38 results
Search Results
2. Mondi Expands Production of Paperbased EcoWicketBags to Meet Demand for Sustainable Packaging in Home and Personal Care Industry.
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KRAFT paper , *PAPER recycling , *DIAPERS - Published
- 2024
3. The Gramscian politics of Europe's rule of law crisis.
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Bohle, Dorothee, Greskovits, Béla, and Naczyk, Marek
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RULE of law , *CIVIL society , *LEADERSHIP ethics , *INSTITUTION building , *EUROPEAN Union law , *PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
The paper explores the long-term trajectory and the recent acceleration of the conflict over the rule of law in the EU. It focusses on the motivation of the two governments in Hungary and Poland to challenge European core values increasingly aggressively even directly at EU level despite the threat of significant material costs to both countries. Putting forward a Gramscian understanding, we argue that this radicalization is the result of a counter-hegemonic strategy that aims at replacing the liberal order with a new, nationalist, ultraconservative, Christian order on domestic and European levels. The paper traces core elements of this strategy which are either disputed or underestimated in existing literature, most importantly the pursuit of a core ideology and the massive and long-term investment into winning moral and cultural leadership through the penetration of civil society which precedes and complements electoral strategies and autocratic institution building. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Historical Development of the Constitutional Social Rights in the Hungarian Constitutional System in the 20th Century.
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Téglási, András
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SOCIAL & economic rights , *CIVIL rights , *HUNGARIANS , *LEGAL literature , *SOCIAL facts , *SOCIAL change - Abstract
The paper introduces the emergence, development of the constitutional social rights, and gives a historical overview to these rights in the 20th century. The aim of the paper is to show when the social idea and the appearance of social rights in the constitution began in the Hungarian constitutional system. However, according to the Hungarian legal literature, the first constitutional declaration of social rights in Hungary took place with the adoption of the 1949 constitution (Act XX of 1949), but as a result of my research I will show that in fact social provisions can be found in Article 6 of the so-called final Constitution of the Hungarian Soviet Republic. The paper shows how social provisions appeared in the so-called minor constitution of 1946, and then describes the social law provisions of the socialist constitution of 1949. The paper also shows how the social provisions of the 1949 Hungarian People's Republic Constitution changed between 1949 and 1989, and then describes in detail the changes in the social provisions of the Hungarian Constitution as a result of the political transition in 1989. The paper concludes with a description of the historical development of social rights in the 1989 constitution of the Hungarian People's Republic, without going into the new Fundamental Law in force in 2012. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
5. „Die doppelgesichtigen Gerichte" - Einige charakteristische Merkmale der neuen untergeordneten Gerichte (iudicia subalterna) in Ungarn und Siebenbürgen (1787 - 1790).
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Biczó, András
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MUNICIPAL courts , *JUDICIAL reform , *COURT system , *JUSTICE administration , *COURTS & courtiers ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In 1785, Joseph II set out to introduce „a new judicial order" (Novus ordo iudiciarius) in the Kingdom of Hungary and its neighbouring lands (Regnum Hungariae partes et eiusdem adnexas), as well as the Grand Principality of Transylvania (Magnus Principatus Transilvaniae). As a result of the Emperor's comprehensive and rapid judicial reform, which went against the historical constitution of the country and was therefore opposed by Hungarian and Transylvanian estates, new subordinate or subaltern (first-instance) courts (iudicia subalterna) were established in Hungary and Transylvania. On 1 September 1787, 38 courts in the Kingdom of Hungary and its neighbouring lands and 11 courts in the Grand Principality of Transylvania officially had to start their operation. The new judicial bodies took over the place of the former country courts (sedes iudiciariae i. e., sedriae), which were terminated on 31 August 1787. Although the iudicia subalterna were „short-lived" because the entire judicial system known as Novus ordo or Justitia Josephina collapsed in 1790, shortly after the death of Joseph II, the more in-depth examination of the josefinist first-instance courts is still considered a research field that has not been fully explored yet. However, the new judicial reform removed the sedriae, in fact, the distinction between iudicia subalterna and sedriae was not as sharp as it appeared, at first glance, from the rules related to the new first-instance courts. By analyzing archival sources of some iudicia subalterna and relevant secondary literature, the paper aims to shed light on the dual nature of these courts. The research uses the term „two-faced" to describe how the dividing line between iudicia subalterna and sedriae, royal court and municipal court, politica and iuridica could become blurred in Novus ordo. To illustrate this phenomenon, the paper primarily relies on the general concepts applied in studies that focus on the history of the court system and it uses the various names of the iudicia subalterna as a guideline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
6. The Hungarian Constitutional Court's practice on restrictions of fundamental rights during the special legal order (2020–2023).
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Erdős, Csaba and Tanács-Mandák, Fanni
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CONSTITUTIONAL courts , *CIVIL rights , *CONSTITUTIONAL law , *DEMOCRATIZATION , *LEGAL rights - Abstract
The paper deals with the practice of the Hungarian Constitutional Court regarding the restrictions of fundamental rights during the state of danger between 2020 and 2023. The state of danger – which is a type of special legal order in Hungary – was first introduced in March 2020 due to Covid-19. The rules of the Fundamental Law related to the special legal order reserve the Government the opportunity of broader restrictions on certain fundamental rights than in a normal legal order. It was the first period when the Constitutional Court could have established its practice and defined its own role in a special legal order, since the democratic transition in Hungary. The need for the interpretation of the constitutional rules on special legal order never applied before has posed a significant challenge to the Constitutional Court. The paper first examines the development of the constitutional rules on special legal order situations since the democratic transition, then reviews the most important parts of the Constitutional Court's practice on the cases related to the restrictions of fundamental rights in special legal order with a focus on the elements of the test used for checking the constitutionality of the challenged items of legislation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Problematic usage of the internet among Hungarian elementary school children: a cross-sectional study.
