UNI NOVA – Research Magazine of the University of Basel
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Column
Goethe’s “Faust”: a dangerous pact with the Devil.
Text: Anne Spang / My book: Biologist Anne Spang recommends «Faust» by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
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Dossier
On urban and rural life.
Text: Manuel Herz / Even as the borders between urban and rural areas become more permeable, we remain a long way from worldwide complete urbanization.
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Dossier
Basel, its population and the city walls.
Text: Jörg Becher / Historians are investigating how the spatial development of Basel since the Middle Ages has affected social life in the city and vice versa.
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Dossier
New housing for social change.
Text: Samuel Schlaefli / Co-operative living is back en vogue. A Basel-based sociologist is following the development of new housing projects and researching their innovative and socially transformative potential.
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Dossier
Where the life sciences are concentrated.
Text: Christoph Dieffenbacher / As one of the world’s leading locations for life sciences, the Basel region is home to a cluster of companies and organizations that not only compete with one another but also engage in cooperation. These are the findings of a new research study in the field of geography.
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Dossier
City districts: shifting spaces.
Text: Christoph Dieffenbacher / Cities are structured into different districts. A human geographer has been exploring the characteristics of Basel’s neighborhoods.
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Dossier
Neighborhoods 2.0
Text: Samuel Schlaefli / Are neighborhoods becoming less important in an individualized and increasingly mobile society? Not according to cultural anthropologist Christina Besmer, who claims that they are simply changing form as diversity grows and society is digitalized.
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Dossier
A critical take on sedentarism.
Text: Samuel Schlaefli / The expectation that “migrants” should become actively involved in the local community of the urban district in which they live is often at odds with their mobility patterns and motivations.
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Dossier
The lives of cross-border commuters.
Text: Tobias Ehrenbold / Some 320,000 commuters – twice as many as 20 years ago – cross the border into Switzerland for work. Sociologist Cédric Duchêne-Lacroix takes a closer look at the complex lives of cross-border commuters.