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DO POST-SOCIALIST URBAN AREAS MAINTAIN THEIR SUSTAINABLE COMPACT FORM? ROMANIAN URBAN AREAS AS CASE STUDY

DO POST-SOCIALIST URBAN AREAS MAINTAIN THEIR SUSTAINABLE COMPACT FORM? ROMANIAN URBAN AREAS AS CASE STUDY

Author(s): Simona Raluca Grădinaru,Cristian Ioan Iojă,Ileana Pătru-Stupariu / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2015

The compact city is regarded as an important concept in promoting sustainable development, especially within the European Union. The socialist urban planning system maintained a high compactness of the urban areas through almost exclusive predominance of the public sector in housing provision, and ideological nature of the planning strategies. After the 1990’s, the administrative decentralization allowed local authorities to adopt particular urban development strategies. However, development was directly influenced by the importance of the urban administrative centre. The aim of the paper is to determine if post-socialist urban areas maintained their compact urban form or they encountered different evolution trajectories. We determined the type of changes by calculating urban form indicators at two time moments: 1990 and 2006. Furthermore, the two-way repeated-measurement ANOVA was used to identify significant changes, and to assess the effect of the development level of the urban area on the variance of form indicators. The results show that Romanian post-socialist urban areas either shifted from the compact form, "inherited" after the collapse of socialism, to more dispersed patterns, either expanded in a compact manner. Moreover, as development level got higher, urban areas were more likely to be affected by suburbanization and periurbanization. In order to respond to these challenges, new instruments such as setting of metropolitan areas or spatial framework plans could be used. Furthermore, planning should be adapted to local circumstances and to the different development trajectories of big and mid-sized urban areas.

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BEYOND THE FRINGE: THE ROLE OF RECREATION IN MULTI-FUNCTIONAL URBAN FRINGE LANDSCAPES

BEYOND THE FRINGE: THE ROLE OF RECREATION IN MULTI-FUNCTIONAL URBAN FRINGE LANDSCAPES

Author(s): Ian Gilhespy / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2013

This paper reviews some of the academic literature and policy documents that relate to and promote the need for urban design and the re-invigoration of the processes and practices of ‘masterplanning’. Specifically, this paper concerns the implications for recreation in areas that have been conceptualised in a number of ways including ‘urban fringe’ and ‘fringe-belt’ and the ways in which these areas are being re-developed as multi-functional spaces in the planning process. The paper pays particular attention to the proposed development of the ‘North Plymouth Community Park’ examining the claims made for the sustainable characteristics of the development and questioning the absence of the cultural aspects of recreation.

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MATERIAL IMPACTS OF HIP-HOP ON URBAN DEVELOPMENT IN DAKAR: THE CASE OF EAUX SECOURS

MATERIAL IMPACTS OF HIP-HOP ON URBAN DEVELOPMENT IN DAKAR: THE CASE OF EAUX SECOURS

Author(s): Hilary Hungerford / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2013

The creative city has emerged as a driving force in urban studies in both academic and urban planning realms. Increasingly, scholars are interrogating these ideas of the creative city and the creative class as to their political implications and applications to cities around the world. This paper focuses on the role of the artist in urban development through the case study of one hip-hop group from the Pikine neighborhood of Dakar. Pikine, a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of the city, is one of many neighborhoods prone to seasonal flooding. Where city government programs of flood alleviation failed to produce positive results, the hip-hop artists have succeeded to organize and work against flooding. The artists imagined a better urban future from the point of view of disadvantaged neighborhoods, and organized the community to make real, material impacts on the city.

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SPATIAL ENTROPY. A SMALL TOWN PERSPECTIVE. CASE STUDY: THE TOWN OF MARGHITA

SPATIAL ENTROPY. A SMALL TOWN PERSPECTIVE. CASE STUDY: THE TOWN OF MARGHITA

Author(s): Valentin Nemeş,Rodica Petrea,Mălina Filimon / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2012

The concept of "spatial entropy" developed by Michael Batty (1974) was primarily used to test different hypotheses concerning the distribution and density of population in great cities like New York, London, Los Angeles. Subsequently spatial entropy was adapted in urban and regional studies, where two types of research have been outlined: - "descriptive statistics" and "MaxEnt" method (Esmer 2005). Three characteristic elements related to the three components of sustainable development (society, economy and environment) have been considered to shape the degree of entropy for the urban system Marghita, namely: population, turnover and green spaces. The determination of the entropy degree for the Marghita urban system was achieved by applying statistical physics functions on open systems, related to the three pillars of sustainable development. The three domains are represented by a series of dynamic and complex elements characterized by input and output streams, influenced by endogenous factors characteristics of urban system and exogenous factors from the higher integrator urban system.

