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  1. Book ; Thesis: Roles of SWAP-70 in dendritic cell functions

    Götz, Anne

    2012  

    Author's details von Anne Götz
    Language English
    Size 101 Bl. : Ill., graph. Darst.
    Publishing country Germany
    Document type Book ; Thesis
    Thesis / German Habilitation thesis Dresden, Univ., Diss., 2013
    HBZ-ID HT017578566
    Database Catalogue ZB MED Medicine, Health

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  2. Article ; Online: Emotionalität in der COVID-19-Krisenkommunikation von Behörden und unabhängigen Expert*innen auf Twitter : Eine Sentiment-Analyse für das erste Pandemiejahr.

    Drescher, Larissa S / Roosen, Jutta / Aue, Katja / Dressel, Kerstin / Schär, Wiebke / Götz, Anne

    Bundesgesundheitsblatt, Gesundheitsforschung, Gesundheitsschutz

    2023  Volume 66, Issue 6, Page(s) 689–699

    Abstract: Background: At the beginning of the COVID‑19 pandemic in Germany, there was great uncertainty among the population and among those responsible for crisis communication. A substantial part of the communication from experts and the responsible authorities ...

    Title translation Sentiments in the COVID-19 crisis communication of German authorities and independent experts on Twitter : A sentiment analysis for the first year of the pandemic.
    Abstract Background: At the beginning of the COVID‑19 pandemic in Germany, there was great uncertainty among the population and among those responsible for crisis communication. A substantial part of the communication from experts and the responsible authorities took place on social media, especially on Twitter. The positive, negative, and neutral sentiments (emotions) conveyed there during crisis communication have not yet been comparatively studied for Germany.
    Study aim: Sentiments in Twitter messages from various (health) authorities and independent experts on COVID‑19 will be evaluated for the first pandemic year (1 January 2020 to 15 January 2021) to provide a knowledge base for improving future crisis communication.
    Material and methods: From n = 39 Twitter actors (21 authorities and 18 experts), n = 8251 tweets were included in the analysis. The sentiment analysis was done using the so-called lexicon approach, a method within the social media analytics framework to detect sentiments. Descriptive statistics were calculated to determine, among other things, the average polarity of sentiments and the frequencies of positive and negative words in the three phases of the pandemic.
    Results and discussion: The development of emotionality in COVID‑19 tweets and the number of new infections in Germany run roughly parallel. The analysis shows that the polarity of sentiments is negative on average for both groups of actors. Experts tweet significantly more negatively about COVID‑19 than authorities during the study period. Authorities communicate close to the neutrality line in the second phase, that is, neither distinctly positive nor negative.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; COVID-19/epidemiology ; Pandemics ; Sentiment Analysis ; Social Media ; Germany ; Communication ; Attitude
    Language German
    Publishing date 2023-05-16
    Publishing country Germany
    Document type English Abstract ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 1461973-8
    ISSN 1437-1588 ; 1436-9990
    ISSN (online) 1437-1588
    ISSN 1436-9990
    DOI 10.1007/s00103-023-03699-z
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Can the United Nations deliver a feminist future?

    Sandler, Joanne / Goetz, Anne Marie

    2020  

    Abstract: The multilateral decision-making enabled by the United Nations (UN), as the world’s only forum for negotiating agreements between almost all countries, has been both fertile and frustrating for advancing women’s rights. The 1995 Fourth World Conference ... ...