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Szapary, Adam, Feher, Gergely, Radvanyi, Ildiko, Fejes, Eva, Nagy, Gabor Daniel, Jancsak, Csaba, Horvath, Lilla, Banko, Zoltan, Berke, Gyula, and Kapus, Krisztian
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SCHOOL children , *SCIENTIFIC literature , *INTERNET , *CROSS-sectional method , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *THERAPEUTIC touch - Abstract
Introduction: Problematic usage of the internet (PUI) is perhaps one of the most frequently studied phenomena of the 21st century receiving increasing attention in both scientific literature and the media. Despite intensive research there have been relatively few meaningful studies among elementary school students in Hungary and worldwide, who may be considered as a high-risk population with regard to problematic internet use. The aim of our study was to carry out a complex research focusing on the prevalence and risk factors of PUI among elementary school children aged 10–15 years (Grade 5–8). Methods: Demographics included were gender, age, place of stay, type of residence, family type, parental education, start of internet use, used devices, daily internet use, purpose of internet use, internet accounts, ways of keeping in touch with friends and sporting activities. PUI was evaluated using the paper-based version of the Potentially Problematic Use of the Internet Questionnaire. Results: Overall, 2000 paper-based questionnaires were successfully delivered and the final analysis included 1168 responses (overall response rate 58.4%). Mean age was 12.55 ± 1.24 years. Female gender (OR = 2.760, p = 0,006, CI 95% 0.065 to 0.384), younger age (11–12 years) (OR = 3.812, p < 0.001, 95% CI: 1.747–4.731), early exposure to the internet (OR = 3.466, p = 0.001, 95% CI 1.535–5.446), living in a small village (OR = 1.081, p = 0.002, 95% CI 1.041–1.186) urgency to answer online (OR = 4.677, p < 0.001, 95% CI: 2.714–6.639), decreased frequency of personal contact with friends (OR = 2.897, p = 0.004, 95% CI: 1.037–1.681), spending more than 6 h online (OR = 12.913, p < 0.001, 95% CI: 10.798–14.892), morning and nighttime internet use (OR = 3.846, p < 0.001, CI 95% 1.886–5.810) and never doing any sports (OR = 2.016, p = 0.044, 95% CI: 1.050–3.354) were independently associated with problematic internet use. Conclusions: Based on the results of our questionnaire survey more than 10% seemed to be problematic users in our study population, which is a relatively high rate. Early exposure to the internet as well as younger age were strongly related to this phenomenon. Duration of being online as well as daily time interval of internet use are important predisposing factors. Scarcely studied social factors such as being online at the expense of personal relationships and the lack of physical activity should be payed more attention to prevent the development of PUI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Multi-decadal atmospheric carbon dioxide measurements in Central Europe, Hungary.
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Haszpra, László
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GLOBAL warming , *ATMOSPHERIC carbon dioxide , *SUMMER , *GREENHOUSE gases - Abstract
The paper reviews and evaluates a 30-year-long atmospheric CO2 data series measured at Hegyhátsál tall-tower greenhouse gas monitoring site, a member of WMO GAW, NOAA, and ICOS networks (id. code: HUN). The paper also gives the technical description of the monitoring system, and that of the physical environment of the station. This low elevation (248 m above m.s.l.), mid-continental Central European site shows a 3.90±0.83 µmol mol‑1 offset relative to the latitudinally representative marine boundary layer reference concentration presumably due to the European net anthropogenic emissions. The long-term trend (2.20 µmol mol‑1 year‑1) closely follows the global tendencies. In the concentration growth rate, the ENSO effect is clearly detectable with a 6–7 months lag-time. The summer diurnal concentration amplitude is slightly decreasing due to the faster-than-average increase of the nighttime concentrations, which is related to the warming climate. The warming climate also caused a 0.96±0.41 day year‑1 advance in the beginning of the summer CO2-deficit season in the first half of the measurement period, which did not continue later. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Characteristics and observed seasonal changes in Cold Air Outbreaks in Hungary using station data (1901-2020).
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MIKES, MÁRK ZOLTÁN, PIECZKA, ILDIKÓ, and DEZSŐ, ZSUZSANNA
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SEASONS , *METEOROLOGICAL stations , *WINTER storms , *EXTREME weather , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
In this paper, we investigated Cold Air Outbreaks (CAOs) in Hungary using temperature data from ten weather stations located near populous Hungarian cities. Our main motivation for performing this research was the fact that in this rapidly changing climate, these events continue to represent a threat to infrastructure and human life, such as the outbreaks experienced in early 2021 (e.g., Texas, USA) and late 2022 (Winter Storm Elliott). In addition, no comprehensive study of CAOs in Hungary has been conducted using station data. The definition of CAO used in this paper is that the daily mean temperature had to be in the lower 10th percentile of the daily climatology for five consecutive days, and we allowed a maximum two-day gap between periods matching the criteria above, after which we merged events together. We found that the number of CAOs in Hungary decreased considerably in recent decades (due to increasing mean temperatures), and the climates of the investigated stations became increasingly homogenous. Developing our understanding of CAOs around the world is important because, due to climate change, their seasonal distribution may change in a way that negatively impacts our life and economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Global Competitive Strategies: Assessing the Role of Marketing Tools in SME Internationalization and Financial Performance.
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Civelek, Mehmet, Ključnikov, Aleksandr, Hruška, Roman, Světlík, Jaroslav, and Vavrečka, Vladimír
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MARKETING , *FINANCIAL performance , *SMALL business , *COMMUNICATION in marketing , *GLOBALIZATION , *SUPPLIERS - Abstract
Although small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are highly important for producing highvalue-added innovative and intermediary goods and play a crucial role in being suppliers of large enterprises, their financial restraints cause them to encounter problems regarding their internationalization process and financial performance. As a dynamic capability of Resourcebased View theory (RBV), the usage of marketing communication tools (MCTs) by SMEs, such as social media (SM), websites, telemarketing, direct mail, SMS campaigns, and Google Adwords, increases the competitiveness of SMEs and might enable them to reduce their financial performance and export concerns. However, the usage of these tools can differ depending on the firm's country of origin since countries have various socio-economic and cultural conditions that affect the competitiveness of firms and their marketing communication approaches to their export and financial performance. In this regard, this paper aims to find international differences in the impact of the usage of MCTs on export and financial performance. This paper examines 1221 SMEs from Czechia, Slovakia, and Hungary for this aim. The researchers created an online questionnaire to collect data from randomly selected respondents in the research sample. The researchers also ran Binary Logistic Regression analyses for analysis purposes. Although this paper confirms international differences in the impact of MCTs on the export of SMEs, the effect of SM usage on the financial performance of SMEs does not differ depending on the SMEs' country of origin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. 'We need to stay alive': ethnicisation and shortage of farm labour in Hungary.
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Kovács, Katalin and Váradi, Monika Mária
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LABOR market , *AGRICULTURAL laborers , *AGRICULTURE , *ROMANIES , *PUBLIC works - Abstract
This article fills a gap in the international academic literature, which has little to say on agricultural labour in Central and Eastern European countries and especially Hungary. The paper reveals factors that determine the ethnicisation and problematic availability of seasonal agricultural labourers in Hungary, made up mainly, but not exclusively of people of Roma ethnicity, largely Ukrainian or Romanian citizens from Hungarian minorities in Trans-Carpathia or Transylvania. The flexible oscillation of low-skilled labour across different economic sectors explains why a shortage peaked between 2016 and 2019 when, in addition to agriculture, the local states (through public works programmes) and industry (as post-crisis growth returned) competed for the same labour. The paper discusses findings from qualitative research, undertaken in an inner peripheral rural region, portraying the strategies and practices of local fruit-growing farmers to obtain labour, as well as diversify and mechanise. The study illustrates the mutual dependency of farmers and the local manual workforce. It is likely, however, that this mutuality will not last long: differentiation in farm structure will continue, some small orchards will disappear, large ones will become stronger and larger, and in doing so will not be able to avoid opting for migrant labour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Trait-based ecology of microalgae.