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Economic Indicators Used in the Holistic Management of Ecological Agricultural Entities

Author(s): Cornel Dumitru Crecană / Language(s): English Issue: 5/2012

The paper begins with a review of theoretical concepts including a conceptual delimitation of the terms Holistic management and sustainable development. Aim of the work is to emphasize the importance of the transition from an economy focused on obtaining maximum profits in a responsible economy, which prioritizes basic maintenance of ecological balance. Under these conditions, economics in general and particularly economic and financial analysis must fundamentally rethink traditional concepts of economic viability and profitability in the economy, by considering the fundamental causes capable of destroying ecosystem restoration capacity. The innovative character of such a theoretical-methodological approach is limited only by the possibility of implementation at the macroeconomic and microeconomic level. It is noteworthy, however, increasing research activities in this field of holistic management and sustainable development, literature study clearly reflects a new direction in the economy, the paradigm shift is expected by all professionals, but was seriously hampered by the financial crisis. Starting from these considerations, I propose in this paper, introducing a some economic indicators for measure the economic viability and economic profitability in the ecological agricultural entities, justifying the need for, and practical possibilities to implement in economic analysis and fiscal management economic entities.

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An analysis of the spatial distribution, influence and quality of urban green space – a case study of the Polish city of Tczew

An analysis of the spatial distribution, influence and quality of urban green space – a case study of the Polish city of Tczew

Author(s): Adam Senetra,Iwona Krzywnicka,Marcin Mielke / Language(s): English Issue: 42/2018

Rapid urban growth can exert negative effects on the natural environment due to the loss of naturally vegetated areas, loss of biological diversity, deforestation and soil erosion. The condition of cities is inherently linked with the natural environment which has a positive influence on health, social relations, human welfare and economic activity. Urban areas should abound in green spaces, and should also be easily accessible to the general public. The aim of this study was to determine the spatial distribution, influence and quality of urban green spaces on the example of the city of Tczew in northern Poland. The proposed methodology can be applied in cities of a similar size and urban structure to promote rational management of urban green space in line with the principles of sustainable development and spatial order. The Green-Space Record, a useful tool for inventorying urban green spaces, was developed to pursue the main research goal. The information accumulated in the Record constitutes valuable input data for further analysis, including the determination of the area, distribution, influence and quality of urban green spaces. The results of the analysis revealed that urban green spaces occupy more than 19% of Tczew’s territory, which is equivalent to 70.6 m2 per resident. Managed green spaces span the area of only 66.75 ha (11.31 m2 per resident) and are unevenly distributed in the city. More than half of these areas are found in the Stare Miasto (Old Town) district, whereas two residential districts (Gdańska, Prątnica) are completely devoid of public greens. The quality of urban green spaces is generally satisfactory in Tczew; however, not all residents have equal access to high-quality public greens.

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Waste Management in Romania

Author(s): Sanda Vişan,Alina Maria Ion,Virginia Ciobotaru,Florica Ligia Botez / Language(s): English Issue: S1/2009

Waste constitutes a serious problem of the contemporary world, through their quantity and diversity, resulting from all economic fields, towns, services, health, and consumption activities. Integrated management of waste which is applied in Romania too, supposes the reducing wastes in productive activities, collection, transport, storage controlled, monitoring deposits and selling material or energy. This study makes references to the collection of their packaging and recycling.

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The Professionalization of the Sustainable Development Management. The Ecologist Manager Profile

Author(s): H. C. Ion Petrescu / Language(s): English Issue: S1/2009

The manager profession has an important role in the sustainable development management framework. It considers the managerial reality transformation in order to obtain economical, technical, social and ecological results in the organization. Throughout its profession, the ecologist manager express its functional relations with the employees and the managing team. And it also ensures the efficiency of the managerial acts, which bound the science and the practice.

