38 results on '"Vaishar Antonín"'
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2. Anniversary Editorial: 15 Volumes of European Countryside Issued.
- Author
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Šťastná, Milada, Vaishar, Antonín, and Pavlata, Leoš
- Subjects
LANDSCAPE ecology ,LANDSCAPES ,APPLIED ecology ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,ANNIVERSARIES - Abstract
The paper evaluates the first 15 editions of the European Countryside magazine in relation to the EURORURAL conferences and international projects of the Department of Applied and Landscape Ecology of the Mendel University in Brno. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The typology of countryside architectonical forms in South-Moravia, a region of Czechia.
- Author
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Lešková, Andrea and Vaishar, Antonín
- Subjects
VERNACULAR architecture ,BUILDING design & construction ,RURAL geography ,DOMESTIC architecture - Abstract
This article focuses on the typology of countryside architectonical forms in the region of South-Moravia in southeastern Czechia and on the expression of village identity through architecture in case study villages. Original folk architecture has been altered by new types of constructions built in rural areas since the 1950s, followed by a more recent wave of new architectural forms that have developed since the 1990s. The number of architectural types in case study villages was predominantly calculated using the panoramic sceneries on mapy.cz. The coefficients of countryside identity were allocated to architectural types based on basic folk house features. The value of countryside identity is higher in smaller villages except for suburbanized settlements of the regional capital of Brno. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Opportunities for the Development of a Borderland Rural Territory: A Case Study of the Hlučín Region.
- Author
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Šťastná, Milada and Vaishar, Antonín
- Subjects
RURAL development ,BORDERLANDS ,REGIONAL development ,RURAL geography ,HUMAN capital ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,STATISTICS - Abstract
The study evaluates the regional development potential of a specific rural micro-region with regard to its qualitative aspect. It aims to set a general strategy for further development. The method is a geographical analysis using the migration balance as an indicator of the region's attractiveness for housing. Main strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats were identified. Generally accessible statistical data was used. The proposed strategy is to support the development of the human capital. In addition to the generally valid recommendations for the development of rural areas, it is always necessary to take into account the peculiarities of the geographical location, path dependency, natural, economic and social potential, the state of the environment, cultural factors or other specifics. The regional and local decision-making levels play an important role in this process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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5. The Impacts of COVID-19 on the Visitor Attendance of Cultural and Natural Heritage: A Case Study of the South Moravian Region.
- Author
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Tuzová, Kristýna, Vaishar, Antonín, Šťastná, Milada, and Urbanová, Martina
- Abstract
Tourism is one of the world's most affected sectors by the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. This article deals with the assessment of the impact of COVID-19 on the visitation of the South Moravian Region, including important cultural and natural sites, based on the analysis of empirical statistical data in the last decade and the calculation of the year-on-year change in attendance between 2019 and 2022. According to the results, the number of visitors to the South Moravian Region in 2020 fell by almost half, including a decrease of a quarter of visitors to cultural monuments compared to 2019. On the other hand, visits to natural areas with no restricted access increased by a fifth after 2020, but natural areas with restricted access fell by more than 40%. From 2021, attendance of the South Moravian Region began to increase slightly, and in 2022, it reached ninety percent of the level before 2019, including attendance at cultural and natural sites. The results of the research confirmed the growing trend in visitors to the South Moravian Region, including cultural and natural monuments, which were significantly influenced by the impact of COVID-19 on tourism after 2020, with a recovery of tourism in 2022. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Small industrial towns in Moravia: a comparison of the production and post-productive eras.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín, Šťastná, Milada, and Zapletalová, Jana
- Subjects
STRUCTURED financial settlements ,CENSUS ,CITIES & towns ,RURAL tourism ,HERITAGE tourism ,SMALL cities - Abstract
The paper focuses on the changes to the industrial structure of small Moravian towns as these towns are part of the settlement structure that connects urban and rural systems. Small towns (of up to 15,000 inhabitants) are the most industrialized part of the Czech settlement system. They were the subject of capitalist industrialization in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as well as socialist industrialization in the second half of the twentieth century. Therefore, the research question asks how the small-town sector coped with the transition to a post-productive society and how small towns were differentiated during this process. Population censuses were the main tool used to gather data for comparison. Today, small towns have preserved, in particular, less innovatively demanding industries, which have been pushed out of large and medium-sized cities. At the same time, they are undergoing a process of post-productive transformation which is associated with a massive transfer of job opportunities to services, but they can also become starting points for cultural tourism in rural areas. However, their future development will be very differentiated depending on their location concerning regional centres, on the quality of human and social capital and also on their historical pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. Cultural heritage and tourism. A comparison of two destinations in Southern Moravia.