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B-Béres, Viktória, Naselli-Flores, Luigi, Padisák, Judit, and Borics, Gábor
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MICROALGAE , *CLIMATE extremes , *WATER management , *PHYCOLOGY , *BENTHOS - Abstract
This paper introduces and summarises the main outcomes of the 19th workshop of the International Association for Phytoplankton Taxonomy and Ecology held in Tiszafüred, Hungary, Tisza Balneum Hotel, from 23 to 30 September 2022. The selected theme of the workshop was "Trait-Based Approaches in Micro-Algal Ecology". The discussions presented during the workshop sessions resulted in the 18 articles contained in this Special Issue. There are 6 main thematic aspects developed by the participants: 1. Shape and size: are these traits easy to measure? 2. Spatial scales: when and where to look for microalgae? 3. Climate and extremes of ecological gradients: hot topics of this century. 4. Metaphyton and metaphytic habitats: life beyond plankton and benthos. 5. Microalgae in water management: phycology in practice. 6. Traditional and new methods: perspectives and comments. Trait-based approaches in microalgae ecology, although requiring further investigation and methodological development, represent a valid tool for refining the analysis of environmental variability in aquatic ecosystems. The papers presented in this Special Issue demonstrate that these approaches are extremely useful not only in the study of planktic algae but constitute a thoughtful method for the analysis of benthic and metaphytic microalgae in a wide variety of aquatic ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Socioeconomic determinants and reasons for non-acceptance to vaccination recommendations during the 3rd - 5th waves of the COVID-19 pandemic in Hungary.
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Ligeti, Anna Sára, Oroszi, Beatrix, Luca, Csaba, Bilics, Edit, Ágoston, József, Röst, Gergely, and Koltai, Júlia
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COVID-19 pandemic , *HEALTH attitudes , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *ATTITUDES toward illness , *VACCINATION of children - Abstract
Background: In Hungary, although six types of vaccines were widely available, the percentage of people receiving the primary series of COVID-19 vaccination remained below the EU average. This paper investigates the reasons for Hungary's lower vaccination coverage by exploring changing attitudes towards vaccination, socio-demographic determinants, and individual reasons for non-acceptance during the 3rd - 5th pandemic waves of COVID-19. Methods: The study's empirical analysis is based on representative surveys conducted in Hungary between February 19, 2021, and June 30, 2022. The study used a total of 17 surveys, each with a sample size of at least 1000 respondents. Binomial logistic regression models were used to investigate which socio-demographic characteristics are most likely to influence vaccine hesitancy in Hungary. The study analysed 2506 open-ended responses to identify reasons for vaccine non-acceptance. The responses were categorised into four main categories and 13 sub-categories. Results: Between the third and fifth wave of the pandemic, attitudes towards COVID-19 vaccination have significantly changed. Although the proportion of vaccinated individuals has increased steadily, the percentage of individuals who reported not accepting the vaccine has remained almost unchanged. Socio-demographic characteristics were an important determinant of the observed vaccine hesitancy, although they remained relatively stable over time. Individuals in younger age groups and those with lower socioeconomic status were more likely to decline vaccination, while those living in the capital city were the least likely. A significant reason behind vaccine refusal can undoubtedly be identified as lack of trust (specifically distrust in science), facing an information barrier and the perception of low personal risk. Conclusion: Although compulsory childhood vaccination coverage is particularly high in Hungary, voluntary adult vaccines, such as the influenza and COVID-19 vaccines, are less well accepted. Vaccine acceptance is heavily affected by the social-demographic characteristics of people. Mistrust and hesitancy about COVID-19 vaccines, if not well managed, can easily affect people's opinion and acceptance of other vaccines as well. Identifying and understanding the complexity of how vaccine hesitancy evolved during the pandemic can help to understand and halt the decline in both COVID-19 and general vaccine confidence by developing targeted public health programs to address these issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Cacophony in conceptualizing and operationalizing ethnicity: the case of Roma in Hungary.
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Messing, Vera and Pap, András L.
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RACE , *SECONDARY research , *DATA protection , *ELECTRONIC data processing , *ETHNIC differences , *ETHNICITY , *OPERATIONAL definitions - Abstract
Using secondary research from the political, education, and employment fields, this paper aims to demonstrate the consequences of confused and overlapping conceptualizations of the Roma in Hungary as an ethnic group, a racialized minority, a national minority, and a socially disadvantaged group. The resulting cacophony of operationalizing schemes blurs clarity and constrains efficient measures for inclusion policies. In social sciences and law, the purpose of classification is to help us understand the internal logic of concepts. Thus, classification has significant consequences, as it can imperil policy goals. Through examining the case of the Hungarian Roma, the article demonstrates how the confused conceptualization of ethnicity, race, and nationality and ill-applied methods of operationalization have vastly detrimental consequences. In addition, it is argued that many concerns regarding ethnic data processing that policy actors voice are legally unfounded, and pre-existing data protection regimes allow the processing of ethno-racial data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Military Criminal Sanctions and the Peculiarities Related to their Execution in Hungary (1930 - 1948).
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Pallo, József
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LEGAL documents , *COURTS-martial & courts of inquiry , *MILITARY reform , *MILITARY law , *JUSTICE administration , *MILITARY personnel , *ACHIEVEMENT - Abstract
The goal of the author is to investigate a slightly obscure topic: the practice of interwar military justice in Hungary and its related questions, with an emphasis on matters concerning the peculiarities on how to implement them. The bill - which came into effect in 1930 - was born amidst uncommon historical conditions, since the Trianon Peace Treaty basically degraded Hungary into a quasi-numb entity. It is without a doubt that the decade-long consolidation - and its achievements - that came after can be regarded as one of the most prominently successful periods of the era's political history. The historical pressure, the necessity of being able to defend ourselves along with the importance of national security demanded that our army remained intact, despite the prohibitions that surrounded its existence. This called for ensuring that the legal environment was modernized enough to be capable of supporting this goal. The system of regulations inherited from the Austro-Hungarian monarchy was subjected to scrutiny and as a result ended up as a state-of-the art framework that even surpassed the European standards it aimed to match. This paper, putting emphasis on the most important dogmatic junctions, will further review these regulations - substantive or procedural contents alike -. After a brief diversion towards taking a glimpse into the historical situation, we will introduce the system of sanctions and punishments pertaining to military personnel, and proceed with the regulations related to their implementation, which in turn will offer a glimpse into the contemporary philosophy that surrounded military justice and procedure. In accordance, further regulations containing provisions regarding infrastructure, personnel, accommodation, and institution security in general would emerge. The author of the article provides a summary of the most important current relevant legal provisions. It touches upon the military justice system and its subsystems, introduces the more substantive procedural rules, and concludes with an argument on practical implementation. It will also raise the theoretical question on a future independent regulation which would take place in accordance with the reforms of the Hungarian military and the national strategy on defense. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
16. Conservative Evaluation of Fault Displacement Hazard for a Nuclear Site in Case of Insufficient Data on the Fault Activity.