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Voice of the Students: The Role of Education and Public Administration in Mitigating Environmental Issues in Romania

Voice of the Students: The Role of Education and Public Administration in Mitigating Environmental Issues in Romania

Author(s): Costică Mihai,Constantin-Marius Apostoaie,Alexandru Maxim / Language(s): English Issue: 13/2018

Environmental protection is one of the core societal issues that the European Union has taken the global lead in tackling. In doing so, it relies not only on macro instruments (such as Environmental Action Plans or Multilateral Environmental Agreements), but also on national and micro-level partners (such as local administration, businesses, civil society and individual citizens). The current paper seeks to collect and disseminate ideas on solving ardent environmental issues, as they are expressed in a focus group involving students with diverse academic backgrounds (but specialized in the study of EU integration and environmental policies). The results suggest that pollution problems are significantly more present in urban areas of Romania and that the respondents were better acquainted of environmental problems that they face in their day-to-day lives. “Education” and “Public administration” proved to be the two central pillars on which innovative solutions for environmental problems could be designed and successfully implemented, in the views of the respondents.

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Część monograficzna. Perspektywy edukacji małego dziecka w kontekście zmian oświatowych (pod redakcją Aliny Budniak): Perspektywy edukacji dziecka w świecie alternatywnych trendów i wyborów

Część monograficzna. Perspektywy edukacji małego dziecka w kontekście zmian oświatowych (pod redakcją Aliny Budniak): Perspektywy edukacji dziecka w świecie alternatywnych trendów i wyborów

Author(s): Monika Frania / Language(s): Polish Issue: 50 (1)/2018

The article is a reflection on selected trends that can significantly affect the education and functioning of a child in a family and school environment. The presented examples of alternative ideas and challenges that modern families are coping with are: high-tech parenting vs low-tech parenting, fast life and slow life, as well as elements of global and local ideas. These phenomena are perceived as opposed to each other at two extremes of the axis – contradictory or complementary. In addition, the author mentions aspects of changes in the learning and teaching process caused by the use of the media and new technologies.

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Część monograficzna. Perspektywy edukacji małego dziecka w kontekście zmian oświatowych (pod redakcją Aliny Budniak): Poczucie kompetencji społecznych uczniów w młodszym wieku szkolnym

Część monograficzna. Perspektywy edukacji małego dziecka w kontekście zmian oświatowych (pod redakcją Aliny Budniak): Poczucie kompetencji społecznych uczniów w młodszym wieku szkolnym

Author(s): Hewilia Hetmańczyk / Language(s): Polish Issue: 50 (1)/2018

The article discusses the issue of social competences from the perspective of a student at early school age. In this case, the author made use of a questionnaire to gauge and determine the level of the sense of social competences of students. The author used a percentage perspective of each of the questions, which allowed for a general look onto the level of the sense of social competences in the surveyed group of third-graders and which helped determine the frequency of selecting particular answers. Finally, the gathered data was thoroughly analysed on account of the number of points scored after summing up each student’s points.

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Environment and Ecology Issues in Works of German Street Art

Environment and Ecology Issues in Works of German Street Art

Author(s): Alise Taškāne / Language(s): English Issue: 1/2019

This article deals with the development of environmental and ecological issues in Germany since the 1970s, and how these issues are represented in works of street art since the beginning of the development of modern graffiti, and later street art, in Germany. The purpose of this research is to identify differences in the ecological and environmental issues in works of graffiti and street art from the 1970s to present day in Germany. This has been done by examining general themes of environmental and ecological issues in graffiti and street art and by studying some of the specific examples of artwork, using research methods by visual analysis based on study “Reading Images: The Grammar of Visual Design” by Gunther Kress and Theo van Leeuwen, and visual analysis of iconography and iconology, described by Marion G. Müller in “The SAGE Handbook of Visual Research Methods” by Eric Margolis and Luc Pauwels. The first phase of the research involves an overview of the sociopolitical background of the ecological and environmental issues in Germany since the 1970s, as well as development of modern graffiti and street art in Germany in the context of ecology and environment, using the method of iconology. The second phase involves examining physical examples of graffiti and street art in Germany. The final phase deals with regional differences reflected in artists’ work in Germany. This article will provide general insights in graffiti and street art in Germany and it will explore how German artists tackle the environmental and ecological issues in their works.