    Abstract The multilateral decision-making enabled by the United Nations (UN), as the world’s only forum for negotiating agreements between almost all countries, has been both fertile and frustrating for advancing women’s rights. The 1995 Fourth World Conference on Women at Beijing, held at a post-Cold War high point in international co-operation, generated a significant political settlement on women’s rights, the Beijing Platform for Action. Twenty-five years later, however, that agreement is out of date. Not only has progress in implementing it stalled, but the very notion that advances can be made in women’s rights through multilateral negotiation is in doubt because of the illiberal and antifeminist agendas of some particularly influential countries. On top of this, the lack of an effective multilateral response to the current COVID19 global crisis has put in question the continuing relevance of UN processes. Misogyny and homophobia also characterise the rhetoric and goals of some sectors of civil society that target multilateral processes, such as the annual Commission on the Status of Women. The sense of intensified polarisation on gender equality has informed a decision not to hold a fifth UN World Conference on Women, in spite of the fact that gender equality remains an urgent and under-actioned global priority. The 25th anniversary of the Beijing Conference will be marked instead by a collaboration between UN Women, Mexico, and France, with civil society input, to foster a global conversation for urgent action and accountability for gender equality, while avoiding the kind of multilateral review and consensus that fuelled action in the aftermath of 1995. This article asks whether the UN is still ‘fit for purpose’ as an engine driving women’s rights gains. It outlines four ways in which multilateralism and the UN’s unique convening and normative authority can be repurposed, with feminist civil society support, to drive feminist social justice agendas more effectively.
    Keywords Gender ; covid19
    Subject code 320
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-06-24T18:25:29Z
    Publisher Oxfam GB
    Publishing country uk
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  4. Article ; Online: Can the United Nations deliver a feminist future?

    Sandler, Joanne / Goetz, Anne Marie

    2020  

    Abstract: The multilateral decision-making enabled by the United Nations (UN), as the world’s only forum for negotiating agreements between almost all countries, has been both fertile and frustrating for advancing women’s rights. The 1995 Fourth World Conference ... ...

    Abstract The multilateral decision-making enabled by the United Nations (UN), as the world’s only forum for negotiating agreements between almost all countries, has been both fertile and frustrating for advancing women’s rights. The 1995 Fourth World Conference on Women at Beijing, held at a post-Cold War high point in international co-operation, generated a significant political settlement on women’s rights, the Beijing Platform for Action. Twenty-five years later, however, that agreement is out of date. Not only has progress in implementing it stalled, but the very notion that advances can be made in women’s rights through multilateral negotiation is in doubt because of the illiberal and antifeminist agendas of some particularly influential countries. On top of this, the lack of an effective multilateral response to the current COVID19 global crisis has put in question the continuing relevance of UN processes. Misogyny and homophobia also characterise the rhetoric and goals of some sectors of civil society that target multilateral processes, such as the annual Commission on the Status of Women. The sense of intensified polarisation on gender equality has informed a decision not to hold a fifth UN World Conference on Women, in spite of the fact that gender equality remains an urgent and under-actioned global priority. The 25th anniversary of the Beijing Conference will be marked instead by a collaboration between UN Women, Mexico, and France, with civil society input, to foster a global conversation for urgent action and accountability for gender equality, while avoiding the kind of multilateral review and consensus that fuelled action in the aftermath of 1995. This article asks whether the UN is still ‘fit for purpose’ as an engine driving women’s rights gains. It outlines four ways in which multilateralism and the UN’s unique convening and normative authority can be repurposed, with feminist civil society support, to drive feminist social justice agendas more effectively.
    Keywords Gender ; covid19
    Subject code 320
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-06-16T11:51:22Z
    Publisher Oxfam GB
    Publishing country uk
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  5. Article ; Online: Ligand Rigidity Steers the Selectivity and Efficiency of the Photosubstitution Reaction of Strained Ruthenium Polypyridyl Complexes.

    Hakkennes, Matthijs L A / Meijer, Michael S / Menzel, Jan Paul / Goetz, Anne-Charlotte / Van Duijn, Roy / Siegler, Maxime A / Buda, Francesco / Bonnet, Sylvestre

    Journal of the American Chemical Society

    2023  Volume 145, Issue 24, Page(s) 13420–13434

    Abstract: While photosubstitution reactions in metal complexes are usually thought of as dissociative processes poorly dependent on the environment, they are, in fact, very sensitive to solvent effects. Therefore, it is crucial to explicitly consider solvent ... ...