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Katona, Tamás János
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EARTHQUAKE hazard analysis , *NUCLEAR power plants , *SEISMOGRAMS , *SAFETY regulations , *HAZARDS , *NATURAL disaster warning systems - Abstract
The safety regulations require periodic reviews of the site hazards when operating nuclear power plants. If any indications of Quaternary fault activity are revealed, the fault displacement hazard should be evaluated. Signs of paleo-liquefaction were recently found at the nuclear site of Paks, Hungary, indicating the late-Pleistocene activity of the fault crossing the site. Except for this, there are no historical or instrumental records of earthquakes at the fault, and the micro-seismic and GPS monitoring results do not indicate activity either. Despite a thorough site investigation of over 40 years, the indications are uncertain and insufficient for defining the fault activity, as required for a probabilistic fault displacement hazard analysis. This paper develops and applies a simplified conservative hazard evaluation method of average fault displacement that allows an in-time decision regarding the safety relevance of the hazard. Geometrical simplification is possible since the fault crosses the site. The fault's activity is evaluated using magnitude–frequency relations of the area sources developed for probabilistic seismic hazard analysis. The total probability theorem is applied, and different strike-slip fault scaling relations are considered while calculating the probability of non-zero surface displacement, fault rupture length, and average displacement. The fault displacement hazard curve is defined and compared with earlier studies for the same site. Since the late recognition of active faults cannot be excluded at several operating plant sites, the methodology can be applied in the future beyond a single application for the Paks site in Hungary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. A Hungarian Centrum Hospital's COVID-19 Response Strategy in Light of International Management Experiences.
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Schandl, László, Kiss, Barnabás, Lengyel, Zoltán, Kis, János Tibor, and Winkler, Gábor
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COVID-19 pandemic , *PUBLIC health , *MEDICAL care , *DECISION making - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has placed enormous pressure on healthcare systems. In the first line of the "war" against the virus, hospitals tried to maintain their general operations, while supplementing their services with COVID-19 patient care. To tackle the new difficulties, hospitals had to develop strategic response plans, and were in need of finding the most effective management structure for their institution. The focus of this paper is the aforementioned management structures. After overviewing the international literature, we identified three different approaches and we named them the Horizontal, Vertical, and Intermedier Approach. The separation is based on the following features: decision making, information distribution, command forwarding, intra-hospital communication channels, hierarchy, and control. After summarizing the international experiences, we introduce a Hungarian centrum hospital's approach, as the institution was assigned to fulfil COVID-19 centrum hospital duties in the middle of the first wave. The North-Buda Szent János Central hospital was in need of restructuring their management structure, and the leadership decided to transform it into a hierarchical, vertical structure, operating with centralized decision making and personal control. This control–command system idea came from the hospital's Internist Head Coordinator Physician, who is the first author of our article, and had serious military medicine experiences (in Afghanistan). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. The White-backed Woodpecker Dendrocopos leucotos in Hungary: results of a two-year nationwide survey.
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Molnár, Márton, Gorman, Gerard, and Schmidt, András
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WOODPECKERS , *ENDANGERED species , *KEYSTONE species , *FOREST management - Abstract
This paper summarizes a two-year (2021 and 2022) survey which sought to determine the breeding population of White-backed Woodpecker (Dendrocopos leucotos) in Hungary. The survey was initiated by the Hungarian Woodpecker Group of MME/BirdLife Hungary and was the first to be conducted nationwide on this species. All hill ranges where the species was historically known to occur were visited. A total of 31 observers were involved, and 102 UTM squares in which White-backed Woodpeckers were known to breed, or potentially breed, were visited. The results suggest that the Hungarian breeding population of this endangered species ranges between 480 and 800 pairs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Conditional environmentalism of right-wing populism in power: ideology and/or opportunities?
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Caiani, Manuela and Lubarda, Balša
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RIGHT-wing populism , *ENVIRONMENTALISM , *ECOLOGICAL modernization , *IDEOLOGY , *CIVIL service positions , *ECOLOGY - Abstract
This study focuses on right-wing populists (RWP) in power and their discourses and policy preferences on environmental issues. Through a content and frame analysis of electoral manifestos, party communication and semi-structured, in-depth interviews with party representatives, this paper examines whether ideological or contextual factors (political opportunities) determine RWP positioning on the environment. By focusing on the only three cases in Europe of RWP in government in a prominent position, i.e. alone or as a major coalition partner (also representing key ideological varieties of RWP), Law and Justice – PiS in Poland; Fidesz in Hungary and Lega in Italy, this study shows that ideological positions (and especially differences) are less important in determining RWP environmental discourses than are opportunities and institutionalization. Moreover, we also find that the shared features across these actors reflect a conditional, 'yes-but' environmentalism of these parties, embedded in the discourse of ecological modernization and oppositional, Manichean framing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Low replicability of testing the stress–dominance hypothesis using a trait convergence/divergence pattern.
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Pakgohar, Naghmeh, Barabás, Sándor, Ćuk, Mirjana, Csecserits, Anikó, Gyalus, Adrienn, Lengyel, Attila, Lhotsky, Barbara, Mártonffy, András, Ónodi, Gábor, Rédei, Tamás, and Botta‐Dukát, Zoltán
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NUMBERS of species , *LEAF area , *COMMUNITY organization , *HYPOTHESIS , *GRASSLANDS , *FOREST productivity - Abstract
Aim s : Ecological theories predict that assembly processes are driven by two deterministic forces: environmental filtering and limiting similarity. Their relative importance under different environmental conditions is still not completely obvious. Therefore, in this paper the predictions of the stress–dominance hypothesis (SDH) are tested in several sites. Location: Kiskunság in Hungary, and Deliblato Sands in Serbia, Central Europe. Methods: We studied a productivity gradient from open sand grasslands to meadows. The cover of species was estimated visually in plots with a size of 2 m × 2 m, resulting in 344 vegetation plots. Four trait values (height, seed mass, specific leaf area, and leaf size) were collected from field measurements and databases. The weighted median of interspecies distances in traits (a robust alternative to Rao's quadratic entropy) was used to determine functional diversity. The convergence and divergence of each trait in communities were evaluated by randomization tests, and effect sizes were calculated for each plot. We used hierarchical general additive models (HGAM) to determine whether the trend of effect sizes along the productivity gradient is the same in different sites. Results: The HGAM approach indicated that trait variations follow global trends but are influenced by site‐specific effects. The exception is seed mass, whose variation did not have any trend. Both environmental filtering and limiting similarity exist in the communities, and mainly a shift from trait convergence to a divergence pattern along the productivity gradient was observed. Conclusion: The results are mainly congruent with theoretical expectations, but the results from the different sites did not lead to the same conclusion. Although traits follow a global trend, the site effect is not negligible. Critical evaluation of SDH using trait convergence/divergence patterns for exploring rules of community assembly points out the weaknesses of this hypothesis. Therefore, alternative ways of studying trait patterns should be found to better understand community organization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. The Missing Scale: "Eastern Europe" in Hungary's Geostrategic Representations.