- Author
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Šťastná, Milada and Vaishar, Antonín
- Subjects
HERITAGE tourism ,TOURIST attractions ,CULTURAL property ,COMPARATIVE method ,STATISTICS ,TOURISM - Abstract
This paper addresses the question: why do two destinations with extremely valuable cultural heritage gain attractions have completely different tourism traffic results? The main aim of this paper was to find the various causes of this inequality. The comparative method was used and Lednice and Dolní Kounice in Southern Moravia were selected as case studies. Statistical data and strategic documents on regional and local levels were analysed. The study showed significant differences in the strategic conceptual plans. Dolní Kounice was a more popular destination for suburban tourism for the inhabitants of Brno, the historical heritage was only an added value. In the case of Lednice, the use of its heritage for tourism was one of the main development priorities. This paper further noted that cultural tourism is often seen as a sector of the economy rather than a part of the culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Cultural Tourism After (COVID)-19: First Findings from Czechia.
- Author
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Šťastná, Milada, Vaishar, Antonín, and Tuzová, Kristýna
- Subjects
HERITAGE tourism ,MASS tourism ,TOURIST attractions ,COVID-19 ,TOURISM ,TOURISM websites ,FOOD tourism - Abstract
This article presents and discusses the visible effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on cultural tourism in Czechia, Europe. The pandemic has caused or accelerated certain changes. Mainly urban destinations focusing on foreign tourists (e.g., Prague) were affected by the pandemic. However, despite the significant decline in tourism as an industry, the seeds of positive changes can be traced. For example, domestic tourists have discovered the appeal of the rural regions of their homeland. The trend has started to evolve from mass tourism to a more individual one. The decline of the workforce in tourism will likely result in the increase of more self-service forms of activities. Even though e-tourism cannot replace real experiences, it will contribute to a more deliberate selection of tourist destinations and services. Therefore, investing in a higher quality infrastructure should be a priority. The latest observations show that the main obstacle is insufficient cooperation among local stakeholders, such as entrepreneurs, public administration, or individual government departments. Czechia???s fundamental drawback is the lack of clear distinction of whether culture tourism falls into the economic sector or the cultural sphere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Extinct Settlements and Their Reflection in the Land-Use Changes and Historical Landscape Elements.
- Author
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Peřinková, Veronika, Vavrouchová, Hana, Kovařík, David, Mašíček, Tomáš, Vaishar, Antonín, and Šťastná, Milada
- Subjects
LANDSCAPE changes ,HISTORICAL maps ,GERMANS ,EDUCATIONAL objectives ,MILITARY education - Abstract
The paper is aimed at the variability of historical landscape elements on the territory of the selected extinct settlements, to classify and to evaluate their development in the context of changes in anthropic pressure between the years 1945 and 2022, focusing on the Moravian-Silesian Region. The article presents a methodology for identifying physically extinct settlements and historical landscape elements by using statistical data, historical and current maps and field verification. Territorial dispersion and classification according to cases of the extinction, and according to individual landscape elements are elaborated. Research has confirmed a link between the cause of the settlement's demise: the expulsion of German residents and proximity to the state border, a military training area, the construction of water reservoirs, mining and development projects, and surviving groups of historical landscape elements. The results can serve as a methodology for research in other areas. On a practical level, they can be used for landscape planning, territorial dispersion of tourism, and educational purposes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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10. Historical Landscape Elements of Abandoned Foothill Villages—A Case Study of the Historical Territory of Moravia and Silesia.
- Author
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Vavrouchová, Hana, Vaishar, Antonín, and Peřinková, Veronika
- Subjects
BUILDING stones ,LANDSCAPES ,FOOTHILLS ,QUARRIES & quarrying ,ARABLE land - Abstract
During the second half of the 20th century, a number of settlements disappeared for various reasons, especially in the hilly landscapes of northern Moravia and in the Czech part of Silesia. Currently, in the relevant localities, it is possible to identify preserved original landscape structures (scattered greenery, water elements, original woody plants, terraces, etc.) and other historical landscape elements with heritage potential. The typical elements of the above-mentioned localities of abandoned settlements are agrarian stone walls that document previous agricultural land use. These structures are generally located outside the original building plots on the edges of previously farmed land. Another important historical element is the unused access roads to arable land, which are still visible in lidar pictures. Numerous elements of the extinct settlements also include the remains of building materials and local quarries of building stone. This paper presents and classifies the historical landscape elements and their typology and proposes a methodology for identification and documentation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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11. Social Farming in Czechia, Actors and Barriers.
