Academic literature on the topic 'Polish Silesia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Polish Silesia"

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Wyderka, Bogusław. "O stosunkach językowych na Śląsku." Białostockie Archiwum Językowe, no. 5 (2005): 181–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.15290/baj.2005.05.13.

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The author presents a very interesting and complex linguistic situation in Silesia, revealing its linguistic and non-linguistic causes, such as people’s migrations, German language influence, and general Polish and folk Polish speech impact. Taking the most important Silesian linguistic features into consideration, he distinguishes five regions of distinctly formed communication systems: Lower Silesia, Opole Silesia, Upper Silesia, Cieszyn Silesia and Zaolzie.
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Michalewski, Tomasz. "Tożsamość narodowa a problem „polskości” i „śląskości” w twórczości Jana Goczoła." Intercultural Relations 7, no. 1 (September 16, 2020): 9–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/rm.01.2020.07.01.

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National Identity and the Problem of "Polish" and "Silesia" in the Work of Jan Goczoł The article presents the issues of Polishness and Silesianness in the national consciousness of Jan Goczoł, who is known as a poet with a great deal of authorship, prose writer, columnist, and also an Opolian Silesia cultural activist. The article describes the life path of the poet, his family background, and the crystallisation of national consciousness in his writing. The poetry of the defender of the native tradition is emotionally marked with Silesian motifs and refers to the culture of many generations of Silesians.
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Kamusella, Tomasz. "Silesian in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: a language caught in the net of conflicting nationalisms, politics, and identities." Nationalities Papers 39, no. 5 (September 2011): 769–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905992.2011.599373.

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A probe into the changing perceptions and classifications of Silesian (i.e. the Slavic dialect and the Slavic-Germanic creole of Upper Silesia, or both construed as the ethnolect of the Silesians) during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, as most saliently influenced by the mutually nullifying competition of German and Polish ethnolinguistic nationalisms. This competition opened the space for the rise of the Silesian national-cum-regional movement, which sometimes undertook the task of codifying a Silesian language. Such codifications were frustrated during the periods of dictatorship and totalitarianism, which lasted in Upper Silesia from 1926/1933 to 1989. Berlin and Warsaw suppressed the possibility of the rise of a Silesian language, perceived as an ideological threat to the ethnolinguistic legitimization of German and Polish national statehood. Today, Warsaw dislikes the recent popular grassroots project to codify Silesian as a language, but, under the democratic conditions enjoyed in postcommunist Poland, the state administration has no legal means to suppress this project. The codification of Silesian gathered pace at the turning of the twenty-first century, due, among other reasons, to the rapid spread of access to the Internet. However, without the state's blessing and support, the outcome of the codification project, remains, at best, uncertain.
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Orlewski, Patryk. "Identity and distribution of the Silesian minority in Poland." Miscellanea Geographica 23, no. 2 (April 30, 2019): 76–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/mgrsd-2019-0006.

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Abstract According to the National Census of Population and Housing 2011, Silesians are the second largest nationality in Poland. Nevertheless, Silesian nationality is not recognised under Polish law. In this paper, the main aspects of the identity of the Silesian people are discussed. Research was carried out using questionnaire-based interviews in ten municipalities in the Silesian Voivodeship, characterised by the greatest share of Silesians. The ethnic identity of Silesians is complex – more than half of the respondents declared dual nationality. Most of the respondents demand the recognition of the Silesian ethnolect as a regional language, and consequently, its inclusion as a school subject in Upper Silesia. The postulate of establishing autonomy is popular, with a model of the Silesian Voivodeship from the period of interwar Poland.
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Gierczak, Dariusz. "Contested minorities – the case of Upper Silesia." Environmental & Socio-economic Studies 3, no. 2 (June 1, 2015): 41–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/environ-2015-0061.

