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Data of the Doctoral School

Doctoral school identification data

Name of the doctoral school: István Széchenyi Economics and Management Doctoral School

The ID of the doctoral school: 239

Field of study: Social Sciences

Field of study: Economics and Management

Place: Alexandre Lamfalussy Faculty of Economics, University of Sopron

Postal address: H-9400 Sopron, Erzsébet str. 9., Hungary

Contacts

Phone: +36 99 518106

E-mail: lkk-doktori##kukac##uni-sopron.hu

Ildikó Petróné Tóth Doctoral Lecturer and Coordinator
Mobil: +36 30 9575587

Dr. Richárd Resperger Secretary of Doctoral School

Prof. Dr. Csilla Obádovics Head of Doctoral School
Mobil: +36 30 3855744

Core members

  • Prof. Dr. Csilla Obádovics PhD Professor
  • Prof. Dr. Attila Fábián PhD Professor
  • Prof. Dr. Zsuzsanna Széles PhD Professor
  • Prof. Dr. László Szalay DSc Professor
  • Dr. habil. Balázs István Tóth PhD Associate Professor
  • Dr. habil. Zoltán Pogátsa PhD Associate Professor
  • Prof. Dr. László Kulcsár CSc Professor Emeritus
  • Prof. Dr. Csaba Székely DSc Core Member Emeritus

Members of the Scientific Doctoral Committee

  • Prof. Dr. Csilla Obádovics PhD Professor
  • Prof. Dr. Zsuzsanna Széles PhD Professor
  • Dr. habil. Balázs István Tóth PhD Associate Professor
  • Prof. Dr. Csaba Székely DSc Core Member Emeritus, Member with the Right to Consult
  • Prof. Gyula Bakacsi CSc Professor – External Member with Voting Rights
  • Prof. József Popp DSc Professor – External Member with Voting Rights
  • Student representative: Astrid Ionescu PhD Student

Namesake of the doctoral school

István, Count Széchenyi, (born Sept. 21, 1791, Vienna, Austrian Empire – died April 8, 1860, Döbling, near Vienna), reformer and writer whose practical enterprises represented an effort toward Hungarian national development before the upsurge of revolutionary radicalism in the 1840s.

Born into an old, aristocratic Hungarian family, Széchenyi fought against Napoleon I and thereafter traveled extensively in Europe. The modernity of England and France impressed him, especially when he contrasted them with his backward homeland. Resolved to improve Hungary’s condition, he donated a year’s income to establish the Hungarian National Academy of Sciences (1825). At Széchenyi’s instigation, the Hungarian nobility formed aristocratic clubs to discuss political affairs. In 1830 he introduced steam shipping on the Danube. Also in that year, he began publishing a number of works, including Hitel (1830; “Credit”), Vilag (1831; “Light”), and Stadium (1833), in which he voiced Hungary’s need for economic advancement.

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