Academy of Sciences of the Czech republic › Vědní oblasti › Humanities and Social Sciences
“World Development Report 2014” panel discussion at CERGE-EI
10 Oct 2013
Prof. František Šmahel will receive the National Award of the Government of the CR Česká hlava (Czech Intelligence)
4 Oct 2013
Nobel Laureate Eric Maskin in Prague
17 Jun 2013
Cubisti Cubismo
6 Jun 2013
The Director of the Institute of Art History, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prof. Vojtěch Lahoda, was involved in the preparation of the international exhibition Cubisti Cubismo, which is open from 8 March to 23 June 2013 at the Complesso Monumentale del Vittoriano in Rome. The curator, Charlotte N. Eyerman, an art historian from Los Angeles, planned it as a wide-ranging survey of Cubists and Cubism, from Picasso, through Russian artists, to figures from the USA (Max Weber) and Great Britain (Wyndham Lewis). She presented Cubism as a trend that eventually influenced all local schools, and emphasised the spread of Cubism into decorative art, architecture (Czech examples were at least shown in photographs and a model of Chochol’s house in Neklanova Street), and into film.
Art Historian Keith Holz in Prague
4 Jun 2013
Václav Havel in Contemporary History
20 Mar 2012
Conference Career horizons: Academic trajectories and early stage researchers
1 Dec 2010
December 7, 2010 - In the Czech context the debate on the early stage phase of academic careers is limited to high numbers of uncompleted doctorates and low financial appraisal. The aim of the workshop is to open the debate more broadly. We are interested in exploring and discussing the relationship between academic positions of early stage researchers, their career prospects and changing institutional contexts of knowledge production.
Theory and method in archaeology of the Neolithic
9 Jun 2010
26th -27th October 2010 - Meeting of researchers interested in the Neolithic of Central Europe. The seminar will be focused on the main topics such as the role of material culture and its appropriate method of analysis, land use and environment, new scientific methods of qualitative analyses of materials and sediments.
Consequences of being rich: wealth and population are key drivers of invasive species in Europe
10 Jun 2010
A new study of biological invasions in Europe found they were linked not so much to changes in climate or land cover, but to two dominant factors – more money and more people. Wealth and population density, along with an increase in international trade and commerce, were the forces most strongly associated with invasive species that can disrupt ecosystems and cause severe ecological or agricultural damage, scientists said.