- Author
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Šťastná, Milada and Vaishar, Antonín
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FARMS ,PUBLIC administration ,CONSUMERS ,COOPERATION - Abstract
The article deals with the state of social farming in Czechia, which is obviously in its infancy. The main barriers to development are the character of Czech agriculture, which is radically based on large-scale production and deliveries to large customers, insufficient cooperation of individual ministries and too narrow conception of the problem as care farming. At the same time, we can expect increasing demand for this type of management in the future. Some ideas for improving the situation are presented, the most important of which is the recognition of social farming by the public administration and the creation of a legal framework for its development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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12. Moravian–Slovak Borderland: Possibilities for Rural Development.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín, Šťastná, Milada, and Kramáreková, Hilda
- Abstract
This article analyzes the question of how the change of geopolitical position in the rural region of Eastern Moravia, which was shifted from the center of the state on its border, is reflected. The paper shows how the originally marginal region transformed from an area with shepherd agriculture to an industrial area with a skilled workforce during the existence of Czechoslovakia and questions how to cope with the consequences of the reverse change into a marginal geopolitical position on the eastern border of Czechia. The paper considers the balance of migration, supplemented by the construction of new dwellings, to be a relatively complex indicator. It states that the region of Eastern Moravia is problematic in terms of further development, except for the northern part, which is affected by the suburbanization of Ostrava. As a result, it proposes to supplement the current orientation toward the manufacturing industry by creating conditions for the development of cultural tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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13. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on rural tourism in Czechia Preliminary considerations.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín and Šťastná, Milada
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,INTERNATIONAL tourism ,RURAL tourism ,URBAN tourism ,COVID-19 ,RURAL development ,SUMMER - Abstract
The paper discusses the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on rural tourism in Czechia. It points out that the catastrophic scenarios of the decline in tourism mainly concern urban destinations focused on foreign tourism. In contrast, rural destinations create an alternative. Some of them have even shown an increase in tourism in the 2020 summer season as compared to 2019. However, this new orientation requires investing in infrastructure, marketing and regional cooperation. Highlights Paper investigates the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on rural tourism in Czechia. The decline in tourism mainly affected destinations focused on foreign tourists. Czech countryside gained domestic tourists due to natural, gastronomic and local attractions. The specificity of COVID 19 new outbreaks is its local or regional limitation. The COVID-19 epidemy has created an opportunity for the development of rural tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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14. Rural Development in Sparsely Populated Areas. Vranov Na Dyjí Micro-Region in Moravia.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín and Šťastná, Milada
- Subjects
SPARSELY populated areas ,RURAL development ,STRUCTURED financial settlements ,SETTLEMENT of structures ,HOUSING development ,SOCIAL capital - Abstract
The article analyses the possibilities of development of one of the most peripheral micro-regions of Moravia on the basis of the theory of sustainability. It notes its above-average focus on agriculture and tourism, which is linked to seasonality, lower education of the population, depopulation and higher unemployment. The settlement structure with predominantly very small villages conditions a worse infrastructure, which is partially balanced by a high-quality natural environment. Possible solutions are seen in the focus on qualitative development and support of social capital. The transition to post-productive development and counter-urbanization gives to regions of this type new opportunities associated with the development of housing and tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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15. The dynamics of population distributions in cities based on daily mobile phone operations: A case study of some Moravian cities.
- Author
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Kopáčik, Gabriel, Vaishar, Antonín, and Šimara, Eva
- Subjects
POPULATION dynamics ,CELL phones ,CASE studies ,RESIDENTIAL areas ,CITIES & towns ,TELEPHONE numbers - Abstract
Analyses of the changes in the presence of persons in different central and residential parts of urban areas are subject to evaluation in this paper. Case studies of the cities of Brno, Ostrava and Zlín during the day and night are highlighted. Data from a provider of mobile phone services were used for the analyses. It appears that the data can be important for the comparison of different urban structures. The results demonstrate that the organisation of urban structure affects the number of visitors and thus the area attractiveness. It was confirmed that the number of mobile phone users in the city cores is higher than the number of permanent residents. The greatest differences between the day and night in the city cores were found in Brno, a concentric city with the most important central functions among the cities studied. Differences between the day and night in residential areas were not as large as expected. City neighbourhoods in Brno showed some specific rhythmicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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16. Cultural Tourism as a Possible Driver of Rural Development in Czechia. Wine Tourism in Moravia as a Case Study.
