Schweiz unterstützen. Zudem sind die Befragten weitestgehend bereit, verschiedene Einschränkungen oder Anpassungen in Kauf zu nehmen, umeine erfolgreiche Reduktion der Treibhausgasemissionen in der Schweiz und weltweit zu ermöglichen und zu unterstützen.

  • Rudolph, Lukas (2018): Voting behavior and electoral choice using causal inference methods for observational data
    Rudolph, Lukas. 2018. “Voting behavior and electoral choice using causal inference methods for observational data.” https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66543.

    Voting behavior and electoral choice using causal inference methods for observational data

    ×

    dc.title:

  • Pamp, Oliver; Rudolph, Lukas; Thurner, Paul W.; Mehltretter, Andreas; Primus, Simon (2018): The build-up of coercive capacities : Arms imports and the outbreak of violent intrastate conflicts
    Pamp, Oliver, Rudolph, Lukas, Thurner, Paul W., Mehltretter, Andreas, et al. 2018. “The build-up of coercive capacities : Arms imports and the outbreak of violent intrastate conflicts.” Journal of Peace Research 55(4): 430–444. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66662.

    The build-up of coercive capacities : Arms imports and the outbreak of violent intrastate conflicts

    ×

    Do governments’ military build-ups foster the outbreak of intrastate violence? This article investigates the impact of governments’ arms imports on the onset of intrastate conflicts. There is scant empirical research on the role of the external acquisition of coercive technologies, and even fewer studies explore the respective causal mechanisms of their consequences. We argue that the existing literature has not adequately considered the potential simultaneity between conflict initiation and arms purchases. In contrast, our study explicitly takes into account that weapon inflows may not only causally induce conflicts but may themselves be caused by conflict anticipation. Following a review of applicable theoretical models to derive our empirical expectations, we offer two innovative approaches to surmount this serious endogeneity problem. First, we employ a simultaneous equations model that allows us to estimate the concurrent effects of both arms imports on conflict onsets and conflict onsets on imports. Second, we are the first to use an instrumental variable approach that uses the import of weapon types not suitable for intrastate conflict as instruments for weapon imports that are relevant for fighting in civil wars. Relying on arms transfer data provided by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute for the period 1949-2013, we provide estimates for the effect of imports on civil war onset. Our empirical results clearly show that while arms imports are not a genuine cause of intrastate conflicts, they significantly increase the probability of an onset in countries where conditions are notoriously conducive to conflict. In such situations, arms are not an effective deterrent but rather spark conflict escalation.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Wehrli, Stefan; Elsaid, Giannina; Näf, Matthias; Wäger, Patricia; Bernauer, Thomas (2018): Schweizer Umwelt-Panel : Leben und Umwelt in der Schweiz
    Rudolph, Lukas et al. 2018. “Schweizer Umwelt-Panel : Leben und Umwelt in der Schweiz.” https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66525.

    Schweizer Umwelt-Panel : Leben und Umwelt in der Schweiz

    ×

    dc.title:


    dc.contributor.author: Wehrli, Stefan; Elsaid, Giannina; Näf, Matthias; Wäger, Patricia; Bernauer, Thomas

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Kuhn, Patrick M. (2017): Natural Disasters and Political Participation : Evidence from the 2002 and 2013 Floods in Germany
    Rudolph, Lukas, and Kuhn, Patrick M. 2017. “Natural Disasters and Political Participation : Evidence from the 2002 and 2013 Floods in Germany.” German Politics 27(1): 1–24. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66665.

    Natural Disasters and Political Participation : Evidence from the 2002 and 2013 Floods in Germany

    ×

    How do natural disasters affect electoral participation? The existing social science literature offers contradictory predictions. A considerable body of research in sociology and psychology suggests that traumatic events can inspire pro-social behaviour, which might increase turnout. Yet, political science has long held that even minor changes to participation costs of low benefit activities can lead to considerable drops in civic engagement. Consequently, natural disasters should reduce electoral participation. We show how these distinct views can be jointly analysed within the Riker–Ordeshook model of voting. This paper then reports results on the impact of the 2002 and 2013 floods in Germany on turnout in federal and state elections in Saxony and Bavaria, conducted few weeks after the floods. Analysing community level turnout data, and drawing on a difference-in-differences framework, we find that flood exposure has a consistent negative effect on turnout. This indicates that the increase in the costs of voting outweighed any increase in political engagement in our case and stands in contrast to findings from developing contexts, where flood management was convincingly linked to electoral participation.

