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- ItemCities After Transition - 9th International Urban Geographies of Post-Communist States Conference: Book of Abstracts(Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences, Centre of Geography, 2022) Berki, Márton (szerk.); Bottlik, Zsolt (szerk.); Gentile, Michael (szerk.); Kőszegi, Margit (szerk.); Nagy, Gábor (szerkesztő); Timár, Judit (szerk.); Tolnai, Gábor (szerk.); Virág, Tünde (szerk.)
- ItemCohesion and development policy in Europe(Institute for Regional Studies, Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 2015) Bodor, Ákos (szerk.); Grünhut, Zoltán (szerk.)
- ItemDevelopment strategies in the Alpine-Adriatic region(Centre for Regional Studies Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1993) Horváth, Gyula (szerk.)
- ItemEnvironmental policy and practice in Eastern and Western Europe(Centre for Regional Studies, 1995) Fodor, István (szerk.); Walker, Gordon P. (szerk.)
- ItemEuropean challenges and Hungarian responses in regional policy(Centre for Regional Studies Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1994) Hajdú, Zoltán (szerk.); Horváth, Gyula (szerk.)
- ItemFlows of Resources in the Regional Economy in the Age of Digitalisation : Proceedings of the 7th CERS Conference(Magyar Regionális Tudományi Társaság, 2020) Gál, Zoltán (szerk.); Kovács, Sándor Zsolt (szerk.); Páger, Balázs (szerk.)
- ItemThe Győr Automotive District(Universitas-Győr Nonprofit Kft., 2014) Csizmadia, Zoltán (szerk.); Dusek, Tamás (szerk.)
- ItemHungarian spaces and places: Patterns of transition(Centre for Regional Studies of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 2005) Barta, Györgyi (szerk.); G. Fekete, Éva (szerk.); Szörényiné Kukorelli, Irén (szerk.); Timár, Judit (szerk.)Although a decade and a half has passed, Hungary's transition from state socialísm to capitalism and the switchover to market economy and democracy are far from being a closed issue for anyone striving to understand economic, social, political and spatial processes in the early years of the 21st century and place them in the current global processes of transformation. How long will it take for a society that is, with respect to its operation, ridden with all the problems of transition to produce spatial forms that are not simply different from their former socialist counterparts, but expressly capitalistic, i.e. for spatial processes to pass through the stage of transition, in a new system of parliamentary democracy and under the conditions of market economy? If there exists `postsocialist' production of space, what are its characteristics and what are the characteristics of its end-products? Seeking an answer to these and similar questions, this book, adopting two approaches, provides an outline of a few aspects of the spatial context of transition, while offering a new dimension to contemporary politological, sociological and economic research in Hungary and, in part, East Central Europe: 20 chapters in the first three parts are devoted to some spatial aspects, the geography and direct and indirect spatial impacts of (regional) political, economic and social transitions, 13 chapters in the next two parts focus on spatial processes themselves, taking stock of new changing patterns of spaces, places and uneven development in Hungary.
- ItemHungary : society, state, economy and regional structure in transition(Centre for Regional Studies Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1993) Hajdú, Zoltán (szerk.)
- ItemInnovationsfördersysteme: Handbuch für Kleinst- und Kleinunternehmen(MTA KRTK RKI Nyugat-magyarországi Tudományos Osztály, 2014) Lados, Mihály (szerk.); Kovács, Gábor (szerk.)
- ItemKülönböző fotovillamos rendszerek regionális hatásai = Regional impacts of different photovoltaic systems = Utjecaj fotonaponskih sustava na regiju(IDResearch Kft. - Publikon, 2014) Varjú, Viktor (szerk.); Pelin, Denis (szerk.); Šljivac, Damir (szerk.); Topić, Danijel (szerk.)
- ItemObnovljivi izvori energije i energetska učinkovitost za ruralna područja(MTA KRTK Institute for Regional Studies, 2018) Topić, Danijel (szerk.); Horváthné Kovács, Bernadett (szerk.); Varjú, Viktor (szerk.)
- ItemOur neighbourhoods' heroes: Stories on citizen participation in local development in European cities(Comparative Research Network, 2017) Keller, Judit (szerk.); Keresztély, Krisztina (szerk.); Virág, Tünde (szerk.)
