Knowledge base for Ore Mountains case study: Difference between revisions

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Use google scholar to find relevant resources:  
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*'''Ladysz, J. (2006). [http://www.springerlink.com/content/v3759646g78381u8/fulltext.pdf Chosen aspects of sustainable development on the Polish, Czech and German borderland.] GeoJournal, 67(1), 1–7.<br>
*'''Ladysz, J. (2006). [http://www.springerlink.com/content/v3759646g78381u8/fulltext.pdf Chosen aspects of sustainable development on the Polish, Czech and German borderland.] GeoJournal, 67(1), 1–7.<br>'''


Abstract: The shift to market forces in Poland, East Germany and Czech Republic has fundamentally reconfigured its economic geography. In particular, spatial inequalities between neighbouring Polish, Czech and German border regions have re-emerged forcefully in response to new values, expectations and preferences. In this paper the example of coal mines illustrates the potency of spatial planning. The abundance of coal mines in the Polish, Czech and German borderland at or near abandonment and their proximity to ecological corridors make them candidates for renewed uses in industry or conservation. Attention will also be given to the main environmental problems caused by wrongly conducted spatial policy on this borderland. Transforming a landscape requires continuation of guidance and financial assistance of the European Union. <br>
Abstract: The shift to market forces in Poland, East Germany and Czech Republic has fundamentally reconfigured its economic geography. In particular, spatial inequalities between neighbouring Polish, Czech and German border regions have re-emerged forcefully in response to new values, expectations and preferences. In this paper the example of coal mines illustrates the potency of spatial planning. The abundance of coal mines in the Polish, Czech and German borderland at or near abandonment and their proximity to ecological corridors make them candidates for renewed uses in industry or conservation. Attention will also be given to the main environmental problems caused by wrongly conducted spatial policy on this borderland. Transforming a landscape requires continuation of guidance and financial assistance of the European Union. <br>
 
*'''Balej, M., &amp; Andel, J. (2008). [http://www.academicjournals.org/jgrp/PDF/Pdf2008/July/Balej%20and%20Andel.pdf Land use changes and environmental stress accounting] (case study from northwestern part of the Czech-German borderland). Journal of Geography and Regional Planning, 1(5), 97–109.'''
 
Abstract: The authors assess the long-term changes in utilisation of the territory (1845 - 2005). They apply a new methodology called environmental stress accounting. They notice qualitative changes in how utilisation of the territory develops. They assess the stress-causing effects on both the natural subsystem (ecological stress) as well as on the social subsystem (social stress). The aggregate result is a methodology measuring environmental stress, as a sum of stress existing in the natural and social subsystem. The methodology can be applied in a randomly chosen territory at various time scales. It reflects the external spatial relations, i.e. relations with localities beyond the model territory, and indicates causal effects (driving forces). Driving forces directly or indirectly affect the structure and function of the landscape and at the same time the landscape can retroactively be one of the impulses for origination and modification of the given driving force. The process of mutual interaction of driving forces and the landscape is monitored in three different landscape types of the Czech-German border area: 1) “mining landscape”, 2) “intensive agriculture” and 3) “highland marginal landscape”. The authors analyse changes in the use of the landscape and the trend in environmental stress in four time phases that are mutually differentiated by their specific characteristics. They generally correspond to stages of change in Czech society: pre-industrial, industrial, totalitarian (final phase of the industrial period) and post-industrial period.<br>


