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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Institut de Géographie Alpine
2010-09-01
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Online Access: | http://journals.openedition.org/rga/1197 |
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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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1721179788774735872 |