In search of the territorial land resource in mountain areas

Land and property issues constitute a crucial element in spatial planning and management. Spatial malfunctions (homogenisation of landscapes, urban sprawl, etc.) and socio-economic problems (exclusion of the most fragile elements of the population, growth of second homes, etc.) have led local author...

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Main Author: Catherine Herrera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut de Géographie Alpine 2010-09-01
Series:Revue de Géographie Alpine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/rga/1197
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spelling doaj-f5da458f9f054b16bc3d0063534f94ed2021-09-02T05:16:27ZengInstitut de Géographie AlpineRevue de Géographie Alpine0035-11211760-74262010-09-0198210.4000/rga.1197In search of the territorial land resource in mountain areasCatherine HerreraLand and property issues constitute a crucial element in spatial planning and management. Spatial malfunctions (homogenisation of landscapes, urban sprawl, etc.) and socio-economic problems (exclusion of the most fragile elements of the population, growth of second homes, etc.) have led local authorities in charge of managing land and development to re-examine their relationship with space. The rhetoric of political actors responsible for addressing this question has thus become increasingly marked by a desire to intervene more strongly in land management issues. However, they have always come up against the problem of deciding how to deal with privately owned land, which constitutes a substantial part of the area under their control. The question of management at a level above that of the commune (supra-communal) is thus envisaged in order to avoid a public/private dialectic by promoting the idea of a territorial land resource. The processes involved in this step could thus be seen as a means of clarifying the methods of land management at the scale of a supra-communal territory through better knowledge and application of regulations, the basis for any measure of collective action.http://journals.openedition.org/rga/1197common goodground rentinterterritorialityland managementland resources
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine Herrera
spellingShingle Catherine Herrera
In search of the territorial land resource in mountain areas
Revue de Géographie Alpine
common good
ground rent
interterritoriality
land management
land resources
author_facet Catherine Herrera
author_sort Catherine Herrera
title In search of the territorial land resource in mountain areas
title_short In search of the territorial land resource in mountain areas
title_full In search of the territorial land resource in mountain areas
title_fullStr In search of the territorial land resource in mountain areas
title_full_unstemmed In search of the territorial land resource in mountain areas
title_sort in search of the territorial land resource in mountain areas
publisher Institut de Géographie Alpine
series Revue de Géographie Alpine
issn 0035-1121
1760-7426
publishDate 2010-09-01
description Land and property issues constitute a crucial element in spatial planning and management. Spatial malfunctions (homogenisation of landscapes, urban sprawl, etc.) and socio-economic problems (exclusion of the most fragile elements of the population, growth of second homes, etc.) have led local authorities in charge of managing land and development to re-examine their relationship with space. The rhetoric of political actors responsible for addressing this question has thus become increasingly marked by a desire to intervene more strongly in land management issues. However, they have always come up against the problem of deciding how to deal with privately owned land, which constitutes a substantial part of the area under their control. The question of management at a level above that of the commune (supra-communal) is thus envisaged in order to avoid a public/private dialectic by promoting the idea of a territorial land resource. The processes involved in this step could thus be seen as a means of clarifying the methods of land management at the scale of a supra-communal territory through better knowledge and application of regulations, the basis for any measure of collective action.
topic common good
ground rent
interterritoriality
land management
land resources
url http://journals.openedition.org/rga/1197
work_keys_str_mv AT catherineherrera insearchoftheterritoriallandresourceinmountainareas
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