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Influence of Ecological Protection on the Corporate Image of Oil and Gas Firms in Nigeria

Influence of Ecological Protection on the Corporate Image of Oil and Gas Firms in Nigeria

Author(s): Deborah Bolanle Motilewa,Ayodotun Stephen Ibidunni,Rowland Worlu,Chinonye Love Moses,James Obi,Joy Dirisu / Language(s): English Issue: 1/2019

Oil and gas firms in Nigeria are generally perceived to be weak in their environmental and ecological initiatives towards their host communities. Yet there has been a dearth of empirical emphasis from research that shows evidences about the role of ecological protection on the corporate image of oil and gas firms. Therefore, this study focused on examining the influence of a commitment to ecological protection on the corporate image of oil and gas firms in Nigeria. The study adopted the mixed methods approach where quantitative and qualitative methods (survey and interview) were used. For the quantitative research, copies of structured questionnaire were distributed to 350 employees of the selected firms, while 30 respondents from other stakeholder groups were interviewed for the qualitative research. Based on the results of the regression and thematic analyses, findings show that the firms’ commitment to ecological protection through their policy to avoid the use of materials from the illegal exploitation of natural resources, commitment to waste minimisation and recycling and pollution leads to increased investors’ confidence, strengthened relationship with the government, host community and reduced pressure from third parties. Therefore, it is recommended that oil and gas firms intensify efforts in activities that ensure ecological protection of host communities and thus build stakeholders confidence in the firms’ corporate image.

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Green Marketing of Automobile Manufacturers

Green Marketing of Automobile Manufacturers

Author(s): Eva Jaderná,Jana Přikrylová,Radka Picková,Nicola Malá / Language(s): English Issue: 1/1/2018

Many long-term scientific studies demonstrate that our planet’s environmental situation is deteriorating. Even the ordinary consumer can see the changes in the climate. Stricter laws are being enacted, and people’s mind-sets are changing. As a result, so is consumer behaviour. Companies have to respond to this change. One area in business where such change is evident is the new field of green marketing. This approach helps to strongly associate companies’ attitudes with the environment and in turn inform the public about these attitudes. Green marketing was swiftly adopted in the automotive industry, which is especially sensitive in matters of environmental protection and sustainability. One response the ordinary consumer can witness is the boom in electric and hybrid vehicles. Since this socalled electromobility is the prevailing trend at the present and in the future, this article focuses on the attitudes of the Czech population to electric cars.

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Presentation of Environmental Problems on Social Networking Websites

Presentation of Environmental Problems on Social Networking Websites

Author(s): Martin Vanko / Language(s): English Issue: 1/1/2018

Plastic pollution is one of the most serious environmental problems of nowadays. The given paper deals with the presentation of environmental problems on social networking websites and corresponding enhancement of awareness of possible solutions. These days a lot of famous brands, businesses or influencers understand their social responsibility towards the environment even though the prognoses about the state of plastic pollution predict that there will have been more plastic in the oceans than fish by 2050. Various worldwide movements and associations are trying to persuade people not to lead a consumption lifestyle but get them to recycle, refuse plastic waste or at least avoid single-use plastic. In 2018 social networking websites are no longer presenting only visually attractive content, but are also given the power thanks to which the environmental problems are not only more discussed but also actively solved.

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ZMAJČKOVA POT KOT ARHITEKTURNO-EKONOMSKI MODEL TRAJNOSTNEGA TURIZMA LJUBLJANE

ZMAJČKOVA POT KOT ARHITEKTURNO-EKONOMSKI MODEL TRAJNOSTNEGA TURIZMA LJUBLJANE

Author(s): Meta Pezdir / Language(s): English,Slovenian Issue: 2/2015

The tourism industry plays a big economic role in Slovenia and, as so, can make a significant contribution to socioeconomic development and protection of the environment. Ljubljana, the capital city of Slovenia, is the 2016 European Green Capital. This fact shows the importance of sustainable development for local people and other people connected to the city. A group of students from the University of Ljubljana, together with pedagogues and a mentor from the business world, made a research on sustainable tourism marketing in Ljubljana. It also included learning about processes in management. Research results were three business models which could be used to promote sustainable tourism in Ljubljana. One of these three models is also The Dragon's road, presented in the following article. The Dragon's road was created by two economics students and one architecture student. It connects existing architecture in Ljubljana – "hidden" Dragons in portals, fences, statues etc. – and tourists with local people. It presents Ljubljana in a new, unique way. The road is presented as a creative notebook which helps tourists to discover the city.