    Abstract While photosubstitution reactions in metal complexes are usually thought of as dissociative processes poorly dependent on the environment, they are, in fact, very sensitive to solvent effects. Therefore, it is crucial to explicitly consider solvent molecules in theoretical models of these reactions. Here, we experimentally and computationally investigated the selectivity of the photosubstitution of diimine chelates in a series of sterically strained ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes in water and acetonitrile. The complexes differ essentially by the rigidity of the chelates, which strongly influenced the observed selectivity of the photosubstitution. As the ratio between the different photoproducts was also influenced by the solvent, we developed a full density functional theory modeling of the reaction mechanism that included explicit solvent molecules. Three reaction pathways leading to photodissociation were identified on the triplet hypersurface, each characterized by either one or two energy barriers. Photodissociation in water was promoted by a proton transfer in the triplet state, which was facilitated by the dissociated pyridine ring acting as a pendent base. We show that the temperature variation of the photosubstitution quantum yield is an excellent tool to compare theory with experiments. An unusual phenomenon was observed for one of the compounds in acetonitrile, for which an increase in temperature led to a surprising decrease in the photosubstitution reaction rate. We interpret this experimental observation based on complete mapping of the triplet hypersurface of this complex, revealing thermal deactivation to the singlet ground state through intersystem crossing.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-06-09
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 3155-0
    ISSN 1520-5126 ; 0002-7863
    ISSN (online) 1520-5126
    ISSN 0002-7863
    DOI 10.1021/jacs.3c03543
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Book ; Online: Feminist activism and the politics of reform when and why do states respond to demands for gender-equality policies?

    Goetz, Anne Marie / Jenkins, Rob

    (Working paper / United Nations Research Institute for Social Development ; 2016, 13)

    2016  

    Abstract: Under what conditions is gender-equality policy advocacy successful? This paper examines a segment of the growing quantitative comparative political science literature that seeks to answer this question. Recent scholarship emphasizes such factors as the ... ...

    Author's details Anne Marie Goetz and Rob Jenkins
    Series title Working paper / United Nations Research Institute for Social Development ; 2016, 13
    Abstract Under what conditions is gender-equality policy advocacy successful? This paper examines a segment of the growing quantitative comparative political science literature that seeks to answer this question. Recent scholarship emphasizes such factors as the strength of women's movements and the forms of opposition to which their policy demands gives rise. Variables such as the nature of the state or the economy, are also seen strongly to influence whether women mobilize to make claims on the state, the issues they politicize and their chances of success. However, one consequence of focusing on institutional factors is that the role of strategic choices made by feminist policy advocates is underestimated in explaining their successes. The article argues that understanding variation in the outcomes achieved by women's rights advocates requires close attention to the strategic capacity of policy entrepreneurs, assessed in terms of three inter-related political skills: (i) "framing" policy demands; (ii) forming and managing civic alliances; and (iii) engaging with state entities without compromising organizational autonomy.
    Keywords feminism ; policy reform ; civil society ; social movements
    Language English
    Size 1 Online-Ressource (circa 55 Seiten)
    Document type Book ; Online
    Database ECONomics Information System

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  7. Article: Agency and accountability

    Goetz, Anne Marie / Jenkins, Rob

    Feminist economics Vol. 22, No. 1 , p. 211-236

    promoting women's participation in peacebuilding

    2016  Volume 22, Issue 1, Page(s) 211–236

    Author's details Anne Marie Goetz and Rob Jenkins
    Keywords Affirmative action ; agency ; community ; development ; discrimination ; interdisciplinary
    Language English
    Publisher Routledge
    Publishing place Abingdon
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 1289247-6 ; 2023694-3
    ISSN 1466-4372 ; 1354-5701
    ISSN (online) 1466-4372
    ISSN 1354-5701
    Database ECONomics Information System

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  8. Article ; Online: The Spread of COVID-19 Crisis Communication by German Public Authorities and Experts on Twitter: Quantitative Content Analysis.

    Drescher, Larissa S / Roosen, Jutta / Aue, Katja / Dressel, Kerstin / Schär, Wiebke / Götz, Anne

    JMIR public health and surveillance

    2021  Volume 7, Issue 12, Page(s) e31834

    Abstract: Background: The COVID-19 pandemic led to the necessity of immediate crisis communication by public health authorities. In Germany, as in many other countries, people choose social media, including Twitter, to obtain real-time information and ... ...