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AbstractUpper Silesia in terms of ethnicity is a typical example of a historical region in Europe, but in fact, one of the few exceptions in contemporary Poland, where its mixed ethnic and religious structures have at least partly survived until today. While their existence had been denied by Nazi Germany (1933-1945) as well as by the Polish People's Republic (1945-1989), the emancipation of the German and Silesian minorities after the democratic changes of 1989 have evoked strong emotions in the ethnically almost uniform country. Nonetheless, the recent situation of minorities has improved as never before. Minority organisations has been officially recognized and German finally has become the second language in some municipalities of Upper Silesia, but the largest ethnic group in the whole country, the Silesians, have still experienced no formal recognition as a national minority. This article deals with the demographic aspects of the ethnic groups in Upper Silesia since the 19th century until recent times. The census results concerning the ethnic minorities or languages in Upper Silesia have been contested since the first records of that kind have been taken. The outcomes of the both last censuses of 2002 and 2011 concerning the minority question reflected for the first time a much more realistic picture of the status quo. Furthermore, they showed that the idea of Silesian identification found an unexpected high number of supporters. This fact indicates an emerging meaning of regional identification amid significant changes of cultural values in Polish society.
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Hentschel, Gerd. "Obserwacje dotyczące rozpowszechnienia germanizmów leksykalnych we współczesnym regiolekcie śląskim." LingVaria 14, no. 27 (May 31, 2019): 113–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/lv.14.2019.27.08.

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Observations on the Spread of Lexical Germanisms in the Contemporary Silesian RegiolectThe article analyses the extent to which Silesians who say that they regularly use the Silesian regiolect still actively use the numerous lexical Germanisms that have been described for Silesian. It is based on a survey of nearly 1,000 respondents about their “subjective frequency” of Germanism usage. Procedures are suggested for distinguishing between Germanisms that tend to be used more frequently and those that tend to be used less frequently. A much-discussed codification of Silesian could dispense with the latter. Factors influencing usage frequency that are discussed in the article include the prevalence of a range of Silesian Germanisms in Polish dialects outside of Silesia as well as knowledge of German. In addition, the extent of Silesian and Polish usage by speakers of Silesian in different communication contexts is also described.
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Dziuba, Adam, and Sebastian Rosenbaum. "Początki ruchu komunistycznego na Górnym Śląsku (1918–1924)." Res Gestae 10 (July 27, 2020): 184–224. http://dx.doi.org/10.24917/24504475.10.13.

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The defeat of the German Empire in World War I contributed to the radicalisation of social and political sentiment in Germany. In the territory of Upper Silesia, a borderland of the German Reich, these conflicts strengthened national antagonisms. In such a situation the Communist Party of Upper Silesia was created at the end of 1918, achieving serious organisational successes and greatly influencing the attitude of a large number of industrial workers. These local communists sought to channel radical social moods into a communist revolution, but they collided with and lost to Polish and German nationalism. At the time of the decisive battle for Upper Silesia’s nationalities, the communist movement was seriously weakened and did not matter in the struggle for the future of the region. After the division of Upper Silesia in 1922, the structures of the Communist Party of Upper Silesia were incorporated on a territorial basis into the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) or the Communist Party of Poland (KPP). The communists operating in the Polish Silesia (Silesian voivodship) region managed to take advantage of mass strikes in 1923 and led to civil unrest. An attempt to escalate this tension was hindered by the pacification action carried out by state authorities. The most important activists were imprisoned and the party itself had to go underground, sharing the fate of the KPP. The communists active in the KPD also tried to lead the population of the German part of Upper Silesia into revolt but, although they were close to success several times, did not manage to channel the strike into a communist revolution. However, they remained one of the three most influential political parties in the German Upper Silesian Province.
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Sołdra-Gwiżdż, Teresa. "„Los granicznej krainy”. Śląsk Cieszyński w socjologicznej refleksji Jana Szczepańskiego." Górnośląskie Studia Socjologiczne. Seria Nowa 12 (December 31, 2021): 231–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.31261/gss_sn.2021.12.12.

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The article is an attempt to reconstruct the image of Cieszyn Silesia contained in the works of Jan Szczepański. The author presents the most important elements of the image of Silesia (the Polish part of Silesia, i.e. the Silesian Voivodeship at that time) drawn by Szczepański in the interwar period, and the image of Cieszyn Silesia in the post-war period. In his opinion, the essence of Silesian reality is conflict and struggle. Treating Cieszyn Silesia as a borderland area with a strongly outlined cultural, religious (Protestant) and aesthetic distinctiveness, he argues about its Polishness, emphasizing that it is a misunderstood region in Poland. The author believes that in Jan Szczepański’s deliberations on Cieszyn Silesia, it is not possible to identify a clear “thinking style”, while Szczepański’s way of thinking about Cieszyn Silesia, despite its fragmentary nature and many understatements, is part of the two most important research paradigms identified in the sociology of Silesia: borderland and multiculturalism.
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Siuciak, Mirosława. "Polska agitacja patriotyczna w prasie górnośląskiej okresu powstań i plebiscytu (1919–1921)." Język Polski 100, no. 4 (2020): 51–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.31286/jp.100.4.4.

