School of Public Affairs

Organisational unit: Research School

Organisation profile

Leuphana School of Public Affairs is the academic and professional home to 1.000 bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral students and 31 professors. 30 research associates and 17 professional staff members are working for us.

The main themes of the school are reflected in its study programs: The School of Public Affairs is currently responsible for three Majors and four Minors at Leuphana College, five Master’s programmes and five Doctoral research groups at Leuphana Graduate School as well as five continuing education Master's programmes at Leuphana Professional School. As a novelty in Germany, the Master of Law offers students the opportunity to obtain both a Master's degree in law (LL.M.) as well as the state law examination. With its emphasis on "Law in Context", this model degree programme transcends a classic-dogmatic perspective of jurisprudence by presenting the relevant contents from civil law, public law and criminal law against the backdrop of current societal challenges and transformations. 

Main research areas

Leuphana School of Public Affairs brings together the disciplines of Political Science, Law, and Economics under one roof. With 31 professorships, it establishes an innovative profile in Germany on issues of public affairs, gaining both national and international visibility and academic reputation.

The School conducts research on the major transformations of our time and thus continues to develop its existing research agenda on the future of democracy, evidence-based political decision-making and law in the context of societal transformation. In an interdisciplinary collaborative endeavour, the three subjects will, among other things, answer pressing questions about

  • the legitimacy and performance of democracies, whose integrative power is under threat, especially in light of recent upheavals in politics and society,
  • the role of the state with regard to the relationship between private-law and public-law regulation,
  • the justification of governmental intervention into market processes and their ex-post evaluation.
  1. Published

    Deregulation in Germany - An empirical analysis

    Wein, T., 01.05.1997, In: Kyklos. 50, 2, p. 259-260 2 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsCritical reviewsResearch

  2. Published

    Exports and success in German manufacturing

    Bernard, A. B. & Wagner, J., 1997, In: Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv. 133, 1, p. 134-157 24 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  3. Published

    The impact of German works councils on profitability and innovation: New evidence from micro data

    Wagner, J. & Addison, J. T., 01.02.1997, In: Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik. 216, 1, p. 1-20 20 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  4. Published

    Firm size and job quality: A survey of the evidence from Germany

    Wagner, J., 01.10.1997, In: Small Business Economics. 9, 5, p. 411-425 15 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  5. Published

    On the determinants of mandatory works councils in Germany

    Schnabel, C., Wagner, J. & Addison, J. T., 01.10.1997, In: Industrial Relations. 36, 4, p. 419-445 27 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  6. Published
  7. Published
  8. Published
  9. Published

    Firm size, firm age and job duration

    Wagner, J., 01.04.1996, In: Review of Industrial Organization. 11, 2, p. 201-210 10 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  10. Published

    Education, its financing and income distribution, part 2 - German - Bellmann,L, Gruske,KD, Timmermann,D

    Wagner, J., 01.04.1996, In: Economics of Education Review. 15, 2, p. 204-205 2 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsCritical reviewsResearch

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Publications

  1. Frauenhauskinder und ihr Weg ins Leben
  2. Krieg und Zivilgesellschaft
  3. Stadt als Möglichkeitsraum
  4. Roadside disturbance promotes plant communities with arbuscular mycorrhizal associations in mountain regions worldwide
  5. Umweltkonflikte und Nachhaltigkeit in Lateinamerika
  6. Revisiting the sustainability science research agenda
  7. Tropical cyclone losses in the USA and the impact of climate change
  8. Inter-individual nectar chemistry changes of field scabious, Knautia arvensis
  9. Kommentar von: Art. 53
  10. Repowering
  11. Vorrangige Probleme von Jugendlichen ohne Ausbildungsvertrag und die Rolle des Sozialarbeiters in der Berufsschule
  12. The Termination of International Sanctions
  13. Mittig ist nur das Mittel
  14. Jünglinge der Moderne
  15. "Notwendigkeit des Vergleichs!“ Der Ansatz einer komparativen pädagogischen Berufsgruppenforschung
  16. The Relationship between Family Law and Female Entrepreneurship in Germany
  17. Klimaschutz durch Biokohle
  18. Luhmann und die Kulturtheorie
  19. Wettbewerbsbeschränkung, spürbare
  20. Corrective Feedback beim formfokussierten digitalen Grammatiküben der Fremdsprache Englisch – eine kriteriengeleitete Analyse von Feedbackformen und -strategien am Beispiel von Duolingo
  21. A Global Classroom for International Sustainability Education
  22. Umweltmanagement ausgewählter Großveranstaltungen
  23. Marktabhängigkeit und ihre Bedeutung für die Grenzziehungen von Solidarität
  24. Diagnosekompetenz von Mathematiklehrkräften zur Erfassung und Bewertung mathematischer Basiskompetenzen
  25. Musik & Empowerment
  26. Begründen bei Geometrieaufgaben der Grundschule
  27. "j'ai écrit ma vie". Die autobiographischen Legitimierungsstrategien Gustave Courbets
  28. Datengetriebene Agilität
  29. Tertiäre Regulierung und Nachhaltigkeit
  30. Foreign Ownership and Firm Survival: First evidence for enterprises in Germany
  31. The Archival Research on Les Immatériaux
  32. Auf Ungerechtigkeit antworten
  33. Feuer und Blut. Heldentum bei Lessing, Kleist, Fontane, Jünger und Heiner Müller.
  34. Lives versus Livelihoods? Perceived economic risk has a stronger association with support for COVID-19 preventive measures than perceived health risk