Les jardins collectifs ont-ils droit de cité ?

Collective gardens, a term which covers many different types of gardens, raise new issues around the environment, social links, exchanges and the protection of ‘ordinary’ nature in metropolitan territories. These gardens are often initiated by spontaneous collective aspirations which ignore public p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bruno Marmiroli
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication 2018-12-01
Series:In Situ : Revue de Patrimoines
Subjects:
law
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/insitu/19352
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spelling doaj-85a8653a2ef048c888be92e8b64234872020-11-24T21:57:34ZfraMinistère de la Culture et de la CommunicationIn Situ : Revue de Patrimoines1630-73052018-12-013710.4000/insitu.19352Les jardins collectifs ont-ils droit de cité ?Bruno MarmiroliCollective gardens, a term which covers many different types of gardens, raise new issues around the environment, social links, exchanges and the protection of ‘ordinary’ nature in metropolitan territories. These gardens are often initiated by spontaneous collective aspirations which ignore public policies. But they become institutionalised spaces once the local authorities take over responsibility for them. Although they may feature in politicians’ declarations, they rarely feature in urban projects, particularly where space is subjected to intense real estate pressure. These collective gardens then do not enjoy the protection they deserve in view of the services they provide. By taking a new look at the history of family gardens, which enjoy some measure of recognition, this article proposes further measures that might be studied in order to better integrate collective gardens into urban projects. Several approaches are considered, the first looking at legal measures that could give these gardens specific statutory protection that would limit their precarity. The second approach looks at the developing movement for urban ecology, in which the garden has an important role to play, despite the difficulties of introducing it to town-planning tools. The last orientation is founded on an extension of our notions of heritage in order to encompass the collective garden as a king of median space between nature and culture.http://journals.openedition.org/insitu/19352collective gardencommunity gardentown-planninglawknow-howplants
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bruno Marmiroli
spellingShingle Bruno Marmiroli
Les jardins collectifs ont-ils droit de cité ?
In Situ : Revue de Patrimoines
collective garden
community garden
town-planning
law
know-how
plants
author_facet Bruno Marmiroli
author_sort Bruno Marmiroli
title Les jardins collectifs ont-ils droit de cité ?
title_short Les jardins collectifs ont-ils droit de cité ?
title_full Les jardins collectifs ont-ils droit de cité ?
title_fullStr Les jardins collectifs ont-ils droit de cité ?
title_full_unstemmed Les jardins collectifs ont-ils droit de cité ?
title_sort les jardins collectifs ont-ils droit de cité ?
publisher Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication
series In Situ : Revue de Patrimoines
issn 1630-7305
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Collective gardens, a term which covers many different types of gardens, raise new issues around the environment, social links, exchanges and the protection of ‘ordinary’ nature in metropolitan territories. These gardens are often initiated by spontaneous collective aspirations which ignore public policies. But they become institutionalised spaces once the local authorities take over responsibility for them. Although they may feature in politicians’ declarations, they rarely feature in urban projects, particularly where space is subjected to intense real estate pressure. These collective gardens then do not enjoy the protection they deserve in view of the services they provide. By taking a new look at the history of family gardens, which enjoy some measure of recognition, this article proposes further measures that might be studied in order to better integrate collective gardens into urban projects. Several approaches are considered, the first looking at legal measures that could give these gardens specific statutory protection that would limit their precarity. The second approach looks at the developing movement for urban ecology, in which the garden has an important role to play, despite the difficulties of introducing it to town-planning tools. The last orientation is founded on an extension of our notions of heritage in order to encompass the collective garden as a king of median space between nature and culture.
topic collective garden
community garden
town-planning
law
know-how
plants
url http://journals.openedition.org/insitu/19352
work_keys_str_mv AT brunomarmiroli lesjardinscollectifsontilsdroitdecite
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