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Dissertation
The Implications of Feedback Frequency for Employee Creativity
(2022)
Managers are still floundering when they have to decide on the optimal level of feedback frequency; either when they consider themselves as a source of feedback, but also when they shape the feedback environment of their employees, e.g., by allowing more (or less) frequent customer feedback. Furthermore, given that feedback is a time-consuming task, managers might be reluctant to provide feedback frequently, foregoing a potentially powerful lever for increasing employee creativity. Ultimately, clarifying the ambiguities ...
Dissertation
Ordoliberalism and the Making of the Economic Constitution: State, Law, and Money in the Market Economy
(2023)
The aim of my research is to explore the political economy of ordoliberalism in its historical trajectory. Beginning from the years of its inception during the interwar period, the dissertation focuses on the specific conditions and political economy of the Weimar Republic as the framework within which the ordoliberal framework was developed. Moving on to the postwar period, the dissertation examines the attempts of operationalization of the ordoliberal framework within the context of West Germany and the social ...
Dissertation
Biases im Planungsprozess
(2023)
Die vorliegende Arbeit befasst sich mit der Frage nach der Relevanz und der Diagnostizierbarkeit kognitiver, motivationaler und gruppendynamischer Biases im Kontext organisationaler Planungsprozesse. Ziel der Arbeit war es, einen Fragebogen zu entwickeln, der die Anfälligkeit von Gruppen für derartige Biases erfasst und damit einen Indikator für die Qualität von Planungsprozessen darstellt.
Bezüglich des Problems der Diagnostizierbarkeit impliziter Biases zeigt sich in der Literatur, dass die Organisationskultur die ...
Dissertation
Experimental analyses of individual sustainable choices
(2023)
This dissertation complements the aforementioned studies by considering choice and allocation experiments which allow to directly examine how individuals choose between sustainable prod-ucts and their conventional counterparts. It particularly examines how different experimental designs and interventions causally affect choices between sustainable electricity contracts and investments over their conventional counterparts and provides guidance on how to analyze these choices using a Monte Carlo experiment.