- Author
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Šťastná, Milada, Vaishar, Antonín, Ryglová, Kateřina, Rašovská, Ida, and Zámečník, Silvie
- Subjects
HERITAGE tourism ,WINE tourism ,RURAL development ,RURAL tourism ,TOURIST attractions ,FOLKLORE - Abstract
The paper connects culture, tourism and rural development. It tries to make an overview of various forms of cultural tourism in Czechia. Attractions of cultural tourism are identified and ranked according to their cognitive function. Their list includes cultural heritage in spheres of archaeological sites, architecture, arts, folklore, pilgrimages, technical works, cultural events or protected landscape areas. The culture of wine in Southern Moravia has been chosen as an example. Its analysis was elaborated using the Importance/Performance Analysis. Czechia has great potential for the cultural tourism development in rural areas but it seems to demand a great deal of work when one needs to be constantly reconciling the changing interests of tourists with the potential of the regions. One of the important goals is to attract tourists into rural areas and thus limit their concentration in the most attractive places. Rural cultural tourism seems to be a significant aspect in this respect. The part of the study is the example of the adaptation of the current situation with COVID-19 to properly support the development and cultural potential of domestic tourism in South Moravian region in relation to the economic impacts on international tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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17. CULTURAL POPULATION STRUCTURE OF THE CZECH BORDERLAND 70 YEARS AFTER RESETTLEMENT A CASE STUDY: TACHOV.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín and Nosková, Helena
- Subjects
WORLD War II ,CULTURAL pluralism ,CULTURE ,POPULATION viability analysis ,GERMAN Jews ,BORDERLANDS ,UNEMPLOYMENT - Abstract
This study focuses on the ethno-cultural situation in one of the regions of the Czech borderland, from where almost the entire population was displaced after the Second World War. Ethnographic, historical and geographical methods were used for the research. The studied region consists of the small town of Tachov and 12 surrounding municipalities, which include a total of 38 settlements. Before the Second World War, the Tachov area was inhabited almost exclusively with people of German ethnicity. After the war, most of these people were displaced to Germany under the Potsdam Agreements. The region also lost most of its Jewish population as a result of the Holocaust and the emigration of those remaining abroad. The area was then inhabited by various groups of Slavic inhabitants from the Czechoslovak interior and other countries, including Czechs and Slovaks from the Czechoslovak interior who were looking for a chance for a new life across the border, and repatriates from the Czech or Slovak minorities in Volhynia, Hungary, Romania. The numbers were supplemented by Ruthenians, who took advantage of the possibility of resettlement after the transfer of Transcarpathian Ukraine to the Soviet Union, by Romanians and Bulgarians who came to the region as forestry experts, and individuals of other ethnic groups. The original population was far from being replaced, nor was resettlement considered as due to a lack of local economic resources and the border position. The loss of about a third of the population was concentrated in the town of Tachov along with the extinction of a number of original settlements due to the protection of the state border, the construction of the Lučina waterworks, or unsuccessful settlements. The result is an extremely low population density of 15 people per km². The western part of the area includes a very sparsely populated landscape of the protected landscape area of the Upper Palatine Forest, while in the eastern part of the area, the Tachovská brázda Furrow is used for agriculture. There are practically no mineral resources. The economic base of the region lies in its manufacturing sector, especially in the processing of plastics in Tachov, which is reflected in its weaker educational structure. The sphere of services is undersized. Unemployment is not high, as Bavaria's proximity allows people to crossborder commuting. Although an ethnically almost homogeneous Slavic population emerged, the socio-cultural levels of the settlers were different. The following ethnocultural groups in particular were singled out and characterized in the territory: Czechs from Czechia, Slovaks from Slovakia, Czechs from formerly Ukrainian Volhynia, Czechs from formerly Polish Volhynia, Slovaks from Transylvania, Ruthenians from Romania, Ruthenians from Transcarpathian Ukraine, and Romanian and Bulgarian forest workers The Roma. German and Jewish ethnocultural groups disappeared, while a new Vietnamese ethno-cultural group formed. A military-police ethnocultural group was also set aside as a remnant of settlers who came to the area within the protection of its state borders. The events of the twentieth century completely changed the ethnic and cultural structure of the population of the Tachov region, when the original majority groups practically disappeared and a completely new structure was created. The study shows how the seemingly ethnically homogeneous structure of the population is in fact culturally differentiated. This had consequences for the entire post-war development of the region. The relationship of the locals to the landscape, to the settlements, and to the land was broken and it took some time for a new local community to form. Moreover, the borderland, in a way, served as a social experiment. The restoration of the middle class was prevented, which today is reflected in a lack of knowledge, and entrepreneurial drive to do business. There is an increased nostalgia for the social security of the socialist period. This is reflected in an increased proportion of votes being cast for non-systemic parties in elections. It turns out that the data on the ethnic structure of the population do not reflect the real cultural diversity of the region. It is necessary to use other statistical data that describe the cultural structure indirectly. Above all, however, it is necessary to carry out ethnographic research which can both characterize the current state and contribute to its explanation using the historical method.0. At present, the possibilities of migration are open. Czechia is becoming a destination for economic migrants from the East and potentially also seniors from the West, or refugees from the South. The experience of this study shows that the assimilation of people from different cultures is a long-term process. People of foreign cultures have a natural tendency to concentrate and separate from domestic culture in order to maintain their own culture. However, intercultural enrichment can only occur if they cooperate with the original culture and gradually integrate into it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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18. Recent population development of very small municipalities in the Czech Republic.