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The aim of the article is to determine the most common means of persuasion used in the Upper Silesian press to influence the Polish-speaking inhabitants of Upper Silesia to vote in favour of joining Poland in the 1921 plebiscite. The campaigning was based on two mechanisms: emphasis on historical and cultural connections with Poland and a negative presentation of Germans and the German state. The Upper Silesian’s ties with the Polish nation were stressed by means of such arguments as: the myth of Silesia as an ancient Piast land, the trope of Poland as a mother figure waiting for the return of her lost child, and the community of Polish speech and Catholicism. The German state, on the other hand, was portrayed as a land of captivity, where the Upper Silesian people had been Germanized and economically exploited for centuries. The image of the German was, in turn, based on the stereotypes of the enemy, an oppressor of Polish speech and religion, and a ruthless capitalist.
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Wnętrzak, Grzegorz. "Niemcy śląscy w wyborach do parlamentu polskiego w latach 1922–1930 a kwestia liczebności Niemców w województwie śląskim." Studia Interkulturowe Europy Środkowo-Wschodniej 10 (November 15, 2017): 67–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0010.5754.

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The article presents a correlation between the size of the German population in the interwar period in the Silesian voivodeship and the results achieved by German electoral lists in the elections to the Polish parliament in 1922–1930. The author not only indicates significant differences between the numbers declared in the German census and the results of the elections, but also tries to find out the cause of this situation. He also discusses the differences between the various parts of the voivodship, especially between Prussian and Austrian Silesia (Cieszyn Silesia), showing how the different levels of Polish national consciousness and regional separatism in these two parts influenced the outcome of the elections for the German minority.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Polish Silesia"

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Bauman-Szulakowska, Jolanta. "Rajmund Hanke, Silesia Cantat. Dzieje polskiego śpiewactwa koscielnego na Śla̧sku [Silesia Cantat. The History of Polish Sacred Choral Societies in Silesia], Katowice 1996,333 S. [Rezension]: Rajmund Hanke, Silesia Cantat. Dzieje polskiego śpiewactwa koscielnego na Śla̧sku [Silesia Cantat. The History of Polish Sacred Choral Societies in Silesia], Katowice 1996,333 S. [Rezension]." Musikgeschichte in Mittel- und Osteuropa ; 5 (1999), S. 179-181, 1999. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A15650.

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Bauman-Szulakowska, Jolanta. "Rajmund Hanke, Silesia Cantat. Dzieje polskiego śpiewactwa koscielnego na Śla̧sku [Silesia Cantat. The History of Polish Sacred Choral Societies in Silesia], Katowice 1996,333 S. [Rezension]." Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2017. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-225131.

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Jefferson, Steven. "Exodus, expulsion, explication : collective memories of Silesia as a German-Polish frontier zone." Thesis, School of Advanced Study, University of London, 2016. http://sas-space.sas.ac.uk/6300/.