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Balazs, Adam Bence
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HUMAN migrations , *INTERNATIONAL alliances , *COUNTRIES , *RECOLLECTION (Psychology) , *NATIONAL character , *GEOPOLITICS ,WESTERN countries - Abstract
Since 2010, with Viktor Orbán's return to power, Hungary has progressively turned into an antidemocratic regime through a well-thought process of state and democracy capture. This slide has come along with chimeric narratives about national identity. Consecutive narratives about the nation and the country's sense of belonging have given the impression that Hungary is moving on the map, as the Orbán regime has been locating itself more and more explicitly against the West. During the migration crisis, 'Central Europe' was at the centre of Orbán's cultural map, as he extrapolated his ideology to the East-Central European macro-region, hoping to turn it into a region against the European establishment. Budapest's tactical moves in the Western Balkans have gained importance as Orbán is increasingly isolated in the EU community. On the global scale, the regime has mixed trade and diplomacy with tying political alliances in Central Asia and beyond. These narratives do not result in a system. However, there is a common denominator in Orbán's consecutive discourses on Hungary's geopolitical place and role: anti-Western and anti-EU convictions flow through the opportunistic contradictions of national propaganda. In a contradictory way, only an EU member state could proceed to state and democracy capture and become famous for it, giving the impression that the small, peripherical Eastern European state is more important than it is. It is an EU member that has fallen into Russia's arms to propagate pro-Kremlin narratives in and outside the EU. In this paper, I will examine the geopolitical narratives used by the Orbán regime and show how Budapest's very sense of scale has got lost in the process. Indeed, it is Hungary's precarious location on the map that the regime seems to have forgotten about and has reached this point at the time of renewed Russian aggression in Hungary's direct neighbourhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Experimental Study of Novel Demountable Shear Connectors for Steel-concrete Composite Buildings.
- Author
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Király, Krisztián and Dunai, László
- Subjects
- *
STEEL-concrete composites , *COMPOSITE construction , *CONSTRUCTION slabs , *CIRCULAR economy , *COMPOSITE structures , *RESEARCH & development projects - Abstract
Sustainable composite structures in building construction are assembled using demountable structural elements that can be reused in the circular economy. The current research and development project, in cooperation with Budapest University of Technology and Economics and KÉSZ Group, bim.GROUP Ltd., Hungary, aims to design a novel demountable steel-concrete composite slab and frame system for buildings. The key component of this construction is the demountable shear connector. In the current research, novel bolted shear connectors with embedded bolts and threaded rods are developed and studied that can fit the applied technology of the industrial partner. One of the leading aspects of this connection is the consideration of bolt hole clearance, since it occurs initial slip and stiffness reduction of the composite beam. In the first phase of the research program, demountable and economical structural details were developed, which can reduce the stiffness reduction with the proper resistance and ductility features. To study the behavior of these shear connections, a push-out experimental program was designed and completed in March and April 2023. It is observed that novel shear connectors have a proper behavior with sufficient resistance and ductility, which is applicable according to the Eurocode 4 standard and fits the objectives of the research and development project. In the paper, the developed structural details and the push-out experimental program are presented with general results and statements besides a detailed evaluation of a specified specimen type. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Governance of religious diversity in Central Europe: A religious nationalism inspired illiberal turn in Hungary and Slovakia?
- Author
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Vékony, Dániel and Račius, Egdūnas
- Subjects
- *
RELIGIOUS diversity , *RELIGIOUS groups , *POLITICAL elites , *CHURCH & state , *PAPACY , *CHRISTIAN identity , *RELIGIOUS identity - Abstract
Central European countries with a historically dominant Roman Catholic heritage belong to a particular cluster in respect to the governance of religion. This paper focuses on Hungary and Slovakia and addresses the effect of religious nationalism on the regimes of governance of religion in the two countries. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, there was a brief period of neutral stance towards religion, which was characterized by liberal values. With the introduction of the bilateral Concordat agreements with the Holy See, both countries started to treat traditional Christian Churches preferentially. By the 2010s legislation in both countries created restrictive entry barriers for "new" religions. This created two or multi-tiered systems for "old" and "new" religions, in which the former enjoyed closer relationship with the state. As a result, the separation of church and state has become blurred. Preferentially treated churches reappeared in the public space as providers of certain educational and social services. Preferentially treated churches and the state developed asymmetrically interdependent relationships, the state having the upper hand. Meanwhile, increasingly populist and nationalist parties instrumentalized religion by involving Christianity in their nationalistic political discourse. This helped create a normative space, in which the state is able to give further preferential treatment to certain religious groups over others. The emphasis on Christian national identity underpinned these governments' narratives that conflates migration with security and Islam, which pushed those religious groups on the margins, which do not fit in the religious nationalist narrative of the increasingly right- and populism-leaning governing elite. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Exegi monumentum: monuments of Jews in public spaces in Budapest as texts (1880–1944).
- Author
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Pető, Andrea and Klacsmann, Borbála
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC spaces , *MONUMENTS , *WORLD War II , *NATIONAL character , *PUBLIC art , *JEWS , *STATUES - Abstract
The late 19th and early 20th centuries were a period when artistic endeavours, aimed at expressing a national identity, were thriving in Hungary. The Jewish minority of Budapest also found it important to be present in public spaces. A couple of years after the emancipation of Hungarian Jews, the first statues of Jewish personalities appeared on the streets of Budapest. Who were these statues dedicated to? Who were the artists commissioned, and who paid for them? What were the invisible texts beyond reading the statues as texts? What happened to the public monuments during the Second World War? This paper aims to respond to these questions as a part of a research project mapping Jewish interventions in public art in Budapest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Effect of Different Herbicides on Development and Productivity of Sweet White Lupine (Lupinus albus L.).
