Abstract

n the long-term development of human geography we can observe a tendency to combine ideas from an intradisciplinary debate and those imported from outside the discipline. It is profoundly influenced by a number of impulses from the rapidly changing world. This paper provides a brief survey of challenges for human geography setting them within the context of paradigmatic development and economic, social, cultural, environmental, political, and technological changes. It briefly focuses on the debates of human geographers what their discipline could or should study in the near future and how it could be done. Part of the paper is devoted to a few reflections of authors from the Visegrad Four countries concentrating attention to further direction of human geography. Human geography is unlikely to be characterised by a mono-paradigm dominance in the next few decades, but a discussion on how to find a common base for the integration of paradigms in geography is likely to continue. Changing hierarchical structures, significant modernization processes, as well as local, regional and global changes influencing space-time behavioural patterns of humans can be expected among the main sources of inspiration for the human geographic research.

Highlights

  • This paper provides a brief survey of challenges for human geography setting them within the context of paradigmatic development and economic, social, cultural, environmental, political, and technological changes

  • Contemporary human geography refers to a type of academic activity, which encompasses a diversity of ways of examining the presence and actions of humans in geographical space

  • Human geography can be expected to retain the nature of a hybrid formation in which multiple paradigmatic viewpoints coexist within the same institutional and disciplinary spaces

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Summary

Introduction

This paper provides a brief survey of challenges for human geography setting them within the context of paradigmatic development and economic, social, cultural, environmental, political, and technological changes. After the break-through in the 1980s, new opportunities opened up for the Czech, Hungarian, Polish and Slovak geographers consisting of broader contacts with the world geography and in the relation to the new themes, epistemological fields and methodological approaches of research.

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