- Author
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Lešková, Andrea and Vaishar, Antonín
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,BORDERLANDS ,URBAN growth ,FOREST declines - Abstract
The problem of municipalities under 200 inhabitants is discussed. There are 1,500 such municipalities (24%) in the Czech Republic. Many of them came to existence after 1989 when the independence of communes was considered part of the democratisation process regardless of the population number. This paper aims at a statistical evaluation of municipalities with fewer than 200 inhabitants and presents their geographical distribution, demographic development and analysis of their aging. In general, 70% of these very small municipalities have been growing since 2001. The smallest of them have the highest percentage of the population decline and are the most endangered by aging. Very small municipalities with the highest population growth are situated mainly in the vicinity of larger towns, the ones with the highest population decline are located mainly in peripheral areas at the border of regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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19. Smart Village and Sustainability. Southern Moravia Case Study.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín and Šťastná, Milada
- Subjects
COMPUTER literacy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,VILLAGES ,DIGITAL technology ,WAGE increases ,SMART cities ,RURAL population - Abstract
The paper is aimed at an attempt to define a smart village in the Czech conditions. It argues that the principles of smart villages are very similar to the concept of sustainability. The analysis deals with preventing rural exclusion, promoting digital technologies for the management of the rural infrastructure, teleworking in rural areas and using ICT for participation and governance. This approach is documented in the case of the South-Moravian Region. It was concluded that it was not so much coverage or accessibility of digital technology that was the main barrier of more intensive use of the smart village concept but rather the lower qualification level and conservatism of rural population is. It is suggested that more attention should be paid to increasing the digital literacy of rural people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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20. The Centennial of Mendel University in Brno and its Faculty of Agrisciences (Editorial).
- Author
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Šťastná, Milada and Vaishar, Antonín
- Subjects
RURAL development ,HORTICULTURE ,VITICULTURE ,AGRICULTURAL education ,ANIMAL culture - Abstract
The paper describes the development of Mendel University in Brno and its Faculty of AgriSciences during last 100 years. It shows the present state of the University and Faculty, including facilities used for educational, scientific and other activities. The journal European Countryside owned by the University has been established 10 years ago. It is a highly cited per review periodical in the field of rural development. This special number gave the opportunity to the members of the Advisory Board to co-celebrate the anniversary by means of their own topic related scientific article. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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21. DIFFERENT COURTYARDS -- DIFFERENT INFLUENCE ON THE QUALITY OF LIFE OF THE LOCAL RESIDENTS? ANALYSIS IN THE POST-SOCIALIST CITY OF BRNO, CZECH REPUBLIC.
- Author
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WITTMANN, Maxmilian, KOPÁČIK, Gabriel, VAISHAR, Antonín, and KILNAROVÁ, Pavla
- Subjects
QUALITY of life ,URBAN planning ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Can different courtyards influence the quality of life of the local residents in different ways? This study focuses on the comparison of the courtyards in closed urban blocks from the 19
th century, the courtyards in the socialist open prefab housing estates and the courtyards in the post-socialist housing development. The analysed courtyards are located in the Central European city of Brno, Czech Republic. The study analyses the satisfaction of the residents living around the courtyards with the social and environmental qualities of the courtyards. The satisfaction which subjectively reflects the quality of life was expressed by the residents in a questionnaire survey. The social parameters of the residents' communities were verified by the demographic data to identify the different demographic conditions. The results imply that a considerable impact on the quality of life should be ascribed to the courtyards in closed urban blocks. The research generated a secondary result too: the analysed buildings and courtyards in the socialist housing estates don't belong to the socially declining areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
22. QUALITY OF RURAL LIFE. EDITORIAL.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín, Vidovićová, Lucie, and Figueiredo, Elisabete
- Subjects
QUALITY of life ,COUNTRY life - Abstract
The paper discusses the concept of the quality of life and its measuring. It tries to explain its peculiarities in the rural space considering different levels of education, professional activities, mobility, ways of dwelling, access to the social and technical infrastructure. The subjective perception of both urban and rural people to the rural quality of life can be manifested in moving in and moving out. The main shortages of the rural quality of life can be seen (by rural people) in a poor access to the prestigious and well-paid jobs and to a richer social life. The main advantages of the rural way of life are generally evaluated (by urban people) by better access to the nature. A promotion of the local identity is considered as an important tool for improving the rural quality of life (besides of a solution of infrastructural problems), considering the enormous difference among European rural areas of a big differentiation of the European countryside. The last part of the paper summarizes the contributions of the special number. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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23. DIFFERENTIATION AND TYPOLOGY OF THE MORAVIAN COUNTRYSIDE.