- Author
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Juhász, Csaba, Mendler-Drienyovszki, Nóra, Magyar-Tábori, Katalin, Radócz, László, and Zsombik, László
- Subjects
- *
LUPINUS albus , *HERBICIDES , *GREEN manure crops , *METRIBUZIN , *WEED control , *SEED yield - Abstract
White lupine (Lupinus albus L.) is a well-known green manure crop in Hungary, but the production of seeds can be badly impacted by weeds. The sweet white lupine 'Nelly' was grown on acidic sandy soil, and experimental plots were treated with different herbicides. Flumioxazin (0.06 kg ha−1), pendimethalin (5 L ha−1), dimethenamid-P (1.4 L ha−1), pethoxamid (2 L ha−1), clomazone (0.2 L ha−1), metobromuron (3 L ha−1), and metribuzin (0.55 L ha−1) were applied pre-emergence (1–2 days after sowing). Imazamox was also tested and applied post-emergence (1 L ha−1) when some basal leaves were clearly distinct (BBCH 2.3). In this paper, the weed control efficiency and the phytotoxicity of herbicides applied to lupine are examined. Vegetation index datasets were collected 12 times using a manual device and 2 times using an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). The phytotoxicity caused by herbicides was visually assessed on several occasions throughout the breeding season. The frequency of weed occurrence per treatment was assessed. The harvested seed yields, in kg ha−1, were analyzed after the seeds were cleaned. The herbicides metribuzin and imazamox caused extensive damage to white lupine. While pendimethalin, dimethenamid-P, pethoxamid, and clomazone were outstanding in several measured indicators, the final ranking which summarizes all the variables showed that only the pethoxamid and clomazone treatments performed better than the control. Metribuzin and imazamox were highly phytotoxic to white lupine. In the future, it would be appropriate to integrate more post-emergence active substances into trials, and the pre-emergence herbicides involved in this study should be further tested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Recovering from the first shock? Changes in suicidality during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic in a country with traditionally high levels of completed suicides.
- Author
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Balint, Lajos, Osvath, Peter, Rihmer, Zoltan, and Dome, Peter
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *SUICIDAL ideation , *SUICIDE risk factors , *SUICIDE , *SUICIDE statistics - Abstract
Hungary was among the few countries where suicidality increased in the first year of the COVID pandemic. In this study, we sought to investigate whether that elevated suicide mortality had changed by 2021, when the number of fatalities due to COVID-19 was much higher than in 2020. We used an interrupted time-series analysis with (quasi-) Poisson regression, controlling for linear trend and seasonal effects, to estimate the effect of the pandemic on the suicide rates of various subpopulations. For both pandemic years the changes in risk of suicide were compared to the period between 2015 and 2019. Although the pandemic had a significant adverse effect on suicidality in 2020 in the Hungarian total population and in males, by 2021 this effect had vanished. In the total population, those aged 25 years and older had elevated suicidality in 2020 but neither age group in the total population had elevated suicidality in 2021. In the total population, increased risks of suicide death could be observed among residents of the capital city (in 2020 and 2021), villages (in 2020), and - in terms of regions - "Central Hungary" (in 2020 and 2021). Only the risk of violent suicides was significantly higher for both the total and male populations (and only in 2020). We used non-individual level data. The increased suicidality in 2020 had abated by 2021. In the paper, we discuss the possible explanations for our findings. • It was feared that national suicide rates would increase during COVID-19 pandemic. • In the majority of countries the number of suicides was not higher than expected. • Hungary was among the few countries where suicidality increased in 2020. • We found that the increased suicidality of 2020 had abated by 2021. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Earthquake swarms near the Mór Graben, Pannonian Basin (Hungary): implication for neotectonics.
- Author
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Czecze, Barbara, Kalmár, Dániel, Kiszely, Márta, Süle, Bálint, and Fodor, László
- Subjects
- *
EARTHQUAKE swarms , *SEISMOLOGICAL stations , *SEISMIC networks , *NEOTECTONICS , *HIERARCHICAL clustering (Cluster analysis) ,HUNGARIAN history - Abstract
The central part of the Pannonian Basin is characterised by low to medium seismicity. North central Hungary is one of the most dangerous areas of the country in terms of earthquakes, which also includes the area of the Mór Graben where some of the largest earthquakes occurred in Hungary's history. Recent activity has been observed in the Mór Graben. It has been established that earthquake swarms occur quite frequently in the graben. To further study these events, we deployed a temporary seismic network that operated for 20 months. Using the temporary network stations as well as permanent stations from the Kövesligethy Radó Seismological Observatory and the GeoRisk Ltd. networks we registered 102 events of small magnitudes. In this paper, we demonstrate and compare three different event detection methods based on the registered waveforms by the permanent and temporary stations to find the optimal one to collect a complete swarm list in the Mór Graben. After the hierarchical cluster analysis, we relocated the hypocentres using a multiple-event algorithm. Our results demonstrate that the most successful detector in this case is the "Subspace detector." We managed to create a complete list of the events. Our results indicate that the Mór Graben is still seismically active. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. White plague among the "forgotten people" from the Barbaricum of the Carpathian Basin–Cases with tuberculosis from the Sarmatian-period (3rd–4th centuries CE) archaeological site of Hódmezővásárhely–Kenyere-ér, Bereczki-tanya (Hungary)
- Author
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Spekker, Olga, Kiss P., Attila, Kis, Luca, Király, Kitty, Varga, Sándor, Marcsik, Antónia, Schütz, Oszkár, Török, Tibor, Hunt, David R., and Tihanyi, Balázs
- Subjects
- *
TUBERCULOSIS , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *BACTERIAL diseases , *HIP joint - Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) is a bacterial infection that is well-known in the palaeopathological record because it can affect the skeleton and consequently leaves readily identifiable macroscopic alterations. Palaeopathological case studies provide invaluable information about the spatio-temporal distribution of TB in the past. This is true for those archaeological periods and geographical regions from when and where no or very few TB cases have been published until now–as in the Sarmatian period (1st–5th centuries CE) in the Barbaricum of the Carpathian Basin. The aim of our paper is to discuss five newly discovered TB cases (HK199, HK201, HK225, HK253, and HK309) from the Sarmatian-period archaeological site of Hódmezővásárhely–Kenyere-ér, Bereczki-tanya (Csongrád-Csanád county, Hungary). Detailed macromorphological evaluation of the skeletons focused on the detection of bony changes likely associated with different forms of TB. In all five cases, the presence of endocranial alterations (especially TB-specific granular impressions) suggests that these individuals suffered from TB meningitis. Furthermore, the skeletal lesions observed in the spine and both hip joints of HK225 indicate that this juvenile also had multifocal osteoarticular TB. Thanks to the discovery of HK199, HK201, HK225, HK253, and HK309, the number of TB cases known from the Sarmatian-period Carpathian Basin doubled, implying that the disease was likely more frequent in the Barbaricum than previously thought. Without the application of granular impressions, the diagnosis of TB could not have been established in these five cases. Thus, the identification of TB in these individuals highlights the importance of diagnostics development, especially the refinement of diagnostic criteria. Based on the above, the systematic macromorphological (re-)evaluation of osteoarchaeological series from the Sarmatian-period Carpathian Basin would be advantageous to provide a more accurate picture of how TB may have impacted the ancestral human communities of the Barbaricum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The first parliamentary appearance of National Socialism in Hungary in 1932.