*'''Balej, M., &amp; Andel, J. (2008). [http://www.academicjournals.org/jgrp/PDF/Pdf2008/July/Balej%20and%20Andel.pdf Land use changes and environmental stress accounting] (case study from northwestern part of the Czech-German borderland). Journal of Geography and Regional Planning, 1(5), 97–109.'''
*Dołzbłasz, S., &amp; Raczyk, A. (2007). [http://bibliotekacyfrowa.pan.pl/Content/138/Europa_XXI_2007_16-internet.pdf#page=153 New versus old cross-border co-operation programmes in the example of Polish-Czech and Polish-German border areas]. Europa XXI, 16, 153–165.  
*Dołzbłasz, S., &amp; Raczyk, A. (2007). [http://bibliotekacyfrowa.pan.pl/Content/138/Europa_XXI_2007_16-internet.pdf#page=153 New versus old cross-border co-operation programmes in the example of Polish-Czech and Polish-German border areas]. Europa XXI, 16, 153–165.  
*Heimpold, G. (2008). [http://www.springerlink.com/content/k3732824l813524r/fulltext.pdf Growth versus equalisation? An examination of strategies for regional policy in the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland after EU accession.] Jahrbuch f\ür Regionalwissenschaft, 28(1), 1–29. (NUTS 2 region under our focus is "Severozápad"  
*Heimpold, G. (2008). [http://www.springerlink.com/content/k3732824l813524r/fulltext.pdf Growth versus equalisation? An examination of strategies for regional policy in the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland after EU accession.] Jahrbuch f\ür Regionalwissenschaft, 28(1), 1–29. (NUTS 2 region under our focus is "Severozápad"  

Revision as of 15:36, 16 March 2012

Resources for themetic issues available on internet

Dbu logo en.jpg

Czech Republic - background information

Ore mountains - region and history‎

Ore mountains - social and economic conditions‎

Case study: Historical mining in the Ore mountains‎

Case study: Brown coal mining in the Usti region‎

Case study: Energy in Usti region‎

Case study: Environment in the Usti region

Syndrome approach applied in Ore Mountains

Study materials for students

Use google scholar to find relevant resources:

Abstract: The shift to market forces in Poland, East Germany and Czech Republic has fundamentally reconfigured its economic geography. In particular, spatial inequalities between neighbouring Polish, Czech and German border regions have re-emerged forcefully in response to new values, expectations and preferences. In this paper the example of coal mines illustrates the potency of spatial planning. The abundance of coal mines in the Polish, Czech and German borderland at or near abandonment and their proximity to ecological corridors make them candidates for renewed uses in industry or conservation. Attention will also be given to the main environmental problems caused by wrongly conducted spatial policy on this borderland. Transforming a landscape requires continuation of guidance and financial assistance of the European Union.

Abstract: The authors assess the long-term changes in utilisation of the territory (1845 - 2005). They apply a new methodology called environmental stress accounting. They notice qualitative changes in how utilisation of the territory develops. They assess the stress-causing effects on both the natural subsystem (ecological stress) as well as on the social subsystem (social stress). The aggregate result is a methodology measuring environmental stress, as a sum of stress existing in the natural and social subsystem. The methodology can be applied in a randomly chosen territory at various time scales. It reflects the external spatial relations, i.e. relations with localities beyond the model territory, and indicates causal effects (driving forces). Driving forces directly or indirectly affect the structure and function of the landscape and at the same time the landscape can retroactively be one of the impulses for origination and modification of the given driving force. The process of mutual interaction of driving forces and the landscape is monitored in three different landscape types of the Czech-German border area: 1) “mining landscape”, 2) “intensive agriculture” and 3) “highland marginal landscape”. The authors analyse changes in the use of the landscape and the trend in environmental stress in four time phases that are mutually differentiated by their specific characteristics. They generally correspond to stages of change in Czech society: pre-industrial, industrial, totalitarian (final phase of the industrial period) and post-industrial period.


Creative Commons Author: Jana Dlouhá, Andrew Barton, Simon Burandt. This article was published under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. How to cite the article: Jana Dlouhá, Andrew Barton, Simon Burandt. (25. 11. 2024). Knowledge base for Ore Mountains case study. VCSEWiki. Retrieved 08:39 25. 11. 2024) from: <https://vcsewiki.czp.cuni.cz/w/index.php?title=Knowledge_base_for_Ore_Mountains_case_study&oldid=2231>.