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Dive into the research topics where Györgyi Bela is active.

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Featured researches published by Györgyi Bela.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2010

Changing conservation strategies in Europe: a framework integrating ecosystem services and dynamics

John R. Haslett; Pam Berry; Györgyi Bela; Rob H.G. Jongman; György Pataki; Michael J. Samways; Martin Zobel

Protecting species and their habitats through the designation and management of protected areas is central to present biodiversity conservation efforts in Europe. Recent awareness of the importance of ecosystem dynamics in changing environments and of human needs for the sustainable provision of ecosystem services expose potential weaknesses in current European conservation management strategies and policy. Here we examine these issues in the light of information gained from reviews, workshops, interviews and discussions undertaken within the RUBICODE project. We present a new conceptual framework that joins conventional biodiversity conservation with new requirements. The framework links cultural and aesthetic values applied in a static environment to the demands of dynamic ecosystems and societal needs within social–ecological systems in a changing Europe. We employ this framework to propose innovative ways in which ecosystem service provision may be used to add value to traditional conservation approaches by supporting and complementing present European biodiversity conservation strategy and policy while remaining within the guidelines of the Convention on Biological Diversity.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2010

Research needs for incorporating the ecosystem service approach into EU biodiversity conservation policy

Christian Anton; Juliette Young; Paula A. Harrison; Martin Musche; Györgyi Bela; Christian K. Feld; R. Harrington; John R. Haslett; György Pataki; Mark Rounsevell; Michalis Skourtos; J. Paulo Sousa; Martin T. Sykes; Rob Tinch; Marie Vandewalle; Allan D. Watt; Josef Settele

Using a range of different methods including extensive reviews, workshops and an electronic conference, 70 key research recommendations and 12 priority research needs to integrate the ecosystem services approach into biodiversity conservation policy and funding were identified by a cross-disciplinary group of over 100 scientists and 50 stakeholders, including research funders and policy-makers. These recommendations focus on the ecological underpinning of ecosystem services, drivers that affect ecosystems and their services, biological traits and ecosystem services, the valuation of ecosystem services, spatial and temporal scales in ecosystem service assessment, indicators of ecosystem services, and habitat management, conservation policy and ecosystem services. The recommendations in this paper help steer the research agenda on ecosystem services into policy-relevant areas, agreed upon by funders, researchers and policy-makers. This research agenda will only succeed with increased collaboration between researchers across disciplines, thereby providing a challenge to the research community and research funders to work in new, interdisciplinary ways.


Conservation Biology | 2016

Learning and the transformative potential of citizen science.

Györgyi Bela; Taru Peltola; Juliette Young; Bálint Balázs; Isabelle Arpin; György Pataki; Jennifer Hauck; Eszter Kelemen; Leena Kopperoinen; Ann Van Herzele; Hans Keune; Susanne Hecker; Monika Suškevičs; Helen E. Roy; Pekka Itkonen; Mart Külvik; Miklós László; Corina Basnou; Joan Pino; Aletta Bonn

The number of collaborative initiatives between scientists and volunteers (i.e., citizen science) is increasing across many research fields. The promise of societal transformation together with scientific breakthroughs contributes to the current popularity of citizen science (CS) in the policy domain. We examined the transformative capacity of citizen science in particular learning through environmental CS as conservation tool. We reviewed the CS and social-learning literature and examined 14 conservation projects across Europe that involved collaborative CS. We also developed a template that can be used to explore learning arrangements (i.e., learning events and materials) in CS projects and to explain how the desired outcomes can be achieved through CS learning. We found that recent studies aiming to define CS for analytical purposes often fail to improve the conceptual clarity of CS; CS programs may have transformative potential, especially for the development of individual skills, but such transformation is not necessarily occurring at the organizational and institutional levels; empirical evidence on simple learning outcomes, but the assertion of transformative effects of CS learning is often based on assumptions rather than empirical observation; and it is unanimous that learning in CS is considered important, but in practice it often goes unreported or unevaluated. In conclusion, we point to the need for reliable and transparent measurement of transformative effects for democratization of knowledge production.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2018

Different arguments, same conclusions: how is action against invasive alien species justified in the context of European policy?

Ulrich Heink; Ann Van Herzele; Györgyi Bela; Kurt Jax

The prevention and management of invasive alien species (IAS) has become a high priority in European environmental policy. At the same time, ways of evaluating IAS continue to be a topic of lively debate. In particular, it is far from clear how directly policy makers’ value judgements are linked to the European (EU) policy against IAS. We examine the arguments used to support value judgements of both alien species and invasive alien species as well as the relation between these value judgements and the policy against IAS being developed at European level. Our study is based on 17 semi-structured interviews with experts from EU policy making and from the EU member states Austria, Belgium, Germany and Hungary. We found that our interviewees conceived of IAS in very different ways, expressed a variety of visions of biodiversity and ecosystem services, and adhered to widely different values expressed in their perceptions of IAS and the impacts of IAS. However, only some of these conceptualizations and value judgements are actually addressed in the rationale given in the preamble to the European IAS Regulation. Although value judgements about IAS differed, there was considerable agreement regarding the kind of action to be taken against them.