- Author
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UDVARVOLGY, Zsolt András
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL socialism , *POLITICAL oratory - Abstract
In this paper, I present the circumstances of the birth of the first more significant national socialist party represented in the Hungarian parliament too, and the life and work of its founder and leader, Zoltán Meskó (1883-1959). Although the almost-unknown National Socialist Party held meetings in Hungary as early as the spring of 1922, and fascist, national, national socialist micro-parties and small movements proliferated like mushrooms in the late 1920s and the early 1930s, Zoltán Meskó, MP was the first to “raise the flag” in the Hungarian parliament on 16 June 1932. This article outlines the life of this strange and unconventional politician, who had once seen better days, was a former military officer, a hero of the First World War, a member of parliament since 1917, and briefly held several posts as a state secretary. I pay special attention to his speeches in parliament in 1932, to the articles in the daily newspaper of the party, the “Nemzet Szava” (Word of Nation), and to the early period of this peculiar “pro-government” organisation loyal to Governor Miklós Horthy1, the National Socialist Hungarian Agricultural Labourers’ and Workers’ Party. From the end of 1933, Meskó was in a downward spiral, losing his seat in parliament in 1935, but was re-elected as a deputy in 1939. From this period onwards, however, Meskó was almost insignificant in Hungarian domestic politics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
30. Bilingual and Multilingual Rhenian Donatus-Based Grammars from Upper Hungary.
- Author
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Buzássyová, Ľudmila Eliášová
- Subjects
- *
GRAMMAR , *BIBLIOGRAPHY , *TEXTBOOKS , *INTERTEXTUAL analysis , *PHILOLOGY - Abstract
This paper presents the outcomes of research on elementary Latin grammar textbooks called Donati – or Donatus-based grammars –, which were written/compiled or printed and also used in the upper part of the Kingdom of Hungary (roughly corresponding to present-day Slovakia) in the period between approximately the second half of the 17thcentury and the middle of the 19thcentury. The textbooks fall into two categories: 1) bilingual textbooks originally written by Johannes Rhenius, compiled and printed in Upper Hungary, as well as those that accurately reflected his bilingual concept; and 2) multilingual textbooks that only loosely followed Rhenius’ model and were compiled by Pavel Doležal (1700–1778) and modified again by Imre Dunay (1767–1838). The research aimed first at identifying all bi- and multilingual editions of the given type. In terms of methodology, this research balanced on the boundary between philology and retrospective bibliography. In addition to the primary focus, this research additionally explored areas that emerged in the context of the specific region of Upper Hungary: the changing social-historical, religious, and pedagogical environment in which these textbooks were created and to which they were adapted. In doing so, the article also clarifies the cross-linguistic contexts and selected intertextual relationships into which these texts entered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Soros's soldiers, slackers, and pioneers with no expertise? Discursive exclusion of environmental youth activists from the digital public sphere in Hungary and Czechia.
- Author
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Vochocová, Lenka, Rosenfeldová, Jana, Vancsó, Anna, and Neag, Annamária
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL activism , *DIGITAL technology , *PUBLIC sphere , *EVIDENCE gaps , *EXPERTISE , *PUBLIC spaces , *VIRTUAL communities - Abstract
Our paper fills the gap in research on online public representations of politically active youth by focusing on the discursive representations of Fridays for Future, a youth-led climate movement, in user generated content in Czechia and Hungary. By employing the childism approach, we aim to contribute to a better understanding of the exclusion of youth from the public sphere. Our qualitative analysis identified two exclusionary strategies: 1) normative roles attributed to youth; 2) labeling youth for allegedly holding aberrant values. We stress both similarities and differences in the two countries of Central and Eastern Europe, reflecting this region's historicopolitical features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Late Quaternary Paleoecology and Environmental History of the Hortobágy, an Alkaline Steppe in Central Europe.
- Author
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Szilágyi, Gábor, Gulyás, Sándor, Vári, Tamás Zsolt, and Sümegi, Pál
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL history , *STEPPES , *SODIC soils , *GLACIAL Epoch , *REGULATION of rivers , *PALEOECOLOGY - Abstract
Hungary's first national park was created in 1973 in the Hortobágy area to protect Europe's largest contiguous steppe area and its flora and fauna. The Hortobágy National Park—the Puszta was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List as a cultural landscape in 1999. The park's outstanding importance is due to the predominantly non-arboreal steppe vegetation, home to a unique bird fauna, and alkaline and chernozem soils with a complex, mosaic-like spatial structure. In addition, the landscape of Hortobágy has a pastoral history stretching back thousands of years. Several hypotheses have been put forward that suggest that the alkaline soils and the habitats that cover them were formed as a result of human activities related to river regulation that began in the second half of the 19th century. However, paleoecological and paleobiological studies over the last 30–40 years have pointed to the natural origin of the alkaline steppes, dating back to the end of the Ice Age. For thousands of years, human activities, in particular, grazing by domestic animals, hardly influenced the natural evolution of the area. The drainage of marshy and flooded areas began in the 19th century, as well as the introduction of more and more intensive agriculture, had a significant impact on the landscape. This paper aims to describe the past natural development of this special alkaline steppe ecosystem, with particular reference to the impacts of past and present human activities, including conservation measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Addressing the growing global persecution of Christians: Hungary Helps as a model initiative for other state actors?
- Author
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Hodge, David R.
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN rights , *CHRISTIANS , *PERSECUTION , *CHRISTIANITY - Abstract
Some states have shown interest in human rights violations targeting Christians, but in most cases the interest has not translated into concrete actions. Hungary is one exception to this pattern. In 2017, the Hungarian government created Hungary Helps, an international development initiative that concentrates on religious oppression with a focus on persecuted Christians. After a review of data on Christian persecution and state responses, this article examines the guiding principles that inform Hungary Helps and its programs. The paper suggests that other states could consider incorporating various dimensions of Hungary Helps into their foreign policy initiatives to address the growing global persecution of Christians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. STRETCHING THE BOUNDARIES OF POLITICAL VIOLENCE: LESSONS FROM HUNGARY AND ISRAEL.
- Author
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Hitman, Gadi
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL violence , *GEOGRAPHIC boundaries , *SOCIAL forces , *SOCIAL skills , *POLITICAL opposition , *VIOLENCE in the workplace - Abstract
Based on the case studies of Hungary and Israel, this article proposes an expansion of the term 'political violence' to encompass the phenomenon of using harsh language followed by punitive measures, which are not necessarily physical. It aims to gain additional power, intimidate opponents, and narrow the public and political abilities of social and political forces with a different ideology. One major consequence is a transition from a democratic regime to a non-democratic one. The paper concludes that political violence is currently mainly verbal in Israel, but in Hungary, it also has the practical dimension of hurting the government's political opponents. This policy has a direct implication on the state national identity, which is in both cases a more national-religious one. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Effect of Saharan dust episodes on the accuracy of photovoltaic energy production forecast in Hungary (Central Europe).