- Author
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Stonawská, Kateřina and Vaishar, Antonín
- Subjects
RURAL development ,LANDSCAPES ,DIFFERENTIATION (Sociology) ,SOCIAL types ,SOCIAL innovation - Abstract
Copyright of European Countryside is the property of Sciendo and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
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24. Outmigration intentions of secondary school students from a rural micro-region in the Czech inner periphery: a case study of the Bystřice nad Pernštejnem area in the Vysočina Region.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín and Pavlů, Aneta
- Subjects
PUSH & pull factors (Emigration & immigration) ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
This paper analyzes push and pull factors of eventual secondary school student's outmigration from the micro-region of Bystřice nad Pernštejnem in the Czech inner periphery in the light of presupposed depopulation trends and manifestations of peripherality and marginality. The outmigration affects primarily the micro-region's centre while small rural settlements as a whole exhibit a population growth. The lack of prestigious and well-paid jobs and limited cultural activities, entertainment, and sports appear to be the main push migration factors. Possible solutions to this situation are limited and should include efforts to strengthen the relationship of the local population to the territory, to maintain the good quality of the environment, and to enhance the feeling of personal safety. It is argued that similar motivations can be expected in the majority of Czech peripheral micro-regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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25. PRESENT CONSEQUENCES OF THE POST-WAR MIGRATION IN THE CZECH BORDERLAND FOR REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT.
- Author
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VAISHAR, ANTONÍN, DVOŘÁK, PETR, NOSKOVÁ, HELENA, and ZAPLETALOVÁ, JANA
- Subjects
ECONOMIC impact of emigration & immigration ,IMMIGRANTS ,RURAL development ,COMMUNITY development ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Czechia lost more than 3,000,000 inhabitants as a result of the WW II. Germans displaced from the borderland formed the largest part. The newcomers after 1945 were of a different character - without any relation to their new settlements. This population formed a special social milieu familiar with the socialist way of thinking and that of a suppressed middle class. The consequences of it are seen in demographic, economic, environmental and social areas. After 1989, the factories in the borderland were mostly closed down, armies left the territory, people were not prepared to start their own businesses. Large-scale landscape protection formed a new barrier. Tourism is not able to substitute for the decrease in employment. The hope in cross-border collaboration has been overestimated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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26. The Small Town in Rural Areas as an Underresearched Type of Settlement. Editors' Introduction to the Special Issue.
- Author
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Steinführer, Annett, Vaishar, Antonín, and Zapletalová, Jana
- Subjects
SOCIAL capital ,RURAL geography ,HUMAN settlements ,SOCIAL isolation ,SOCIAL sciences - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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27. Between Urban and Rural: Sustainability of Small Towns in the Czech Republic.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín, Zapletalová, Jana, and Nováková, Eva
- Subjects
SMALL cities ,SOCIAL development ,SUSTAINABILITY ,SUBURBANIZATION - Abstract
The paper analyses the position of small towns in the Czech settlement system. It deals with the definition of small towns, their geographical positions, demographic characteristics and functions in the national settlement system. A typology of small towns aimed at individual pillars of their sustainability is one of the results of the paper. The article discusses the position of small towns as part of the urban world and their position as a part of the countryside. It concludes that small towns are functionally important as rural centres. However, differences between urban and rural seem to be less important than differences among individual types of the Czech countryside (suburban, intermediate, inner periphery, borderland). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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28. Bojkovice: Transformation of a peripheral micro-region at the Czech-Slovak border.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín and Šťastná, Milada
- Published
- 2016
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29. Regional identities of Czech historical lands.
