Andrea Éltető: Imitable model? (Külgazdaság, 2019.)
Anikó Magasházi: Singapore globally entangled. Institute of Advanced Studies, 2019. 267 p.
Anikó Magasházi: Singapore globally entangled. Institute of Advanced Studies, 2019. 267 p.
The Visegrad Europe journal has several articles from our researchers in issue 3-4./2019.
A new article by György Csepeli was released in Visegrad Europe.
György Csepeli: Human 2.0. Kossuth Publishing – Institute of Advanced Studies Kőszeg, 2020. 272 p.
Should Central Europe abandon essential components of its identity in order to conform to Western Europe, so that the fate of Europe could be turned in a “good direction,” or is it possible that a deeper integration of the two macro-regions will emerge, where the two, Western and Central parts of equal rank unite to create a genuinely and deeply integrated Europe?
We face numerous questions, which are difficult or impossible to answer immediately, but the exchange of views among stakeholders and those responsible can help us to find optimal ways to accountable and efficient attitudes and flexible adaption. In order to formulate the response, we will need more and more information, positive examples and, above all, resilience.
Date: 2nd October 2020, 9 am- 4 pm
Venue: Zwinger Old Tower, Kőszeg H-9730 Chernel st. 16.
Live streaming: https://www.facebook.com/iask.hungary
Academic book launch and roundtable discussion by iASK
Date: 17th of September 2020. at 4.00 p.m.
Venue: Berzsenyi Könyvtár H-9700 Szombathely, Dr. Antall József tér 1.
The event will be held in Hungarian!
This volume is a compilation of some of the keynote speeches and lectures that were delivered at the Fourth European Blue Sky Conference.
The new iASK volume can be downloaded for free!
Lecturer: Prof. János Bogárdi (hydrologist – Univesity of Bonn)
Date: 14th September 2020 at 6. p.m.
The lecture will be accessible by online streaming on the Facebook-page of iASK!
The newly renovated heritage building of the former Benedictine Convent and School has reopened in Kőszeg as a hotel on Monday, September 7.
In this podcast episode, Astrea Pejović and Dragana Kovačević Bielicki discuss their personal experiences with digital methods in anthropological research and the situation in which they had to digitally adapt their researches.
Our book has been written in response to this invitation for debate, as a kind of reflection on the work of the two Austrian authors, Emil Brix and Erhard Busek. We did this as Central Europeans, from a Hungarian perspective, on a national democratic ideological basis. It is well known that all of us depict the world on the basis of our personal experiences—we find it hard to “step out” of our skin and stand nowhere, yet we strove to approach the ideas that do not meet our agreement or, contradicting our own experience and knowledge, provoke our disparate thoughts or beliefs “objectively,” with tolerance and empathy as much as possible.