Könyvek - Tanulmánykötetek - idegen nyelvű (RKI)
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Browsing Könyvek - Tanulmánykötetek - idegen nyelvű (RKI) by Author "Horváth, Gyula (szerk.)"
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- ItemDevelopment strategies in the Alpine-Adriatic region(Centre for Regional Studies Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1993) Horváth, Gyula (szerk.)
- ItemEuropean challenges and Hungarian responses in regional policy(Centre for Regional Studies Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1994) Hajdú, Zoltán (szerk.); Horváth, Gyula (szerk.)
- ItemRegional policy and local governments(Centre for Regional Studies of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1991) Horváth, Gyula (szerk.)In September 1990 Hungarian and Estonian researchers came together to a round-table talk in Pecs, the regional centre of Southern Hungary. Economists, jurists, political scientists and geographers of the Centre for Regional Studies of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and of the Institute of Economics of the Estonian Academy of Sciences expounded their research results and exchanged ideas on the subject of regional policy and the development and work of local self-government communities. In both countries there have been requirements of there fundamental changes accumulated in past decades: change to a post-industrial society, structural and technological change in economy and change of social paradigm. The democratic transformation has opened merely the doors to the socio-economic modernization in both countries. The way there, however, is today for the most part unknown and thereare several unknown political factors influencing the tendency of development. Regional and settlement development has come to crucial cross-roads both in Hungary and Estonia. The period of fast town-growth and settlement concentration has come to an end as well. It is the turning-point of the new settlement-forming process as well that gives ground to the beginning of a new era of regional policy. What should the regional policy of the new economic system be like, in what way should it help the restoration of Hungarian and Estonian national markets, how can it serve best the macro- and microeconomic reintegration into the growth centres of Europe, in what way should the settlement function under market terms (conditions), what should the relationship between the local authority and the central state be like and what direction should the regional development policy take? The participants of this round-table conference tried to give answers to all these questions and the answers given to the various issues are published in this volume.
- ItemRegional transformation processes in the Western Balkan countries(Centre for Regional Studies of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 2011) Horváth, Gyula (szerk.); Hajdú, Zoltán (szerk.)
- ItemRegions and cities in the global world: Essays in honour of György Enyedi(Centre for Regional Studies Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 2000) Horváth, Gyula (szerk.)
- ItemThe Routledge handbook to regional development in Central and Eastern Europe(Routledge, 2017) Lux, Gábor (szerk.); Horváth, Gyula (szerk.)Since the fall of state socialism, the East-Central European (ECE) group of countries - Bulgaria, Czechia, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia and Romania - have undergone new processes of socio-economic restructuring, leading to new patterns of regional differentiation and development. Influenced by a combination of inherited and newly emerging factors, territorial disparities have been on the rise. Examples of catching-up with western EU member states in the capital cities and a handful of successful regions are contrasted by the re-emergence of deep socio-economic problems in traditionally underdeveloped peripheries and newly hollowed-out regions still struggling with the legacies of industrial decline and the loss of economic functions. These differences, reflected in several fields (e.g. competitiveness, social cohesion, governance and sustainability), shape the new national and sub-national dividing lines of post-crisis Europe. Taking a comparative approach, this volume delivers a comprehensive view on the complex system of regional development within ECE. Focussing on the different aspects of restructuring, the authors identify the common features of spatial restructuring, as well as the underlying patterns of socio-economic differentiation, showing the ECE group to be just as heterogeneous as the EU-15. Particular attention is paid to development processes after EU-accession, and particularly the 2008-2009 crisis, which has raised new questions about the sustainability of the dominant post-transition paradigm of development.