F
Frank Marcinkowski
Researcher at University of Düsseldorf
Publications - 21
Citations - 312
Frank Marcinkowski is an academic researcher from University of Düsseldorf. The author has contributed to research in topics: Politics & Legitimacy. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 21 publications receiving 152 citations. Previous affiliations of Frank Marcinkowski include University of Münster.
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
Implications of AI (un-)fairness in higher education admissions: the effects of perceived AI (un-)fairness on exit, voice and organizational reputation
TL;DR: Concerning the subsequent effects of fairness perceptions, it is found that distributive fairness as well as procedural fairness perceptions have a negative impact on the intention to protest against an ADM system, whereas (2) only Procedural fairness perceptions negatively affect the likelihood of exiting and (3) distributive unfair, but not procedural fairness perception have a positive effect on organizational reputation.
Journal ArticleDOI
The importance of input and output legitimacy in democratic governance: evidence from a population-based survey experiment in four West European countries
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored citizens' preferences regarding democratic governance, focusing on their evaluations of a public policy according to criteria related to various legitimacy dimensions, as well as on the (tense) relationship among them.
Journal ArticleDOI
Public communication by research institutes compared across countries and sciences: Building capacity for engagement or competing for visibility?
Marta Entradas,Marta Entradas,Martin W. Bauer,Colm O'Muircheartaigh,Frank Marcinkowski,Asako Okamura,Giuseppe Pellegrini,John C. Besley,Luisa Massarani,Pedro Russo,Anthony Dudo,Barbara Saracino,Carla Maria da Silva,Kei Kano,Luís Amorim,Massimiano Bucchi,Ahmet Suerdem,Tatsuo Oyama,Yuh Yuh Li +18 more
TL;DR: The first cross-national study of research institutes within universities and large scientific organisations in Brazil, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Portugal, the United Kingdom, and the United States finds that institutes embrace communication with non-peers and do so through a variety of public events and traditional news media.
Book ChapterDOI
Mediatization and Political Autonomy: A Systems Approach
TL;DR: In this paper, a socio-theoretical analysis of the causes and consequences of mediatization is presented, where the authors adopt a systems theory perspective to supplement some of the sociological work that has been carried out in relation to mediatisation.
Journal ArticleDOI
From incidental exposure to intentional avoidance: Psychological reactance to political communication during the 2017 German national election campaign:
TL;DR: The study’s results are indicating, that the viral character of online campaigning may lead to the opposite of what was intended: voters are not only “trapped,” but might be repelled instead.