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This thesis addresses the traumata associated with Poland’s frontier changes in 1945, within a collective memory paradigm. These events include expulsions from German territories incorporated into Poland, and population transfers between Poland and the USSR. The thesis addresses two components: a central trauma complex, and the resulting collective memory discourse. Being a matter of historical record, the statistical details and chronology of these events are seldom contested, although they have often been instrumentalised by various stakeholders. Instead, the relevant collective memory discourse has focused on the production of broad, often exculpatory, narrative frameworks designed to explain a set of largely accepted facts. Accordingly, my thesis is primarily focused on this collective memory discourse. As an active phase, dominated by stakeholders with a high level of emotional investment in the narration and memorialisation of the relevant events, this collective memory discourse is currently undergoing a transition to the domain of History as a scholarly pursuit. This transition is best symbolised by the fact that, as of 2016, for the first time since 1945, all restrictions on the acquisition of agricultural land and forests in Poland’s former German territories, by Germans, will be lifted. Thus, for surviving expellees, the right of return, in conjunction with the potential to purchase any formerly held real estate and landholdings, will become a de jure reality, marking the end of the region’s long postwar period. Arguably, therefore, one can now engage, at a retrospective, analytical level, with the relevant collective memory discourse without being drawn into it. In order to navigate this complex discourse, I have developed a number of analytical and conceptual tools, which I hope may prove useful beyond this project. In this sense, this thesis can be viewed as a proof of concept. Chief among these tools are a novel working definition of collective memory as a discrete phase in the historification and mythologizing of traumatic events, and a three-level model designed for the consistent analysis of narrative texts, artefacts and cultural productions. By tracing the relevant collective memory discourse through a number of 4 disparate fields, including political myth-making, historiography, toponymic practice, cartography and literature, I have been able to test these analytical and conceptual tools to breaking point, often benefiting from the resulting heuristic gain wherever lived complexity defies simplistic analytic idealisation. To ensure a focused exposition of the theoretical framework and the sources analysed, this thesis is primarily centred upon Lower Silesia and the following broad research questions: what geo-socio-political power dynamics resulted in Poland’s postwar frontier changes and the associated traumata, and how were they justified at the time? How have historians reacted over time to Poland’s postwar frontier changes, and the humanitarian consequences, as well as to contemporary framework narratives relating to these events? How has the toponymic re-inscription of Poland’s former German territories influenced the relevant collective memory discourse, and to what extent have cartographic representations of postwar Poland been influenced by changing geo-political configurations? How have the prevailing socio-political conditions in postwar Germany and Poland constrained literary contributions to the relevant collective memory discourse? And, finally, in what ways, has literature contributed in turn, to the relevant collective memory discourse and the establishment of hegemonic historical narratives? This thesis presents a number of specific findings, the most significant of which is that political contingencies can result in a surprising deflection of collective memory discourse into seemingly unrelated fields, and can trigger a ripple effect, which has the ability to globalise collective memory discourse under certain circumstances. Similarly, my analysis of shared topoi in the works of German and Polish historians and literary authors demonstrates that, far from generating its own framework of reference based on specific traumatic events, collective memory discourse is exquisitely sensitive to broader socio-political narratives. In addition, I contend that mainstream historical narratives tend to simplify, for example, through the imposition of a chronology on multidirectional memories, and by focusing on homogenizing accounts of the collective at the expense of 5 individual narratives. In contrast, literature and local cultural performances often resist such simplification, thus preserving complexity. Viewed in this light, the pursuit of Cultural and Literary Studies addresses a clear problem within, and usefully augments, traditional historical scholarship. By carefully analysing a subset of Polish and German literature, historiography and cultural artefacts produced in response to the traumatic events in question, my thesis seeks to trace the transition from highly localised stakeholder-led collective memory discourses to hegemonic historical narratives developed and maintained in the service of broader geo-political agendas.
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Ozatagan, Guldem. "Integration of Turkish And Polish component suppliers to global auto-production networks : investigating inter-firm relations and innovation in Bursa and upper Silesia." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2009. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.496795.

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Theoretically grounded on the Global Value Chain literature, this thesis aims to examine the role of lead firm strategies on the ways in which firms and production nodes in the periphery are integrated in global production networks and transformed. To this end it directs attention to two automotive production nodes integrated in the European automotive system: Bursa in Turkey and Upper Silesia in Poland. Specifically, it distinguishes between different types of networks lead firms established with component suppliers in Bursa and Upper Silesia and focuses on the ways in which these networks are governed, and how these relate to the innovative behaviour of suppliers in Bursa and Upper Silesia.
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Robak, Kazimierz. "In Poland World War I ended in 1923." [Tampa, Fla.] : University of South Florida, 2005. http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/SFE0001119.

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Zielinski, Joseph M. "Dreams Won and Lost: Fait Accompli and the Creation of Modern Poland, 1918-1923." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1367351251.

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Beranová, Veronika. "Klastrová politika jako součást regionalní inovační politiky." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2007. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-85382.

