Thomas Bräuninger

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomas Bräuninger (born October 3, 1969 in Karlsruhe ) is a German political scientist and professor of political economy at the Institute for Social Sciences at the University of Mannheim .

academic career

From 1990 to 1991 Bräuninger first studied chemistry at the University of Karlsruhe before moving to Mannheim to study political science and mathematics . In 1997 he graduated with the 1st state examination. In 2000 - also in Mannheim - at the Faculty of Social Sciences with Franz Urban Pappi he was awarded a Dr. phil. PhD . Bräuninger moved to the University of Konstanz , where he completed his habilitation in 2006 after visiting lectureships in Pittsburgh and at Trinity College in Dublin . From 2001 to 2008 Thomas Bräuninger was a fellow of the Zukunftskolleg at the University of Konstanz and from 2004 to 2008 on its board of directors. This was followed by substitute professorships in Mannheim and Mainz, before he was offered a professorship for international politics in Mainz in 2009. In the 2009/2010 winter semester, he took over a professorship at the Institute for Social Sciences at the University of Mannheim.

From 2004 to 2010, Bräuninger was one of three speakers in the Action and Decision Theory working group of the German Association for Political Science . In 2014 he was elected to the Academy of Sciences and Literature .

research

Bräuninger is primarily concerned with issues of political sociology , comparative government theory and international politics . Among other things, he deals with the interaction between the Bundestag and Bundesrat and the resulting blockade situations and currently the influence of coalition statements on the formation of a government.

Publications (selection)

Books

  • Shikano, Susumu , Joachim Behnke and Thomas Bräuninger (eds.) (2009) Yearbook for Action and Decision Theory, Vol. 5, focus on theories of constitutional change. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag.
  • Bräuninger, Thomas and Joachim Behnke (eds.) (2006) Yearbook for Action and Decision Theory, Vol. 4, focus on party competition and elections. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag.
  • Bräuninger, Thomas (2000) International Institutional Policy. The choice of decision rules for the seabed authority. Frankfurt am Main: Campus.

Magazine articles

  • Bräuninger, Thomas and Marc Debus (2009) 'Legislative Agenda-Setting in Parliamentary Democracies', European Journal of Political Research.
  • Bräuninger, Thomas and Marc Debus (2008) 'The influence of coalition statements, programmatic standpoints and federal politics on the formation of governments in the German states', Politische Vierteljahresschrift 49 (2): 309–338.
  • Bräuninger, Thomas (2007) 'Stability in Spatial Voting Games with Restricted Preference Maximizing', Journal of Theoretical Politics 19 (2): 173-91.
  • Bernhagen, Patrick and Thomas Bräuninger (2005) 'Structural Power, Information Asymmetry and Public Policy: A Signaling Model of Business Lobbying in Democratic Capitalism', Political Studies 53 (1): 43–64.
  • Bräuninger, Thomas (2005) 'A Partisan Model of Government Expenditure', Public Choice 125: 409-429.
  • Bräuninger, Thomas (2003) 'When Simple Voting Doesn't Work. Multicameral Systems for the Representation and Aggregation of Interests in International Organizations, British Journal of Political Science 33 (4): 681-703.
  • Bräuninger, Thomas and Thomas König (1999) 'The Checks and Balances of Party Federalism. German Federal Government in a Divided Legislature ', European Journal of Political Research 36 (2): 207-35.
  • König, Thomas and Thomas Bräuninger (1998) 'The Inclusiveness of European Decision Rules', Journal of Theoretical Politics 10 (1): 125-41.
  • König, Thomas and Thomas Bräuninger (1998) 'The Formation of Policy Networks. Preferences, Institutions and Actors 'Choice of Information and Exchange Relations', Journal of Theoretical Politics 10 (4): 445-71.

Individual evidence

  1. Board of Directors of the Zukunftskolleg. Accessed August 13, 2018 .
  2. ↑ The curriculum vitae of Thomas J. Bräuningner. March 2016, accessed on January 10, 2019 .

Web links