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VAISHAR, ANTONÍN and ZAPLETALOVÁ, JANA
- Subjects
LAND settlement - Abstract
Bohemia and Moravia are historical lands, which constitute Czechia (together with a small part of Silesia) since the 10
th century. Two entirely different settlement systems can be identified in Czechia: the centralistic Bohemian sett lement system surrounded by a ring of mountains, and the transitional and polycentric Moravian settlement system. The two lands were physically divided by a border forest. Although they have belonged always to the same state, their autonomy was relatively high until the formation of the Czechoslovak Republic in 1918. In 1948, a new administrative division was introduced, which did not respect the border between the two lands. Bohemia and Moravia kept their importance as different cultural units only. The main research question addressed in this paper is how the Bohemian and Moravian identities are perceived by the people today and whether it makes any sense to consider the historical lands seriously when rethinking the idea of the Europe of regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Evaluation of Land Consolidation Process by Rural Stakeholders.
- Author
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Podhrázská, Jana, Vaishar, Antonín, Toman, František, Knotek, Jaroslav, Ševelová, Miloslava, Stonawská, Kateřina, Vasylchenko, Alona, and Karásek, Petr
- Subjects
LAND consolidation ,RURAL land use ,STAKEHOLDERS ,ACREAGE allotments ,LAND tenure ,LAND management - Abstract
Copyright of European Countryside is the property of Sciendo and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Changes Of A Rural Landscape In Czech Areas Of Different Types.
- Author
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Šťastná, Milada, Vaishar, Antonín, Vavrouchová, Hana, Ševelová, Miloslava, Kozlovská, Silvie, Doskočilová, Veronika, and Lincová, Helena
- Subjects
LANDSCAPE changes ,MICROSTRUCTURE ,URBANIZATION ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,SUBURBANIZATION ,CULTURAL landscapes - Abstract
Copyright of European Countryside is the property of Sciendo and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. LANDSCAPE CHANGE IN MENTAL IMAGE OF ITS RESIDENTS.
- Author
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LINCOVÁ, Helena, VAVROUCHOVÁ, Hana, ŠŤASTNÁ, Milada, VAISHAR, Antonín, ŠEVELOVÁ, Miloslava, KOZLOVSKÁ, Silvie, DOSKOČILOVÁ, Veronika, and MAŠÍČEK, Tomáš
- Subjects
MENTAL imagery ,CULTURAL landscapes ,LAND use ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Cultural landscape went through many changes during the last seventy years. It is possible to measure this change by many ways, including comparative methods. However, is it really the right activity? While there are number of references and land-use maps, old residents are dying. In that sense there is a last chance to record an origin mental image of the landscape. The Project Landscape Memory as a Rural Heritage -- The Changes of Czech Cultural Landscape in The Mental Reflection of its Inhabitants aims to identify a unique local identity and create a theoretical base applicable in territorial planning. The methodology consists of following steps: to elaborate typology of contemporary landscape, to define landscape values for the next investigation, to select case study areas. Subsequently the field research will be realized, aimed at own evaluation of the landscape values, perception of the cultural landscape and its changes by seniors (65+) and young people. A synthesis will be based on the comparison of "objective" landscape development using statistical data and aerial photographs and "mental" landscape development hidden in the perception of the people. The two-year project started in January 2014. The aim of this paper is to present a research, which has been carried out till these days. The identified landscape values varied in each of investigated landscape types. Up to now these results confirm how much an individual and a holistic approach is essential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
33. European rural regions in the era of globalization: the South Moravia case study.
- Author
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Št'astná, Milada, Toman, František, Vaishar, Antonín, Woods, Michael, and Vavrouchová, Hana
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,RURAL development ,SUSTAINABLE development ,RURAL population ,CASE studies - Abstract
Rural regions are perceived mostly on a local, regional or national scale, but globalization impacts also on the countryside. Both production and consumption in rural regions are similar throughout Europe, being directed from the very limited number of global centers. Local authorities do not always react appropriately. Present trends in rural businesses, migration of rural population, sustainable rural development and capacity-building are investigated in 10 European case study regions within the DERREG project of 7th EU framework program. Preliminary findings for the South Moravia case study are presented in the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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34. Accessibility of Services in Rural Areas: Southern Moravia Case Study.
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín and Šťastná, Milada
- Abstract
The accessibility of basic services in rural settlements in the South Moravian Region was evaluated; the accessibility by public transport was taken into account because the accessibility by individual car transport does not manifest any problems. The accessibility was calculated for 768 rural settlements, defined as spatially separate places which do not belong to municipalities with extended power. The time distance includes the time of the ride plus 8 min walking distance to and from the stop. The data was taken from the Integrated Transport System of the South Moravian Region, which ensures that each populated place in the region has to be connected by public transport at least six times on working days. The results show that for 99.8% of the inhabitants of the region, central places equipped with a post office, a basic school and a general practitioner's office are accessible in a shorter time than 30 min. The accessibility of the services depends primarily on the characteristics of the settlement system and the physical conditions of the transport. In lowland areas, the share of settlements with comfortable accessibility is expressively higher than that of the highland and peripheral territories. The possible future improvement consists of the digitization of the services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Preparedness of Young People for a Sustainable Lifestyle: Awareness and Willingness.