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The main objective of this thesis has been to answer the question, whether the cluster policy in the Moravian-Silesian Region is a proper part of the regional innovation policy and whether it is properly targeted within the context of the regional innovation policy. In other words whether there is an impact of cluster policy on research, development and innovation, or vice-versa on the fields that can eventually be considered harmful to the fair competition (e.g. activity of the cluster organisations in the field of joint procurement and enforcing of joint interests); and further whether the cluster policy measures contribute rather to dissolving of innovation barriers caused by lack of contact with the other companies and institutions (e.g. missing cooperation partner, low level of trust, missing technical equipment, missing know-how), or to dissolving innovation barriers which should be targeted by other means of the innovation policy (e.g. problems with financing of the innovation projects). An attempt to answer the questions was made in a survey among the members of the Moravian-Silesian cluster organisations. The results of the survey have confirmed the assumption, that the members of the cluster organisations see the activities in the field of networking and information and research, development and innovation as the most beneficial and that they have experienced the highest improvement in dissolving the following innovation barriers: missing cooperation partner, missing business related know-how and low level of trust. However, after a thorough analysis of the policy system and conduction of several structured interviews with the cluster managers, doubts concerning the impact on the "natural" clusters were stated. Based on these findings the further cluster promotion at the national and regional level proves to be eligible, but further research is necessary to examine, whether the activities of the cluster organisations really promote the "natural" clusters, what impact on the innovativeness and competitiveness they bring and whether the promotion is economically efficient.
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Němcová, Darina. "Politika soudržnosti EU a její vliv na Moravskoslezský kraj." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2011. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-112676.

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The thesis "EU cohesion policy and its impact on the Moravian-Silesian Region" is divided into three chapters. The first chapter of the thesis describes the stages of development in the economic and social cohesion of the European integration process. This chapter is deals with the fundamental attributes of cohesion policy, which are the objectives, tools and principles. Attention is paid to the financing of the Cohesion Policy within the European Union. In the second chapter, "Cohesion Policy in the Czech Republic," the author introduces cohesion in the Czech Republic. This chapter describes the basic documents that are used for the implementation of cohesion policy in the CR and the operational programs of which the Czech Republic draws allocation. The last part of this thesis is focused on the Moravian-Silesian Region. Attention is focused on the analysis of whether the region adequately draws the funds with which it is offered through the cohesion policy and the impact of cohesion policy in this region.The aim of my work is to highlight the importance of cohesion policy. I will try to outline the role played by cohesion policy in the European Union, which takes form in the Czech Republic and how it affects the Moravian-Silesian Region. The work has illustrated the economic and social cohesion as a tool for improving the socio-economic level. I would like to assess how big a role of cohesion policy in the Region and the effect on this region.
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Šimkovská, Lenka. "Sociální služby a jejich dostupnost v Moravskoslezském kraji, případová studie okresu Karviná." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2014. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-192983.

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The aim of this thesis is to monitor and evaluate the availability of social services in the Moravian-Silesian region with a more specific focus on the region Karvina. To better achieve the goal, there were set research questions that focus primarily on differences in the range of services for seniors and persons with disabilities, both in the region and in the Karvina region. The theoretical part is focused on defining the basic terms of social policy. There are introduced social models in the European Union and the social system in the Czech Republic. The next chapter presents the theoretical part of social services in the Czech Republic, where the services are divided according to types and according to the focus on the target groups of disadvantaged persons. It also describes the financial aspects for these services. The practical part is divided into two areas of investigation. First, it analyzes the availability of services in the Moravian-Silesian region where the services are compared between six regions. Further analysis evaluates the availability of social services in the Karvina region. Conclusion corresponds to the predetermined hypothesis whether the services offer to the two largest target group are different or not.
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Sobková, Gabriela. "Analýza nezaměstnanosti v Moravskoslezském kraji se zaměřením na těžební průmysl." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2013. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-198291.

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This Master's thesis deals with the analysis of unemployment in the Moravian-Silesian region from various perspectives, such as age structure, educational structure, length of unemployment, there is also a comparison with other regions of the Czech Republic and analysis of labor supply and demand in the region. Emphasis was also placed on an active employment policy in the region that plays a key role. It was also important to Compaq Czech republic with other European countries and emphasizes the utilization of European funds on active employment policy. Due to the fact that region has strong industrial focus is also prepared an analysis of OKD company, as a major employer, its impact on employment in the region and the potential impacts of the layoffs. The aim of the study was to determine the direction in which the region should follow, where the hidden opportunities are for job seekers, in what position is in comparison with other regions and the influence of the company OKD company the region.
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Books on the topic "Polish Silesia"

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Limanowski, Bolesław. Odrodzenie i rozwój narodowości polskiej na Śląsku. 4th ed. Opole: Instytut Śląski w Opolu, 1985.

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Rostocka, Krystyna, editor of compilation and Trela-Mazur, Elżbieta, editor of compilation, eds. Kresowianie na śląsku opolskim: Eastern borderland expatriates in Opole Silesia. Opole: Politechnika Opolska, 2011.