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Značenje šuma za poljoprivrednu proizvodnju

Značenje šuma za poljoprivrednu proizvodnju

Author(s): Slavko Matić / Language(s): Croatian Issue: 6/2012

The relationship between the man and the forest has been a continuous one since the very beginnings of mankind. It is marked by forest cult, which the man has respected and nurtured since the earliest days of contact. By felling, clearing and burning forests, the man obtained food and firewood, ensuring thereby his survival. Fearing the wrath of “powerful forest creatures”, which he believed to inhabit the forests, the man kept particular parts of forests, which he called “holy groves”, untouched. He felt that the forest is consumed by a powerful extra-terrestrial existence; therefore, approximately 2,000 years ago, people started planting and growing trees around their houses, arranging gardens and creating forest ambience, which offered them peace and quiet. Today we comprehend that this cult had once caused the ever-present phenomenon of the forest: the so-called generally useful forest values or functions. This is the reason why forests have had a major meaning for and impact on human life and survival. Science divides the generally useful values to ecological or protective; social; and social-eco-physiological. The said values are stipulated by and defined in The Forest Act and other legal documents regulating the role and position of forests in our country. The Forest Act lists fifteen generally useful functions, dividing and calculating them – according to their contribution and importance regarding finances – in ten groups. Apart from having a positive effect on human life, most of these values significantly affect agricultural production as well, in the following aspects: protection from erosion; flood prevention; balanced water regime; increased soil fertility and agricultural production; milder climate; during photosynthesis, they use carbon from carbon dioxide for trees and other forest plants, releasing thereby oxygen. A particularly important link between forests and agriculture lies in the fact that all our original local fruit and wine-growing sorts, the so-called “wild” ones, even today belong to the structure of our natural forests; their biological attributes and ecological demands have hence been harmonized with and adapted to the mesoclimatic and microclimatic life conditions created by the forest. Thus, the ecological and biological links between forests and farming cultures should be pointed out in particular. Every natural forest creates its own climate, which affects both its immediate and its broader environment, especially fruit and wine-growing cultures. Our grape and wine sorts are known for their fine quality thanks to vineyards being grown on the south and southwest afforested hillsides of Plješivica, Ivančica, Kalnik, Papuk, Krndija, et al. European wine-growers have appreciated the importance of forests for the success of vineyards; that is why they grow vineyards in the vicinity of forests or grow forests in areas surrounded by major vineyard complexes, as may be observed on the south hillsides of the afforested Schwarzwald in Germany and Vogez in France, famous for high-quality fine wines. Krndija forests, covering 22,451 ha of land, are very stable, productive and biologically diverse, they consist of fourteen natural forest communities and more than fifty original local tree sorts. The written history of Krndija is equally long and old as the history of Kutjevo and its vineyards. After they had settled in the area in 1232, the Catholic order of Cistercites started clearing forests, growing vineyards and other farming cultures, as well as building wine cellars and producing wine. Kutjevo, Kutjevo land, vineyards and forests were further mentioned during the Turkish period 1698–1773, as well as between 1689 and 1698, when the land belonged to the Zagreb canon and abbot J. J. Babić. Jesuits had managed Kutjevo forests and vineyards 1698–1773; the Croatian Apprenticeship Trust had managed the land 1773–1880; while the Turković family had taken over the Kutjevo land in 1882 and remained its owners until 1945. After 1945, the land became oriented to viticulture and wine industry; it experiences a constant rise, while state-owned Forest Administrations manage Krndija forests. During the long years of the history and development of Kutjevo, its vineyards and forests, Krndija forests have – faithfully and usefully – accompanied and completed their owners’ economic activities and profit, in addition to viticulture and wine industry. Riesling is a grape sort that has been grown in Kutjevo on the south hillsides of Krndija for over a century. Forests and vineyards intertwine, interchange and surround each other there, causing mutual impacts and influences. This is, among others, a reason why Riesling in this area has developed its characteristic attributes, thanks to which it is singled out and different from all similar wine sorts grown in other areas, making it unique. Thanks to long-standing growing on habitats extraordinarily suitable for this sort, Riesling has developed high-quality features that had until then not been recognised in connection with this wine sort. This may – to the most part – be explained by the fact that Kutjevo vineyards grow on the land where Krndija forests have been growing since the earliest days. By their mesoclimatic, microclimatic and other features, they influence the grape that has grown wild in those forests since the earliest days, since ecological demands and biological attributes have been adapted to optimal conditions created by the forest through its existence, growth and increase. Soil and climate conditions, being to the most part a forest product, participate – according to research results – in defining the credit worthiness of vineyard soils with the maximum of 85 %, whilst all other conditions make out the rest of 15 %. Hence, it may be justly claimed that the impact of forests on agricultural production, in particular viticulture and wine industry, is not only major, but also rather significant. It is thus necessary to continue growing and nurturing both fine Kutjevo Riesling vineyards and Krndija forests.

