2,939 research outputs found
Social change in Central and Eastern Europe: General trends and national patterns
The paper addresses five issue areas. First it describes the plurality of trajectories in central and eastern European transformations, offering a broad typology. Then it addresses the drift between acceptance of democracy and the market, owing to growing inequalities. Third, problems of poverty and exclusion are addressed. Fourth, it is addressed if any known model of redistribution emerged in the post-transition economies. Fifth, consequences of the populist turn in European policies are being analyzed. Influences of the EU practices will be dealt with and some preliminary conclusions drawn. These suggest a strong intertwining between social and economic performance that limit theoretically conceivable – neoliberal, social democratic, postmodern or conservative - policy choices
Economics of the new member states: A post-crisis perspective
This essay addresses four major issues confronting the Central and Eastern
European new members of the European Union in the decade to come. First:
what to think of the financial meltdown of 2008-2009. Second, what have they
learned from the tremors, having shaken the previous star performers of the EU? Third we ask if we can expect a return to ‘normalcy' as forecast by most
models of financial rating agencies and international financial institutions?
Fourth the question is raised what did the new members benefit from their EU membership? Some conclusions on the future of EU reforms and policies close the overview
Az élhetőbb Magyarország esélye
A tanulmány azt a kérdést vizsgálja, hogy társadalmi értelemben mennyire volt sikeres Magyarország átalakulása az elmúlt két évtizedben. Megállapítja, hogy a gazdasági siker és a társadalmi deficit kettőssége mellett az első másfél évtized tartalékai kifulladóban vannak. Az uniós tagság csak esélyt, de nem biztosítékot jelent az új szakasz véghezvitelére. 2007-ben egészen más kihívások előtt áll az ország, mint 1995-ben állt. Ebből is adódóan ezúttal a fenntartható növekedés és az eddigieknél eredményesebb társadalompolitika kettősére, illetőleg a mindezt megalapozó irányok fölvázolására teszünk kísérletet
Unintended consequences of crisis management
This contribution attempts to decipher the largely unintended, still predictable consequences of crisis management in the global economy. In a series of improvised, case-bycase and unilaterally demand-focused measures, governments tried to extend the Keynesian
arsenal to a system whose basic features are unlike those of the national economy. While the collapse of output and employment, on par with the Great Depression, could
indeed be averted, conditions for the resumption of sustainable finance and growth have
been undermined
Hungary and the eurozone crisis: a comedy of errors?
The spill-over of the global fi nancial crisis has uncovered the weaknesses in the governance of the EMU. As one of the most open economies in Europe, Hungary has suff ered from the ups and downs of the global and European crisis and its mismanagement. Domestic policy blunders have complicated the situation. This paper examines how Hungary has withstood the ups and downs of the eurozone crisis. It also addresses the questions of whether the country has converged with or diverged from the EMU membership, whether joining the EMU is still a good idea for Hungary, and whether the measures to ward off the crisis have actually helped to face the challenge of growth
Agrobacterium-mediated barley transformation.
More than ten years have passed since the first successful Agrobacterium-mediated
barley transformation experiment, however it is still quite challenging to establish a stably
functioning agroinfiltration protocol. Efficiency of the method depends mainly on the transformation
and co-cultivation conditions, and also the components of the tissue-culture media.
With the use of an optimized media we have been able to set up a reliable, properly functioning
transformation protocol. The first generation of transgenic barley plants, transformed with a
transformation cassette carrying an aldo-keto-reductase gene from Arabidopsis thaliana and
the hpt marker gene, were analyzed at nucleic acid (both DNA and RNA) and at protein levels.
The key factors of success proved to be the use of Silwet L-77 (surfactant) in transformation
inoculum, the Cu-content of regenerating media and the continuous visual monitoring of the
transformed callus during the somatic embryogenesi
Classification of Surface Geoelectric Arrays
We have found in the geophysical literature more than ninety different surface geoelectric arrays, fulfilling an updated definition (specifying the current feeding, the potential difference measurement and the geometry of the electrodes). Several composite configurations, with widely varying geometry, have also been collected. We have presented the geoelectric arrays in a systematic way and with a unified notation. The classification is based on three divalent parameters: “superposition” of measurements, “focusing” of
currents and “colinearity” of the array, creating 8 groups of geoelectric arrays. For the simplest group (the group of nonfocused, nonsuperposed, colinear arrays) we cover all theoretically possible arrays. For the other groups – due to the infinite variety – we collected only the already existing arrays, but it is easy to create further example arrays. The proposed classification may facilitate a systematic comparison of properties of different arrays and inspire testing new arrays, to find optimal configurations for actual field problems. Finally, the classification certainly helps to avoid rediscovering already published arrays
Auxiliary Results of Collection and Classification of Surface Geoelectric Arrays
Recently, we have made a classification of more than one hundred various surface geoelectric arrays ever published in geophysical literature (Szalai and Szarka 2007a, 2007b). The classification is based on three divalent parameters (as “superposition” of measurements, “focusing” of currents and “colinearity” of the array), thus we set up eight groups of geoelectric arrays. One further group was separated for about 10 socalled “composite” arrays, which cannot be classified in the aforementioned way. Here we present some
application examples of the classification results. Namely, we call the attention to some hidden relationships among geoelectric arrays: (1) we give an illustration how various arrays can be derived from their root array (besides the Schlumberger-related arrays several other examples will also be given in the presentation); (2) we provide a summary of arrays, capable to measure various partial derivatives of the electric potential. Among the 21 arrays 14 are already published arrays, but there are seven possible, but
not-yet-applied arrays. In this way, such missing links in the genealogic trees may lead to creation of reasonable and purposeful new arrays
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