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Schlonzska mowa: Język, Górny Śląsk i nacjonalizmy = The Szlonzokian language : language, Upper Silesia and nationalisms. Zabrze: Narodowa Oficyna Śląska, 2005.

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Kolbuszewski, Stanisław. Kolumna duchów nad nami. Opole: Instytut Śląski w Opolu, 1988.

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Małgorzata, Łoboz, ed. Kocham was mali ludzie--: Franciszkanizm, literatura, publicystyka. Wrocław: Oficyna Wydawnicza ATUT, 2010.

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Friedl, Jiří. Češi a Poláci na Těšínsku 1945-1949: Czechs and Poles in Cieszyn Silesia 1945-1949 = Die tschechische und polnische Bevölkerung im Teschener Gebiet zwischen 1945 und 1949 = Czesi i Polacy na Zaolziu 1945-1949. Praha: Historický ústav AV ČR, 2012.

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Waniek, Henryk. Finis Silesiae. Wrocław: Wydawn. Dolnośląskie, 2003.

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Kamusella, Tomasz. Ślōnsko godka: The Silesian language. Zabrze: Narodowa Oficyna Śląska, 2014.

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Committee, Silesian Profiles. Silesian profiles II: Polish immigration to Texas 1850s-1870s. Panna Maria, Tex: Panna Maria Historical Society, 2004.

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Silesian Profiles Committee. Silesian profiles: Polish immigration to Texas in the 1850s. Panna Maria, Tex: Panna Maria Historical Society, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Polish Silesia"

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Siebel-Achenbach, Sebastian. "Polish Beginnings." In Lower Silesia from Nazi Germany to Communist Poland, 1942–49, 149–97. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-23216-1_7.

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Cordell, Karl. "Polish and Czech Silesia under Communist Rule: A Comparison." In The Politics of Ethnicity in Central Europe, 131–60. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780333977477_7.

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Dobosiewicz, Ilona, and Liliana Piasecka. "Reading in Polish and National Identity in Nineteenth-Century Silesia." In The History of Reading, Volume 1, 101–16. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230316782_7.

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Ostrowska, Alicja, and Danuta Bochenska. "Ethnic Stereotypes among Polish and German Silesians." In Key Issues in Cross-Cultural Psychology, 102–13. London: Garland Science, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003077442-10.

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Kowalik, Paweł, and Marek Kustosz. "Fiscal Equalisation in Polish Municipalities (Example of Lower Silesian Voivodship)." In Finance and Sustainability, 85–95. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-92228-7_8.

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Jaworska, Kazimiera. "Communist policy towards the Catholic Church in Lower Silesia (1956–1974)." In Catholic Church in Lower Silesia against Communism (1945–1974), 51–106. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.13109/9783666573378.51.

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Foltynowicz, Zenon, and Zbigniew Stanisław Kłos. "Research Activities on LCA and LCM in Poland." In Towards a Sustainable Future - Life Cycle Management, 289–303. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-77127-0_26.

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AbstractThe main goal of this paper is to present the history and actual situation in research on LCA and LCM in Poland. This task will be performed by reviewing the different activities and their results in this field, from the very beginning. The paper includes the review of the activities of LCA/LCM main research centres in Poznań (Poznań University of Technology (PUT), Poznań University of Economics and Business (PUEB)), Cracow (Polish Academy of Sciences, AGH University of Science and Technology, Cracow University of Economics), Zielona Góra (University of Zielona Góra), Bydgoszcz (UTP University of Science and Technology), Katowice-Gliwice (Silesian University of Technology), Częstochowa (Częstochowa University of Technology) and Szczecin (ZUT Western Pomeranian University of Technology). LCA/LCM researches are also performed in several smaller research groups in R&D centres. In the end of the paper, some conclusions referring to the actual situation of research on LCA/LCM, dealing with critical evaluation of the LCA/LCM centres in Poland location, issues and problems addressed, areas of the projects covered and the desired activities in the future, are presented.
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Janusz, Spyra. "Jewish Rights of Residence in Cieszyn Silesia, 1742–1848." In Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry Volume 14, 31–48. Liverpool University Press, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781874774693.003.0003.