- Author
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Varga, György, Gresina, Fruzsina, Szeberényi, József, Gelencsér, András, and Rostási, Ágnes
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRIC power production , *DUST , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *MINERAL dusts , *PHOTOVOLTAIC power generation , *ELECTRIC power , *ENERGY industries , *DUST storms , *FORECASTING - Abstract
In order to meet global sustainability goals, in particular, the rapid decarbonisation of the energy sector in combination with geopolitical energy security issues, as well as further improvement in regional air quality-the so-called renewable energy sources are becoming increasingly critical and important. Photovoltaic power (PV) generation is clearly the most widely deployed (non-hydro) renewable energy source globally, which still has a significant growth potential in many countries, including Hungary. However, due to the intermittent nature and the strong dependency of photovoltaic power production on meteorological factors, continuous adjustment of electric power in the electric grid is needed. This, in turn, requires the most accurate forecast of the photovoltaic energy to be produced in the ultra-short term (15 min) and short term (1 day) in order to minimise last-minute and high-price energy acquisition or unplanned kicks-in of gas-fired auxiliary power plants. In this paper, we evaluate the impacts of large-scale dust transport episodes on the accuracy of forecasts of PV power generation. The numbers and intensities of Saharan dust storm events reaching Central Europe have increased over the last decade, hitting a new record in 2022 with 16 (!) African dust episodes observed over Hungary. We have shown that the semi-direct effect of atmospheric dust particles on high-level cloud formation rather than their direct irradiance-reducing effect is responsible for the reduced accuracies of e short-term (24-h) PV energy production forecasts during these events. • 16 Saharan dust events (SDEs) were identified in Hungary in 2022. • SDEs caused photovoltaic (PV) generation drops and forecast errors. • Indirect effect of dust on irradiance (through cloud formation) was the dominant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Detection of circovirus in free-ranging brown rats (Rattus norvegicus).
- Author
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Tarján, Z.L., Szekeres, S., Vidovszky, M.Z., and Egyed, L.
- Subjects
- *
RATTUS norvegicus , *BIRDS of prey , *GENOMICS , *VIRAL genomes , *AMINO acid sequence - Abstract
Accidentally found, two poisoned brown rats from Hungary were surveyed for presence of circoviral DNA, using specific nested primers, designed against the rep gene of the virus. Both specimens were positive. The whole genomes were amplified using inverse PCR based on the Rep sequence parts and sequenced by the primer walking method. Genomic analyses revealed that these novel rat viruses, together with tawny owl-associated circovirus reported by Italian researchers in 2022, are sequence variations of the same virus from genus Circovirus. In phylogenetic reconstructions, these circovirus strains detected from brown rats clustered closest to circoviruses derived from faeces samples of various predatory mammals. Molecular data as well as the phylogenetic analyses of the complete derived replication-associated protein and the capsid protein, as well as the prey preference of the host species of the recently described tawny owl-associated virus suggest that brown rat could be the evolutionary adapted host of the viruses described in this paper (brown rat circovirus types 1 and 2) and the previously reported tawny owl-associated virus. Possible pathogenic and zoonotic role of these viruses need further studies. • Circoviruses were detected by PCR from organs of free-ranging brown rats. • Full genomes of these viruses were sequenced. • The DNA and protein sequences of the two viruses were compared to each other. • Phylogenetic studies indicated similar circoviruses from predatory mammals and birds. • These viruses are probably genuine circoviruses of rats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Unravelling ancient drilling techniques: A case of pottery repair in the Early European Neolithic.
- Author
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Vindrola-Padrós, Bruno and Vilde, Vladimir
- Subjects
- *
POTTERY techniques , *POTSHERDS , *CASING drilling , *SLEEP spindles , *NEOLITHIC Period , *MEASURING instruments , *POTTERY - Abstract
The emergence of pottery brought many changes in the way people in the past designed, cooked, stored, transported and gave meaning to their social worlds. Yet, the widespread use of these materials also brought challenges, such as how to contend with their brittleness. One of the many creative responses to this challenge, was pottery repair. At the start of the Neolithic period in central and south-east Europe, we find traces of repair activities even among the oldest pottery assemblages, which commonly consist of perforations placed alongside cracks used to bind the damaged vessels. Obtaining measurements and microscopically examining perforations can prove to be challenging, due to the accessibility constraints of most used measuring instruments. Attempting to overcome this limitation, our paper provides a method for identifying ancient drilling procedures (techniques and gestures) by integrating photogrammetric recording techniques into archaeological drilling experiments on low-fired ceramic specimens. Through this method we shed light on the unique characteristics of Early Neolithic pottery repair in the Upper Tisza/Tisa Basin (NE Hungary, NW Romania and SW Ukraine). Our experimental results using lithic borers show clear differences between two drilling techniques, i.e. thumb- and rod-drilling, according to the rotational striations produced, and the variation in the aspect ratio and centroid of perforations at different depths. Furthermore, our analysis of repair holes in Early Neolithic pottery demonstrates the consistent use of mixed drilling techniques for the purposes of repair, and the exclusive use of rod-drilling for the manufacture of sherd spindle whorls. The reconstruction of the sequences of repair also suggests that deviation from these consistent drilling procedures was likely due to the adaptation of the craftsperson to the specific damage condition of the vessels. Thus, repair work cannot be described as following a strict recipe, but as an ongoing creative process of evaluation. • Photogrammetric techniques detected diagnostic traces of drilling procedures. • Mixed use of drilling techniques for pottery repair observed at Méhtelek-Nádas. • Preference for repairing small or medium-sized open vessels unveils a regime of value. • Evidence of technical adaptation to vessels' damage state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Copper-alloy belt fittings and elite networking in Early Medieval Central Europe.
- Author
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Macháček, Jiří, Eichert, Stefan, Nosek, Vojtěch, and Pernicka, Ernst
- Subjects
- *
BRONZE , *LEAD isotopes , *X-ray fluorescence , *COPPER ores , *ISOTOPIC analysis , *SCANNING electron microscopy - Abstract
This paper attempts to change the traditional view of the Late Avar belt fittings, which in the 8th century AD delineated an extremely dense communication network within the Carpathian Basin and beyond, by using a groundbreaking combination of iconography, energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence (EDXRF), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), lead isotope analysis, digital morphometry and 3D comparative prototyping. It presents a complex analysis of bronze belt ends decorated with an exceptional scene of a snake eating a frog-like creature, discovered in the last decade in Czech Republic, Hungary and Germany. According to the iconography, this motif represents an important cosmogonic and fertility myth, known to various early medieval populations living in Central Europe. Some of these belt ends come from the same workshop and/or are derived from a common model, even though they were found in very distant regions. The study also focuses on the provenance of the raw material used in the production of Avar-style belt fittings in general. For the first time, it was possible to locate the Early Medieval source of copper in the Slovak Ore Mountains, using lead isotope analysis. • First analytical approach to peculiar belt fittings found in Avar and non-Avar contexts. • Combination of elemental, isotopic and morphometric analyses. • Metal source identified in Slovakian Ore Mountains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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