Veröffentlicht am: 07.02.2024
Veröffentlicht am: 07.02.2024
Children and young people use media to establish their position within their respective social groups and contexts. The role their media repertoires and communicative practices play in this and how these change over time is being examined in a qualitative longitudinal study with colleagues from the FAU Erlangen-Nuremberg.
In his article with the original German title "Von Kelsen zu Castells? Zu Tendenzen der Vervielfältigung und Dynamisierung des Rechts" in the journal Rechtstheorie, Tobias Mast deals with structural changes in the legal system and the actors involved.
This paper explores the question of how complex socio-technical ecosystems can be modeled using architectural methods.
In his article in GRUR Int., Tobias Mast describes the peculiarities of platform law, which has been developing at European level for several years.
The aim of this project is to develop a communication-sociological approach to the relationship between software systems, the public sphere and participation.
What is the interplay between the diversity of our information exposure online and the polarization of our political opinions towards certain issues or groups over time?
The project, which is located between media law and computer science, aims to use a new method to visualize the functioning of news distribution on digital platforms and thus offer media regulation opportunities for new regulatory approaches.
The cooperation project transfers computer science methods to empirical communication science. Semi-automated content analyses can thus also examine vast amounts of data.
The study aims to provide an overview of politically oriented media use and political culture in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern as well as to develop strategies to improve outreach to population groups that largely avoid news.
The annual international representative survey conducted by the Reuters Institute in Oxford examines news usage and reveals general trends and national characteristics of developments. The Leibniz Institute for Media Research is conducting the German part of the study.
The research project Human in the Loop? investigates how human participation can improve automated decision-making processes.
Are public service media legally obliged to create social cohesion? And how is the integration-related performance of these media perceived?
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