About
History
The MECO conferences were deliberately created as an attempt to establish and maintain an exchange between scientists in the fields of statistical and condensed matter physics from Western and Eastern countries, overcoming the hurdles of the "iron curtain". In 1972, the Hungarian theorist Peter Szépfalusy started activities about organising a meeting of physicists from middle European countries, who worked in the area of critical phenomena. Another meeting took place in Budapest in the following year and the first MECO conference was organized 1974 in Vienna. Founding fathers of the conference included physicists, experimentalists as well as theorists, doing, especially, research on ferroelectricity, like Robert Blinc from Jugoslavia and K. Alex Müller from Switzerland.
In order to develop this concept in the mid 70’s and 80’s of the 20th century, the original intention was to have each year a conference, alternating on either side of the iron curtain. If it took place on the Eastern side, scientists from the communist countries could easier obtain permission to travel to the conference site. In addition, it was deemed essential to provide free (or very cheap) accommodation for participants and the low cost of attending MECO was also useful after the fall of the iron curtain, due to the resulting difficult economic situation in the Eastern part of Europe in the 90’s of the last century.
In this way, the organizers of the early MECO conferences succeeded, perhaps for the first time, to bring numerous scientists, despite the political difficulties, together and to create a lively atmosphere of fruitful scientific exchange. This has greatly helped to establish many collaborations which lasted up to the present time, when, partly thanks to the European Union, many more such collaborations have become possible. The ties created by MECO, however, still are useful to help scientific exchange, even though the scientific emphasis has changed from the traditional fields of statistical mechanics and solid state physics to interdisciplinary themes of current interest as well.
Past conferences
MECO usually gathers from 100 to 150 scientists almost every year. Below is the list of the past conference and their locations.
MECO 1 (1974, Wien, Austria)
MECO 2 (1975, Regensburg, West Germany)
MECO 3 (1976, Bled, Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia)
MECO 4 (1977, Unterägeri, Switzerland)
MECO 5 (1978, Boszkowo, Poland)
MECO 6 (1979, Trieste, Italy)
MECO 7 (1980, Budapest, Hungary)
MECO 8 (1981, Saarbrücken, West Germany)
MECO 9 (1982, Wien, Austria)
MECO 10 (1983, Bled, Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia)
MECO 11 (1984, Gernrode, East Germany)
MECO 12 (1985, Aussois, France)
MECO 13 (1986, Liblice, Czech Republic)
MECO 14 (1987, Puidoux, Switzerland)
MECO 15 (1988, Karpacz, Poland)
MECO 17 (1990, Balatonfüred, Hungary)
MECO 16 (1989, Siena, Italy)
MECO 18 (1991, Duisburg, Germany)
MECO 19 (1994, Smolenice, Slovakia)
MECO 20 (1995, Wels, Austria)
MECO 21 (1996, Bled, Slovenia)
MECO 22 (1997, Szklarska Poreba, Poland)
MECO 23 (1998, Trieste, Italy)
MECO 24 (1999, Lutherstadt Wittenberg, Germany)
MECO 25 (2000, Pont-a-Mousson, France)
MECO 26 (2001, Prague, Czech Republic)
MECO 27 (2002, Sopron, Hungary)
MECO 28 (2003, Saarbrücken, Germany)
MECO 29 (2004, Bratislava, Slovakia)
MECO 30 (2005, Cortona, Italy)
MECO 31 (2006, Primošten, Croatia)
MECO 32 (2007, Ladek Zdroj, Poland)
MECO 33 (2008, Wels, Austria)
MECO 34 (2009, Leipzig, Germany)
MECO 35 (2010, Pont-a-Mousson, France)
MECO 36 (2011, Lviv, Ukraine)
MECO 37 (2012, Tatranské Matliare, Slovakia)
MECO 38 (2013, Trieste, Italy)
MECO 39 (2014, Coventry, United Kingdom)
MECO 40 (2015, Esztergom, Hungary)
MECO 41 (2016, Wien, Austria)
MECO 42 (2017, Lyon, France)
MECO 43 (2018, Krakow, Poland)
MECO 44 (2019, Kloster Seeon, Germany)
MECO 45 (2020, Cluj, Romania )
MECO 46 (2021,Riga, Latvia)
MECO 47 (2022, Erice, Italy)
MECO 48 (2023, Stará Lesná, Slovakia)