    Abstract Background: The COVID-19 pandemic led to the necessity of immediate crisis communication by public health authorities. In Germany, as in many other countries, people choose social media, including Twitter, to obtain real-time information and understanding of the pandemic and its consequences. Next to authorities, experts such as virologists and science communicators were very prominent at the beginning of German Twitter COVID-19 crisis communication.
    Objective: The aim of this study was to detect similarities and differences between public authorities and individual experts in COVID-19 crisis communication on Twitter during the first year of the pandemic.
    Methods: Descriptive analysis and quantitative content analysis were carried out on 8251 original tweets posted from January 1, 2020, to January 15, 2021. COVID-19-related tweets of 21 authorities and 18 experts were categorized into structural, content, and style components. Negative binomial regressions were performed to evaluate tweet spread measured by the retweet and like counts of COVID-19-related tweets.
    Results: Descriptive statistics revealed that authorities and experts increasingly tweeted about COVID-19 over the period under study. Two experts and one authority were responsible for 70.26% (544,418/774,865) of all retweets, thus representing COVID-19 influencers. Altogether, COVID-19 tweets by experts reached a 7-fold higher rate of retweeting (t
    Conclusions: Twitter data are a powerful information source and suitable for crisis communication in Germany. COVID-19 tweet activity mirrors the development of COVID-19 cases in Germany. Twitter users retweet and like communications regarding COVID-19 by experts more than those delivered by authorities. Tweets have higher coverage for both authorities and experts when they are plain and for authorities when they directly address people. For authorities, it appears that it was difficult to win recognition during COVID-19. For all stakeholders studied, the association between number of followers and number of retweets was highly significantly positive (authorities Z=28.74, P<.001; experts Z=25.99, P<.001). Updated standards might be required for successful crisis communication by authorities.
    MeSH term(s) COVID-19 ; Communication ; Humans ; Pandemics ; SARS-CoV-2 ; Social Media
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-12-22
    Publishing country Canada
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ISSN 2369-2960
    ISSN (online) 2369-2960
    DOI 10.2196/31834
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Book: Governing women

    Goetz, Anne Marie

    women's political effectiveness in contexts of democratization and governance reform

    (Routledge / UNRISD research in gender and development ; 5)

    2009  

    Institution Research Institute for Social Development
    Author's details United Nations Research Institute for Social Development. Ed. by Anne Marie Goetz
    Series title Routledge / UNRISD research in gender and development ; 5
    Keywords Democratization ; Women/Political activity
    Language English
    Size XII, 306 S, 24 cm
    Publisher Routledge
    Publishing place New York, NY u.a.
    Document type Book
    Note Includes bibliographical references and index. - Enth. 13 Beitr.
    ISBN 020389250X ; 0415956528 ; 9780203892503 ; 9780415956529
    Database ECONomics Information System

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  10. Book ; Online: Governing women

    Goetz, Anne Marie

    women's political effectiveness in contexts of democratization and governance reform

    (Routledge / UNRISD research in gender and development ; 5)

    2009  

    Abstract: Using case studies from around the world, this volume argues that good governance from a gender perspective requires more than just additional women in politics: it requires fundamental incentive changes to orient public action and policy to support ... ...

    Institution ebrary, Inc
    Author's details edited by Anne Marie Goetz
    Series title Routledge / UNRISD research in gender and development ; 5
    Abstract Using case studies from around the world, this volume argues that good governance from a gender perspective requires more than just additional women in politics: it requires fundamental incentive changes to orient public action and policy to support gender equality
    Keywords Democratization ; Women/Political activity
    Language English
    Size Online-Ressource (xii, 306 p)
    Publisher Routledge
    Publishing place New York
    Document type Book ; Online
    Note Includes bibliographical references and index
    ISBN 0415956528 ; 9780415956529
    Database Library catalogue of the German National Library of Science and Technology (TIB), Hannover

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