  • Rudolph, Lukas (2017): Die Münchner Ergebnisse im Bundes- und Landesvergleich : Ein Ude-Effekt in München?
    Rudolph, Lukas. 2017. “Die Münchner Ergebnisse im Bundes- und Landesvergleich : Ein Ude-Effekt in München?” In Exit Polls und Hybrid-Modelle : Ein neuer Ansatz zur Modellierung von Wählerwanderungen, eds. André Klima et al. Wiesbaden: Springer VS, p. 21–35. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66585.

    Die Münchner Ergebnisse im Bundes- und Landesvergleich : Ein Ude-Effekt in München?

    ×

    Kapitel 2 ordnet die Wahlergebnisse in München zu den Bundes- und Landtagswahlen seit 1994 in den deutschland- bzw. bayernweiten Trend ein. Es zeigt sich, dass durchschnittliche Wahlbeteiligung und Stimmenanteile von SPD und CSU in München sehr eng den durchschnittlichen Ergebnissen im Bund bzw. in Bayern folgen. Daraus lässt sich die Hypothese ableiten, dass Wählerwanderungen in München vergleichbar auch in anderen Wahlorten der Bundesrepublik, zumindest aber Bayerns, beobachtbar sein sollten. Abweichungen vom bayernweiten Trend sind durch spezielle Dynamiken des Wahlkampfes erklärbar. Mittels eines Difference-in-Differences-Designs wird gezeigt, dass 2013 bei der Landtagswahl in München ein Kandidateneffekt des ehemaligen Münchner Oberbürgermeisters und SPD-Spitzenkandidaten Christian Ude vorliegt: Dieser Kandidateneffekt wirkt sich spezifisch auf den SPD-Zweitstimmenanteil aus, der dadurch 5 Prozentpunkte über dem allgemeinen SPD-Trend liegt. Der „Ude-Effekt“ geht vermutlich v.a. auf Grünen-Wähler zurück, die ihre Stimme zugunsten Christian Udes gesplittet haben. Theoretisch lässt sich dies als Spill-Over eines Amtsinhaberbonus erklären. Dieses aus den Aggregatdaten gewonnene Ergebnis deckt sich mit der Wählerwanderungsanalyse der Exit Poll-Studie zu Wechselwahlverhalten und -gründen auf Individualebene.

  • Thurner, Paul W.; Klima, André; Rudolph, Lukas (2017): Wählerwanderung bei Landtags- und Bundestagswahl 2013
    Thurner, Paul W., Klima, André, and Rudolph, Lukas. 2017. “Wählerwanderung bei Landtags- und Bundestagswahl 2013.” In Exit Polls und Hybrid-Modelle : Ein neuer Ansatz zur Modellierung von Wählerwanderungen, eds. André Klima et al. Wiesbaden: Springer VS, p. 171–180. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66586.

    Wählerwanderung bei Landtags- und Bundestagswahl 2013

    ×

    Nachdem sich in dem vorausgegangenen Kapitel das von uns neu entwickelte Hybrid-Modell ‚eiwild‘ auf der Basis des Multinomial-Dirichlet-Modells entsprechend der Ergebnisse von Simulationsverfahren als das beste herausgestellt hat, wird es nun zur Identifikation der Wählerströme herangezogen. Wir bestimmen separat die Übergangsmatrizen zwischen den Landtagswahlen 2008 und 2013, den Bundestagswahlen 2009 und 2013, und nutzen die außergewöhnliche Möglichkeit, die Wählerströme zwischen der nur durch eine Woche getrennten Landtagswahl 2013 und Bundestagswahl 2013 zu schätzen.

  • Rudolph, Lukas; Däubler, Thomas (2016): Holding Individual Representatives Accountable : The Role of Electoral Systems
    Rudolph, Lukas, and Däubler, Thomas. 2016. “Holding Individual Representatives Accountable : The Role of Electoral Systems.” The Journal of Politics 78(3): 746–762. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66663.