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Kaş-Kekova Özel Çevre Koruma Bölgesindeki Geleneksel Kültürün Kültür-Çevre İlişkileri Açısından Değerlendirilmesi

Kaş-Kekova Özel Çevre Koruma Bölgesindeki Geleneksel Kültürün Kültür-Çevre İlişkileri Açısından Değerlendirilmesi

Author(s): Solmaz Karabaşa / Language(s): Turkish Issue: 97/2019

In this study, the traditional culture in Kaş-Kekova Specially Protected Area will be opened to discuss for the impact on the environmental problems caused by human activities and the contribution to the solution of these problems. The Specially Protected Area (SEPA) is a conservation status and Kaş-Kekova has acquired this status due to its characteristics such as rich biodiversityand, cultural heritage, underwater treasures. However, Kaş-Kekova SEPA is threatened mostly due to human activities. In 2015, a fieldwork focusing on culture-environment relations was conducted in the region in order to identify the problem correctly and to find solutions. In the fieldwork observation, in-depth interviewing and visualization techniques were used. Although an ecological anthropology approach which explores the interrelation of human with natural environment has been adopted in the study, due to the global world economy system prevails all over the world nowadays, evaluations have been made with a broader scale and a political attitude.

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TÜRKİYE’DE ULUSLARARASI İLİŞKİLER LİSANS PROGRAMLARINDA ÇEVRE İLE İLGİLİ DERSLERİN İNCELENMESİ

TÜRKİYE’DE ULUSLARARASI İLİŞKİLER LİSANS PROGRAMLARINDA ÇEVRE İLE İLGİLİ DERSLERİN İNCELENMESİ

Author(s): Senem Atvur,Ceren UYSAL OĞUZ / Language(s): Turkish Issue: 3/2018

Environmental problems such as pollution, loss of biodiversity, global warming or climate change are multidimensional issues which affect international system and its actors. Global environmental issues have been a part of international agenda since 1970s and have become one of the research areas of International Relations discipline. In this study, it is aimed to examine the curricula of undergraduate programs of Turkish universities’ International Relations departments. Firstly, in order to reflect the place of environmental issues in International Relations field, fundamental works (books, articles) on subjects like environmental politics, global environmental issues and environmental security are collected through a brief literature review. Then, the courses on environment and their syllabi are examined. Conducting academic studies and giving education are the main responsibilities of International Relations departments. Therefore, this study discusses that there are wider opportunities of employment and additional benefits for International Relations students who take courses on environment.

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REWITALIZACJA PRZESTRZENI PUBLICZNYCH MIEJSCOWOŚCI Z RUCHEM TRANZYTOWYM W CENTRUM NA PRZYKŁADZIE GRYBOWA

REWITALIZACJA PRZESTRZENI PUBLICZNYCH MIEJSCOWOŚCI Z RUCHEM TRANZYTOWYM W CENTRUM NA PRZYKŁADZIE GRYBOWA

Author(s): Jarosław Szczepanek,Ewa Trzaskowska / Language(s): Polish Issue: 2/2019

Market is the most important place in the city, especially in a small town, where it performs representative, commercial and social role. Due to the fact that it is often the only public space in this places, that it’s important to care aesthetic, historical and cultural values. Many markets of small Polish cities, also the market in Grybów does not fully exploit their values, performing mainly the transport and parking function. The problem stems from the route of a high traffic which runs through the center. Historically, the course of roads through town centers was a desirable phenomenon, as it contributed to the city’s economic development. Currently, these roads are a barrier divisiving urban centers and lowering the rank and quality of public spaces. The market square in Grybów is crossed by the national road No. 28. There is a proposal to build a beltway, but it was not accepted by the residents. The work presents proposals of actions aimed at “recovering” the space for residents and encouraging them to stay in it, which in the future could contribute to the elimination of vehicular traffic from the center and completion of the revitalization process. Attention was paid to the problem of the destruction of public spaces by vehicular traffic, low interest of residents in the use of common spaces, which has been consolidated over the years when they were missing. The issues raised at work indicate that it is worth referring to Gehl’s idea of “cities for people” also in small towns and it should constitute guidelines for local government authorities.

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