- Author
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Dimitrova, Anastazija, Vaishar, Antonín, and Šťastná, Milada
- Abstract
This article discusses the relationship between a consumer lifestyle and the environment. The willingness to adapt to a sustainable lifestyle was tested through a questionnaire among students of Mendel University in Brno, who are theoretically well-informed people. Overall, 417 students answered, i.e., 19% of the respondents. The students generally recognised the need to address environmental issues, and 90.6% intended to change their lifestyle in this direction. Among the barriers, they mentioned in particular lack of time, lack of financial resources, lack of specific information and insufficient conditions. Addressing this issue requires close co-operation in education between governmental and non-governmental organisations in both the public and private sectors. The COVID-19 pandemic has affected the situation in that it has drawn attention to the response of local companies to the global problem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Cultural Tourism as a Driver of Rural Development. Case Study: Southern Moravia.
- Author
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Šťastná, Milada, Vaishar, Antonín, Brychta, Jiří, Tuzová, Kristýna, Zloch, Jan, and Stodolová, Veronika
- Abstract
The main aim of the study was to find out whether cultural tourism could be a driver of rural development in the selected area and in general. In case yes, to what extent and under what conditions. Three districts in the South-Moravian Region, Znojmo, Břeclav, and Hodonín, situated in the rural borderland with Austria and Slovakia represented the study area. Both geographical and sociological methods were used to gather evidence for cultural tourism in that study. Firstly, attractiveness analysis of the area defined for cultural tourism took place. Next, factors influencing the potential for cultural tourism affecting rural development in South Moravia were evaluated. Finally, synergistic relations were discussed. In the territory, many forms of tourism intersect. Based on the results, it can be stated that cultural tourism can hardly be the main driver of rural development after the decline of agriculture because the region's economy has branched out in several directions. However, it can be an important complementary activity that yields both economic and non-economic benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Sustainable Development of a Peripheral Mountain Region on the State Border: Case Study of Moravské Kopanice Microregion (Moravia).
- Author
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Vaishar, Antonín and Šťastná, Milada
- Abstract
The sustainability of rural areas is considered to be most threatened in peripheral, hardly accessible microregions with insufficient economical sources. The paper analyses one such rural area in the eastern part of Moravia from the viewpoint of individual economic, social, and environmental sustainability pillars. The area under study is the mountain territory on the border with Slovakia, which is under large-scale landscape protection. The area with very limited economic sources has been impacted with a change to the geopolitical situation after 1993 (from the centre of Czechoslovakia to the fringe of Czechia). It was stated that the environmental pillar is in the best of conditions; however, perhaps threatened with missing technical infrastructure in relation to the disposal of solid, liquid, and gaseous waste, the social pillar is improving in relation to the post-productive transition, whereas the economic pillar is the most fragile because of its dependence on exogenous jobs in surrounding towns. In general, the microregion seems to be sustainable at the moment. Long-term sustainability will depend on the general economic, demographic, and climatic development of the country and Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. New Approach to Sustainability in Rural Areas Comprising Agriculture Practices–Analysis of Demonstration Farms in the Czech Republic.
- Author
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Šťastná, Milada, Peřinková, Veronika, Pokorná, Pavla, and Vaishar, Antonín
- Abstract
The research was aimed at an overview and analysis of the demonstration activities in the Czech Republic dealing with the transfer of innovations for agricultural practice. Several methods were used to compile the national inventory, in particular the questionnaire survey method. The Czech part of the research was based on 30 questionnaires conducted among both farmers and agricultural organizations engaged in demonstration activities. The questions were focused on a specialization in agriculture, type of the management, connections with networks and their size, types of demonstration activities according to the types of farms and non-productive activities. The most common topics and purposes for demonstration in the Czech Republic are recorded for the category arable land with combined crops. Highly linked to sustainability are activities such as conservation agriculture on arable land with combined crops, root crops and fodders mainly due to a reduction of soil erosion within crop production and animal health management and welfare for dairy within livestock production. The Ministry of Agriculture has prepared a subsidy program to help farmers in the form of illustrative practical demonstrations of comprehensive sustainable farming practices. The main added values for the end-users, if the generated knowledge is implemented, are to strengthen the knowledge transfer system in agriculture, focusing on practical demonstrations and presentation of sustainable farming systems and soil protection in practice. However, the demonstration activities support mostly technological development and some individual ecological measures whereas the sustainability of agriculture as the complex process unifying the crop and animal production is not in the foreground. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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