Karsten Mause

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Karsten Mause

Karsten Mause

@KarstenMause

Political scientist, Economist, @Uni_Muenster

Muenster, Germany Sumali Aralık 2017
1K Sinusundan3.1K Mga Tagasunod
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International and Monetary Economics Network
Robert Skidelsky, RIP An influential and brilliant economist has left us: x.com/ComAcFreedom/s… Here is his homepage: robertskidelsky.com
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Committee for Academic Freedom@ComAcFreedom

It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Lord Robert Skidelsky, historian, economist, and a founding member of CAF. Robert was a steadfast defender of free speech and academic freedom, and a shining exemplar of intellectual independence. He was also among the first to recognise the emerging dangers of “safetyism” on campus, an issue he addressed with characteristic clarity in a speech delivered in the House of Lords on 26 November 2015. We reproduce it below in full: I shall draw your Lordships’ attention to two threats to free speech on the campus. In four minutes I have time for only two threats, but I think that they cover most of the ground. The first threat comes from the Government. The state has a duty to protect its citizens from terrorism. The Government have conceived of that duty in part as preventing university students from being what they call “radicalised”. The Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015 requires universities to “prevent individuals from being drawn into terrorism”. This is construed as part of their duty to “care” for “vulnerable” students. Universities are required to assess the risks of students being drawn into terrorism and extremism, and to train staff how to assess those risks and “challenge extremist ideas”. Universities must seek government guidance on which speakers to allow on campus. In this guidance terrorism and extremism are frequently conflated, as the noble Lords, Lord Pannick and Lord Lester, have pointed out, although very occasionally the drafters remember that one can hold extremist views without being a terrorist. I turn to the second threat. The National Union of Students has opposed the Counter-Terrorism and Security Act on the grounds that it will lead to mass campus surveillance and the criminalisation of Muslims and black people. The universities should be kept as “open democratic spaces”. All this would carry more conviction if student bodies were not themselves a big threat to free speech on the campus. Student unions in many universities run “no platform” policies for speakers whose views they consider reprehensible, even though they are legal. For the NUS—and this is the key—keeping students “safe” is paramount. Bristol University Students’ Union runs a “safe space” policy aimed at ensuring students’ safety from harassment. However, keeping students safe turns out to include keeping them “safe from radicalisation”. So, despite the verbal skirmishes, the Government and students are quite united on the need to protect students from harmful ideas, differing only slightly in their definition of what they regard as harmful. I must come clean: I hate the doublespeak that runs through the public pronouncements that I have read on this topic. How Orwell would have shuddered. The facts are pretty clear: universities have a statutory duty to uphold free speech and are bound by the Public Order Act to ban incitement to racial and religious hatred. So they have a duty to uphold free speech within the law. Similarly, the security forces have a duty to keep the country safe from terrorism wherever it sprouts—prevention does not stop or continue on the campus. What I deny is that university students are an especially vulnerable species needing special protection against being abused or radicalised. Students are adults: they can vote, fight and die for their country, drive, drink alcohol and so on. Why should they be treated as adults in one branch of life and as children in another? In particular, I think it is an abuse of thought and language to extend the good liberal notion of protecting people against harms to the decidedly unliberal notion of protecting them against harmful ideas.

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Justus Haucap
Justus Haucap@haucap·
Der #Tankrabatt ist gut gemeint, aber dennoch (erneut) der falsche Weg! Mein Kommentar in der Rheinischen Post.
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Félix de Bedout
Félix de Bedout@fdbedout·
“Los alemanes son gente muy fría y poco emocional” : La narración del gol de Lucho Díaz.
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FC Bayern
FC Bayern@FCBayernEN·
This angle makes it even better 🤯
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Eucken Institut
Eucken Institut@EuckenInstitut·
Für die 7. Franz-Böhm-Vorlesung konnten wir @haucap gewinnen, der zu "Wettbewerb als Ordnungsprinzip im 21. Jahrhundert: Herausforderungen durch Digitalisierung und neue Geoökonomie" sprechen wird. 20. April 2026, 18.30 Uhr Haus zur lieben Hand, Freiburg eucken.de/veranstaltung/…
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FC Bayern München
FC Bayern München@FCBayern·
𝑬𝒖𝒓𝒐𝒑𝒂𝒑𝒐𝒌𝒂𝒍 𝑬𝒖𝒓𝒐𝒑𝒂𝒑𝒐𝒌𝒂𝒍 𝑬𝒖𝒓𝒐𝒑𝒂𝒑𝒐𝒌𝒂𝒍 𝑬𝒖𝒓𝒐𝒑𝒂𝒑𝒐𝒌𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒂𝒍 ❤️
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Philipp Weber
Philipp Weber@we_philipp·
1/ I am happy to share that my dissertation “Fiscal Policy without Romance: Three Empirical Essays on Fiscal Rules, Public Investment, and Inflation” is now publicly available via the digital archive of the @UniFreiburg freidok.uni-freiburg.de/data/278827
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Karsten Mause
Karsten Mause@KarstenMause·
@Lars_Feld Perfektes Neuerscheinungstiming! Angesichts Sondervermögen, Zweckentfremdungen, Schuldenbremsenlockerungsvorschlägen usw. usf. regt das Buch hoffentlich möglichst viele zum kritischen Nachdenken über die gegenwärtige Finanzpolitik an.
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Lars P Feld
Lars P Feld@Lars_Feld·
Zur Diskussion um die Schuldenbremse verweise ich gerne auf unser Buch „Schuldenwende“. Darin sind die Argumente gegen eine weitere Öffnung der Schuldenbremse aufgeführt. @BerlinReporter
Eucken Institut@EuckenInstitut

Bis 2029 dürfte rund ein Drittel des Bundeshaushalts über Schulden finanziert werden. Eine weitere Lockerung der Schuldenbremse macht auch deshalb keinen Sinn, meint @Lars_Feld in seiner Kolumne "Ordnungsruf" im @handelsblatt. handelsblatt.com/meinung/wirtsc…

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Sabine Döring
Sabine Döring@sabinedoering·
Das Buch ist da.
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Karsten Mause
Karsten Mause@KarstenMause·
Wo versagt der Markt? Unter welchen Bedingungen sind staatliche Eingriffe in das Wirtschaftssystem notwendig? Dazu ein Beitrag von Christian Müller (Universität Münster) und mir in der 2. Auflage des Handbuchs Politik & Wirtschaft: ➡️doi.org/10.1007/978-3-… #PoliticalEconomy
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Wirtschaftliche Freiheit
Wirtschaftliche Freiheit@wirtschaftfreih·
Gastbeitrag Einkommen, Prestige & Macht Zur Politischen Ökonomie der Politikberatung von Klaus Heine (Uni Rotterdam) und Karsten Mause @KarstenMause (WWU) Angesichts multipler Krisen boomen die Nachfrage nach und das Angebot an wissenschaftlicher Politikberatung.„Top-Ökonomen“ und weniger prominente Wissenschaftler sind als Berater aktiv. Was motiviert sie? wirtschaftlichefreiheit.de/wordpress/?p=4…
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Justus Haucap
Justus Haucap@haucap·
Eine traurige Nachricht: In der Nacht von Samstag auf Sonntag ist Prof. H. Jörg Thieme (HHU Düsseldorf) verstorben. Er war es, der sich maßgeblich für die Gründung des DICE an der HHU stark gemacht hat. Danke für alles, lieber Jörg, RIP. wiwi.hhu.de/aktuelle-meldu…
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