    Holding Individual Representatives Accountable : The Role of Electoral Systems

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    Voters are reluctant to sanction representatives for individual misconduct if they have to balance candidate-level and party-level factors in their choice, but this trade-off is affected by the electoral system. Our general theoretical model explains why individual accountability can empirically occur in single-member district (SMD) systems but is expected under less restrictive conditions using open-list proportional representation (OLPR). The latter not only decouples party and candidate choice but also makes seat allocation more vote elastic. For a thorough empirical test of our argument, we draw on real-world evidence from state-level elections in Bavaria, Germany, which are held under an unusual mixed-member system. Exploiting a recent public scandal involving one-third of representatives, we examine how electoral punishment of the same candidates by the same voters differs across electoral rules. Drawing on difference-in-differences as well as matching/regression estimators, we show that electoral punishment is substantially larger under OLPR than under SMD systems.

  • Leininger, Arndt; Rudolph, Lukas; Zittlau, Steffen (2016): How to Increase Turnout in Low-Salience Elections : Quasi-Experimental Evidence on the Effect of Concurrent Second-Order Elections on Political Participation
    Leininger, Arndt, Rudolph, Lukas, and Zittlau, Steffen. 2016. “How to Increase Turnout in Low-Salience Elections : Quasi-Experimental Evidence on the Effect of Concurrent Second-Order Elections on Political Participation.” Political Science Research and Methods 6(3): 509–526. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66667.

    How to Increase Turnout in Low-Salience Elections : Quasi-Experimental Evidence on the Effect of Concurrent Second-Order Elections on Political Participation

    ×

    Voter turnout in second-order elections is on a dramatic decline in many modern democracies. This article investigates how electoral participation can be substantially increased by holding multiple of these less important elections simultaneously. Leading to a relative decrease in voting costs, concurrent elections theoretically have economies of scale to the individual voter and thus should see turnout levels larger than those obtained in any stand-alone election. Leveraging as-if-random variation of local election timing in Germany, we estimate the causal effect of concurrent mayoral elections on European election turnout at around 10 percentage points. Exploiting variation in treatment intensity, we show that the magnitude of the concurrency effect is contingent upon district size and the competitiveness of the local race.

  • Rudolph, Lukas (2013): Federalism in South Asia and beyond : An introduction to models, best practices and new challenges
    Rudolph, Lukas. 2013. “Federalism in South Asia and beyond : An introduction to models, best practices and new challenges.” In Federalism in Asia and beyond : The Wildbad Kreuth Federalism Days 2012 : Models, Best Practices and New Challenges, eds. Christian J. Hegemer and Hanns Bühler. München: Hanns-Seidel-Stiftung, p. 17–36. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66661.

    Federalism in South Asia and beyond : An introduction to models, best practices and new challenges

    ×

    dc.title:

  • Behnke, Joachim; Hintermaier, Johannes; Rudolph, Lukas (2010): Die Bedeutung von Werten für Verteilungsergebnisse im Ultimatum- und Diktatorspiel
    Behnke, Joachim, Hintermaier, Johannes, and Rudolph, Lukas. 2010. “Die Bedeutung von Werten für Verteilungsergebnisse im Ultimatum- und Diktatorspiel.” In Jahrbuch für Handlungs- und Entscheidungstheorie. Band 6: Schwerpunkt Neuere Entwicklungen des Konzepts der Rationalität und ihre Anwendungen, eds. Joachim Behnke, Thomas Bräuninger, and Susumu Shikano. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, p. 165–192. https://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/66666.

    Die Bedeutung von Werten für Verteilungsergebnisse im Ultimatum- und Diktatorspiel

    ×

    Eines der interessantesten Anwendungsgebiete der Spieltheorie bezieht sich auf Verhandlungen, in denen bestimmte Güter, oft ein Geldbetrag, zwischen mehreren Akteuren aufzuteilen sind. Die Ergebnisse unzähliger Varianten von Verhandlungsspielen widersprechen dabei immer wieder den Hypothesen der klassischen Entscheidungstheorie (vgl. Roth 1995; Camerer 2003). So wurde inzwischen experimentell eindeutig belegt, dass Menschen in verschiedenen Situationen in Verhandlungsspielen nicht nach den Maßregeln monetärer Nutzenmaximierung und entgegen fundamentalen Annahmen der klassischen rational choice- Theorie handeln – dies wirft Fragen nach einer erklärungskräftigen Fundierung menschlicher Entscheidungsweisen auf. Die rein formale spieltheoretische Analyse dient in solchen Untersuchungsdesigns gewissermaßen als Folie, vor deren Hintergrund die Abweichungen vom im Sinne der reinen Spieltheorie erwarteten Verhalten als eigentlicher Untersuchungsgegenstand in den Fokus treten.

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