Archive | 2009

Multifunctional Farming and Survival Strategies in the Borsodi Floodplain

Bálint Balázs; Barbara Bodorkós; Györgyi Bela; László Podmaniczky; Katalin Balázs

In this chapter we summarise and interpret results from the multidisciplinary analysis of a marginal socio-economically disadvantageous small farm region in Hungary. We identify a range of survival strategies within the predominantly agricultural local population to summarize how farmers adapt to unfavourable conditions in agriculture with decreasing revenues while suffering from instability of severe economic situation. The historically rooted and increasing tendencies of part time farming, pluractivity, diversification and off-farm activities only recently required the collective action of farmers in order to develop novel rural development networks. Our case study finds that new policy programmes should build more on the local beneficiaries’ landscape maintaining activities and diversified land use, which for centuries prevented the loss of semi-natural habitats and biodiversity. Relatedly, the marginal area should further activate local participative capabilities to enhance networks and processes across various local stakeholders to effectively influence rural development.


Archive | 2004

Conserving Crop Genetic Resources on Smallholder Farms in Hungary: Institutional Analysis

Györgyi Bela; György Pataki; Melinda Smale; Mariann Hajdú

Hungary is home to a great diversity of plant and animal species, whose preservation is of global value. This paper focuses on the institutional aspects of the research project on on-farm conservation of crop genetic resources in three Environmentally Sensitive Areas of Hungary (Devavanya, Orseg-Vendvidek, Szatmar-Bereg). Implemented by the Institute of Environmental Management, St. Istvan University and the Institute for Agrobotany in partnership with the International Plant Genetic Resources Institute, the project consists of an interdisciplinary institutional, economic, and scientific analysis. The main goal of the project is to develop a scientific understanding about the current and potential socio-economic role of agrobiodiversity maintained in home gardens. The first aim of the institutional analysis carried out by this paper is to identify the institutions and organisations that have significant impact on the seed choices and seed maintenance practices of farmers, and hence, on their access to genetic resources. The second aim is to identify and analyse different stakeholders’ perceptions of the issue at hand, as well as their interests and the values they ascribe to them.


International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability | 2006

A pluralistic economics methodology for analysing landrace conservation on farms: a case study of Hungarian home gardens

Györgyi Bela; Ekin Birol; Melinda Smale

Crop landraces contribute to food security and agricultural research that supports productivity or enhances product quality. The few extant landraces still grown in Hungary are found in home gardens, which are subsistence-oriented, small-scale family farms managed with traditional practices. A pluralistic economics methodology was developed to analyse the prospects of including landraces and home gardens in Hungarys National Rural Development Plan. The methodology draws from three fields of economic inquiry: institutional economics, environmental economics and agricultural economics. Data were collected using qualitative and quantitative approaches from over 300 farmers across 22 communities in three regions. This paper summarizes the methodology and highlights its advantages. A synopsis of findings is also reported.


Ecosystem services | 2017

Stakeholders’ perspectives on the operationalisation of the ecosystem service concept: results from 27 case studies

Jan Dick; Francis Turkelboom; Helen Woods; Irene Iniesta-Arandia; Eeva Primmer; Sanna-Riikka Saarela; Peter Bezák; Peter Mederly; Michael Leone; Wim Verheyden; Eszter Kelemen; Jennifer Hauck; Christopher Andrews; Paula Antunes; Réka Aszalós; Francesc Baró; David N. Barton; Pam Berry; Rob Bugter; Laurence Carvalho; Bálint Czúcz; Robert Dunford; Gemma Garcia Blanco; Nicoleta Geamănă; Relu Giucă; Bruna Grizzetti; Zita Izakovičová; Miklos Kertesz; Leena Kopperoinen; Johannes Langemeyer


EuroChoices | 2005

The role of home gardens in promoting multi-functional agriculture in Hungary.

Ekin Birol; Györgyi Bela; Melinda Smale


Environmental Policy and Governance | 2017

Caught Between Personal and Collective Values: Biodiversity conservation in European decision-making

Eeva Primmer; Mette Termansen; Yennie K. Bredin; Malgorzata Blicharska; Marina García-Llorente; Pam Berry; Tiina Jääskeläinen; Györgyi Bela; Veronika Fabók; Nicoleta Geamana; Paula A. Harrison; John R. Haslett; Georgia Cosor; Anne Holst Korsbæk Andersen

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György Pataki

Corvinus University of Budapest

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Eszter Kelemen

Corvinus University of Budapest

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Ann Van Herzele

Research Institute for Nature and Forest

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Leena Kopperoinen

Finnish Environment Institute

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Melinda Smale

Michigan State University

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Jennifer Hauck

Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

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Ulrich Heink

Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

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