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This chapter explores Jewish rights of residence in Cieszyn Silesia. Cieszyn Silesia, which encompasses the southern part of Silesia, is a historical area based on the Duchy of Cieszyn. In 1920, Cieszyn Silesia was divided between Poland and Czechoslovakia along the River Olza. Before Jewish emancipation in the second half of the nineteenth century, a limited number of Jews were tolerated in the province in exchange for certain services. From 1742 to 1848 the number of Jews and their rights were determined by complicated legislation called the Jewish incolate. The Silesian estates, unlike those of Moravia and Bohemia, ignored the ban; still, before the mid-seventeenth century Jews resided in the area of Cieszyn Silesia only sporadically. This changed during the Thirty Years War, when the impoverished rulers were constantly in need of money. Emperor Ferdinand II relaxed the legislation concerning Jews, and leasing tolls, customs tariffs, taxes, and the right to produce and sell alcohol, above all spirits, to Jews became a vital source of cash for the feudal lords.
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Piotrowski, Jacek. "The Policies of the Sanacja on the Jewish Minority in Silesia, 1926–1939." In Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry Volume 14, 150–55. Liverpool University Press, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781874774693.003.0009.

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This chapter considers relations between the Sanacja and Silesia's Jewish minority. The Jewish minority possessed particularly strong links with German cultural circles in this region, thus making them quite important to the Sanacja. The Silesian Sanacja described the de facto union between the German and Jewish minorities as an alliance between forces hostile towards the Polish state. Pointing out the lack of Jewish independence in this alliance, the ruling camp's journalists sharply criticized both minorities. The alliance was based, in their view, on a hatred of independent Poland. The participation of the Jews in the National Minorities' Electoral Bloc, formed in autumn 1927 and headed in Silesia by the detested Germans, constituted a huge disappointment for local Sanacja activists.
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Marcin, Wodziński. "Recent Developments in the Historiography of Silesian Jews." In Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry Volume 14, 339–51. Liverpool University Press, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781874774693.003.0025.

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This chapter reviews some recent studies on the Jews of Silesia. The history of the Jews in Silesia became an abandoned field for nearly two decades. Isolated, if sometimes very interesting, studies appeared (including works by Stefi Jersch-Wenzel and Karol Jonca), but they did not maintain the continuity of research, and it could certainly not be said that there was any systematic interest in the subject. But with the renaissance of Judaic studies in Germany and Poland in the second half of the 1980s came a revival of interest in Silesian Jewry. Two conferences on the history of the Jewish community in Silesia, organized almost simultaneously, can be regarded as a symbolic double threshold: the first took place at the Institute of History at Wrocław University in June 1988, the second, a year later in Berlin.
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Conference papers on the topic "Polish Silesia"

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Salamak, Marek. "PROTECTIONS AND MONITORING OF EUROPEAN TRANSPORTATION ROUTES IN POLISH UPPER SILESIA MINING AREA." In 14th SGEM GeoConference on INFORMATICS, GEOINFORMATICS AND REMOTE SENSING. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2014/b22/s9.051.

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Pastuszka, J. S., R. Görny, and A. Wlazlo. "100. Studies of Indoor Particulate Aerosol in Upper Silesia, a Highly Industrialized Polish Region." In AIHce 1998. AIHA, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.3320/1.2762481.

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Checko, Jaroslaw. "HARD COAL RESOURCES IN THE UPPER SILESIA COAL BASIN (POLAND) ACCORDING TO POLISH CLASSIFICATION AND INTERNATIONAL JORC CODE." In 19th SGEM International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference EXPO Proceedings. STEF92 Technology, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2019/1.3/s03.041.

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Neustupa, Zdenek. "VISUALIZATION OF THE REHABILITATION OF THE POST-MINING LANDSCAPE IN THE CZECH-POLISH BORDERLAND OF UPPER SILESIA � LOUKY AREA." In 14th SGEM GeoConference on INFORMATICS, GEOINFORMATICS AND REMOTE SENSING. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2014/b21/s7.055.

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Dořičáková, Šárka. "Implementation Of Active Ageing Policy In The Moravian-Silesian Region." In 11th International Conference on Education and Educational Psychology. European Publisher, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epiceepsy.20111.14.

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Starzec, Krzystof. "THE STRUCTURE OF THE SILESIAN AND MAGURA UNITS IN THE WESTERNMOST POLISH OUTER CARPATHIANS." In 17th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM2017. Stef92 Technology, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2017h/15/s06.060.