- ItemPerspectives of renewable energy in the Danube region(Institute for Regional Studies, Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 2015) Ortiz, Willington (szerk.); Somogyvári, Márta (szerk.); Varjú, Viktor (szerk.); Fodor, István (szerk.); Lechtenböhmer, Stefan (szerk.)The energy production in the Danube region is predominantly based on fossil and nuclear energy sources contributing to climate change and endangering the ecosystem and lowering the quality of life. While in the last decade the share of renewable energy sources (RES) has grown steadily in final energy consumption, the national energy strategies in the Danube region are still mainly based on fossil and nuclear sources. The international financial crisis and the prolonged recession have pushed the issues of environmental protection and sustainable energy production in the region into the background. The existing RES technologies and plants are in some cases only pilot or small scale projects and they can not spread to their full extent due to political, legal, administrative, economic and technical barriers. Although a lot of studies try to quantify the Renewable Energy Source (RES) potential in the EU and worldwide, the methodology of assessment varies from country to country, from author to author and from time to time. This makes impossible to compare the results because of the diverting assumptions, time horizons and methodology (NREL 2012). Moreover, any informed decision on energy policy should consider the interlinks of energy supply and consumption to ecological, economic and social dimensions. Thus, the goal of the book is to advance in the sound assessment of RES potentials in the Danube Region as weil as in understanding the ecological, economic and societal aspects related with the deployment of those potentials.
- ItemPortrait of South Transdanubia : a region in transition(Centre for Regional Studies Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 2003) Hajdú, Zoltán (szerk.); Pálné Kovács, Ilona (szerk.)
- ItemRegional development processes and policies(Centre for Regional Studies Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1989) Berentsen, William H. (szerk.); Danta, Darrick R. (szerk.); Daróczi, Eta (szerk.)Technologic change, increased international economic competition, and associated reorganization of goods and service producing entities are resulting in a restructuring of economies in the developed world. In turn, this is causing changes in the interrelated socioeconomic and regional structures of nations’ societies and creating new sets of social and regional problems. Ironically, included among these problems are the need for some nations, whose restructuring has yet to begin in earnest (e.g., in Hungary), to hasten the restructuring process in order to remain competitive in the international market place. There is a clear need for regional planners to devise new types of policies to respond to the political, social, and economic challenges of the 1990s and to implement these policies in an era of lessened support and funding from central governments. This situation presents and opportunity for regional analysts to interpret pattern and process reflected in current trends in regional development in order to provide data and analysis for the policy debate. Increasingly, it would appear that despite the appeal of broad, relatively simple theoretical notions in regional development (e.g., Williamson’s inverted U-curve of regional inequalities or the core—periphery or Sunbelt—Frostbelt dichotomies), greater complexity exists in the pattern and process of development than has generally heretofore been acknowledged. Despite the relatively simple theoretical notions in regional development, there have evolved more sophisticated methodological and empirical approaches for the study of regions. The analytic approach is exemplified by many of the papers in Regional Development Processes and Policies, the second volume of the Regional Research Reports series. Themes that emerge are: (1) sectoral structure, enterprise organization, and regional change; (2) related issues of regional inequalities and policy responses to undesirable regional change (including inequality); (3) spatial patterns of population change in response to economic change; and (4) methodological approaches to regional analysis in complex environments.
- 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 processes and spatial structures in Hungary in the 1990's(Centre for Regional Studies Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1999) Hajdú, Zoltán (szerk.)
- 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.)
- ItemRegionalisation and regional policy in Central and Eastern Europe: Selected revised papers from the 21st NISPAcee Annual Conference May 16-18, 2013 Belgrade, Serbia(NISPAcee, 2014) Pálné Kovács, Ilona (szerk.); Profiroiu, Constantin Marius (szerk.)European territorial governance underwent a strong convergence process in the last decades relying on the relationships between the different tiers of governance as well as on common procedural and professional standards. The European cohesion policy has had an invasive effect on national administrations, especially in central and eastern European countries, where the territorial reforms were gene ra ted directly by the management regime of the Structural Funds. However, the motivation for accessing and acquiring European resources had not provided sufficient motivation for the transforma- tion of the territorial distribution of power. Regionalism and region- alisation is therefore not always identical to political decentralisa- tion. National characteristics strongly differentiate the meso-tier administrations. The changing boundaries, scales and actors could be an innovation contributing to the modernisation and decentrali- sation of territorial governance, but these could also be the driving forces behind centralisation and client networks. The book provides insight into several national examples in how diverse way the Euro- pean admininstrative space is shaping. More tolerance, variable geometry of governance systems and tailor-made institutions can provide the opportunity for CEE coun- tries to find their own "good" governance systems. The conference organised by NISPAcee in Belgrade in 2013 offered a platform for discussions on state-of-the-art and future regionalism, especially the po ints of view of central and south-eastern European countries and beyond.