This page sets out the English summaries of the research papers published by the Research Services. A link from the end of the summary will take you to the complete research paper in German.
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Hate crimes
The term 'hate crime' is used to refer to criminal offences the victims of which have been chosen precisely because they belong to a certain social group that the perpetrator objects to. Currently there are several motions pending on this subject (a bill introduced by the SPD parliamentary group, Bundestag printed paper 17/8131; a motion tabled by the Alliance 90/The Greens parliamentary group, Bundestag printed paper 17/8796; and a bill introduced by the Bundesrat, Bundesrat printed paper 26/12). This Topical Term discusses these and gives examples of similar legislation in other countries.
Skilled labour shortage in Germany. Statistics, studies, strategies
A representative selection of forecasts, studies and statistics from a variety of research institutes, which are summarised, all expect a shortage of qualified professionals in Germany in the coming years particularly in the maths, IT, science and technology sectors as well as in the health professions. The decisive factors in this shortage are the demographic trend (the shrinking and ageing population) and the transformation of the economy to create a service and information society. According to the 12th Population Projection of the Federal Statistical Office, there will be only approximately 36 million people of working age between 20 and 65 in the year 2060 - that is 27 percent fewer than today. This forecast is based on an optimistic assumption that there will be annual net immigration of 200,000 people. In view of this and other forecasts, a twin strategy is frequently recommended: on the one hand, unlocking the full potential of the domestic labour pool. This means, for example, introducing measures to increase the economic activity of women, models for keeping older workers longer in employment, and for instruments to improve the integration of people with an immigrant background into the labour market; on the other hand, the qualified immigration of foreign skilled labour, which may also entail amending current immigration rules that are seen by some as too bureaucratic.
The Hungarian parliament and party system
The Prime Minister of Hungary, Viktor Orbán, is planning to use his two-thirds majority in Parliament to reform his country’s electoral law. In its current form, the electoral law favours - in comparison to Germany’s system - large parties or electoral alliances, as majority voting plays a greater role.
- Hungarian electoral law requires parties to obtain more than 5% of the vote in order to be represented in Parliament.
- 176 parliamentary seats are allocated in single-member constituencies; to be elected, a candidate must win an absolute majority of the votes cast.
- The remaining seats are allocated by proportional representation in multi-member constituencies.
Following the 2010 elections, Hungary’s unicameral parliament has had 386 seats. Orbán’s alliance is composed of the right-wing liberal and anti-Communist Alliance of Young Democrats (FIDESZ) and the Catholic Christian-Democratic People’s Party (KDNP). Both parties are members of the European People’s Party (EPP) and are part of the Christian-Democratic Group in the European Parliament. The three opposition parties are, firstly, the socialist MSZP, which was the main government party from 2002 to 2010; secondly, the Green party Politics can be different (LMP), which is represented in Parliament for the first time; and, thirdly, Jobbik, whose name is a play on words that can mean "Right" either in the political sense or in the sense of "correct". Jobbik is seen as being anti-multiculturalism, anti-Semitic and anti-Roma.
Ruling by the Federal Constitutional Court on the German Bundestag’s EFSF Panel
In its judgement of 28 February 2012, the Federal Constitutional Court ruled that the transfer of decision-making powers concerning the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) from the Bundestag to the nine-person panel established by the Stabilisation Mechanism Act in most cases infringes the rights of the Members of the Bundestag, as enshrined in Article 38 (1), sentence 2 of the Basic Law. The Court ruled that the delegation of powers to the Panel is only permissible for decisions on the EFSF buying up sovereign bonds on the secondary markets.
Obligations of hosting service providers to protect third-party intellectual property according to the judgment of the European Court of Justice of 16 February 2012 (case no. C-360/10)
In a judgment of principle of 16 February 2012, the Court of Justice of the European Union was asked to rule on whether it is compatible with European Union law for a court order to be issued to a hosting service provider operating as a social network that requires it to introduce a preventative general filter system at its own expense to log all the data of a network’s users for the purpose of preventing the unlawful use of musical, cinematographic or audiovisual works.
Reserves of the statutory pension scheme
On account of Germany’s good economic performance and the increase in employment, the reserves of the statutory pension insurance scheme have grown in the last few years. The sustainability reserve is approaching the prescribed maximum value of 1.5 months of expenditure.
Programme of the 2012 Danish Presidency of the EU Council
On January 1, Denmark took over the Presidency of the Council of the European Union from Poland for the first half of 2012. The programme of the Presidency is divided into four themes: a responsible Europe, a dynamic Europe, a green Europe and a safe Europe. Even as a non-euro country, the Danish Presidency aims to use these priorities to help solve the economic and financial crisis.
E-Books
An electronic book (also e-book, ebook, digital book) is a publication in digital form and readable on e-readers, computers or other digital devices. Forecasts indicate a growing demand for digital content around the world. E-books will become established as a further book format in addition to paperbacks and hardcover. The shift to e-books and digital publishing is challenging the basic models of copyright and contracts that underlie the functioning of book markets.
Council of Europe Convention on the counterfeiting of medical products
On 28 October 2011 in Moscow, Germany signed the Council of Europe Convention on the Counterfeiting of Medical Products and Similar Crimes Involving Threats to Public Health of 4 August 2011. The purpose of the Convention is to introduce substantive criminal law provisions in the member states of the Council of Europe to provide protection against counterfeit medical drugs as well as their supply and trade in them. The Council of Europe’s Convention is essentially born of an initiative of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. A recommendation was made to the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe on 20 April 2007. It called upon the member states of the Council of Europe to create a specific legal framework for dealing with counterfeit medical drugs.