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Stromská, Eliška, Dominika Tóthová, and Katarína Melichová. "Dopady společné zemědělské politiky EU na české zemědělce v období 2014–2020." In XXIV. mezinárodního kolokvia o regionálních vědách. Brno: Masaryk University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9896-2021-70.

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The implementation of the Common Agricultural Policy of the EU in the Czech Republic brought many changes in the functioning and financing of agriculture in the Czech Republic with political, economic, and social impacts and many challenges and threats for Czech farmers. Since the Czech Republic acceded to the EU, the Common Agricultural Policy has been reformed several times. The aim of the article is to evaluate the impact of the Common Agricultural Policy on Czech farmers in 2014–2020. The evaluation is based on a qualitative survey among selected farmers in the Moravian-Silesian and Olomouc regions. The research results show that enterprises positively evaluate financial stability and the overall protection of the agricultural sector. Support for the diversification of agriculture and support for the investment was also highlighted. On the contrary, the administrative burden, great emphasis on cross compliance rules, differences in the payments in EU countries, reducing the competitiveness of Czech agriculture and unfavourable conditions for livestock farmers were assessed negatively.
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Žítek, Vladimír, and Tereza Lelková. "Poptávková inovační politika: Podpora elektromobility v českých regionech." In XXIV. mezinárodního kolokvia o regionálních vědách. Brno: Masaryk University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9896-2021-1.

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Innovation policy strives to support the creation and dissemination of innovation. For this purpose, it mainly uses tools that stimulate innovation supply, but in recent years, it has also increasingly implemented demand-oriented tools such as public procurement, support for private demand and regulation. The innovation policy defined in this way pursues not only economic goals but also the fulfillment of various societal challenges. Therefore, it is often associated with the promotion of environmental innovations that lead to green growth and climate change mitigation. In this context, electromobility is significantly promoted in European countries. The aim of the paper is to demonstrate the possibilities of linking cohesion policy and demand-side innovation policy, and to analyse the practical implementation of such a policy in the Czech regions. The analysis incorporates 519 projects supported through the Low Carbon Technologies programme within the OP EIC 2014-2020. More than 50% of projects were implemented in the three most populated regions, namely the South Moravian, Central Bohemian and Moravia-Silesian regions. These regions also accounted for more than half of the EU subsidy. The most frequent beneficiaries by legal form were micro and small enterprises. A significant group also consists of self-employed persons, which represented 21.8 % of beneficiaries.
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Pawluszek-Filipiak, Kamila, Maya Ilieva, Natalia Wielgocka, and Krzysztof Stasch. "Evaluation of synthetic aperture radar interferometric techniques for monitoring of fast deformation caused by underground mining exploitation." In 5th Joint International Symposium on Deformation Monitoring. Valencia: Editorial de la Universitat Politècnica de València, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/jisdm2022.2022.13863.

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EPOS-PL+ is the Polish national realization of the European Plate Observing System (EPOS) project that aims to build a multidisciplinary infrastructure. It allows integration of a variety of geoscience expertise and techniques to better understand the geohazard related to the underground mining of coal in the Upper Silesian Coal Basin (USCB) in Poland. The study case in this project is the Marcel Mine, located within USCB, where the detected subsidence for the analyzed period of four months reaches 91 cm. Various interferometric processing techniques demonstrated some advantages and also some limitations in the context of mining deformation measurement, including accuracy, spatial resolution, detectable deformation rate, atmospheric delay, and ability to detect the maximal deformation gradients. This is especially important from a mining perspective. Therefore, we investigated three different interferometric processing techniques to monitor fast mining deformation in the Marcel hard coal mine area. More specifically, we used conventional DInSAR, Small Baseline Subsets (SBAS), and Persistent Scattered Interferometry (PSInSAR). The result confirmed that none of these methods can be considered as the best. The DInSAR approach allows capturing the maximal deformation gradient, which was not possible with the PSInSAR and SBAS approaches. On the contrary, PSInSAR and SBAS allow us to provide less noisy and reliable results in the area of safety pillars.
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Waligóra, Anna, and Marcin Gorski. "TRANSFORMATION OF THE POLISH UNIVERSITY THROUGH THE POWER 3.5 INTEGRATED UNIVERSITY PROGRAMS ON THE EXAMPLE OF THE SILESIAN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY." In 15th International Technology, Education and Development Conference. IATED, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/inted.2021.1358.

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