Session
Valley floors and high-altitude areas: reinterpreting territorial construction and land value dynamics
Cité des Territoires - Université Grenoble-Alpes
Du 11/01/2017 au 13/01/2017
In the past, before extensive draining and protection work, valley floors that were not embanked or dammed up were considered inadequate for intensive land use, and even for the establishment of societies, unlike higher up in the valley. However, these lands were not without a certain economic and productive value, thanks notably to the various forms of development which they sustained (production of fodder, lands for grazing, fishing, carriage by river, etc.). They were also in the continuation of the towns and villages of the forelands more or less nearby.
From the beginning of the 19th century, these spaces underwent significant transformations resulting from agricultural innovations and changes to ownership regimes, with the gradual abolition of properties or collective rights to the benefit of individual private ownership. These changes gathered momentum in the 20th century. Certain valleys were altered by industrial installations, which conferred upon them the status and image of "territories of innovation". By the second half of the 20th century, they went from "agricultural plain areas" to areas overshadowed by peri-urbanisation.
At present, certain alpine valley floors are the spaces most subject to anthropogenic pressure, as well as being among the European continent's most dynamic areas from a demographic and economic perspective, thanks to their "territorial connection" role. Conversely, others have become de-populated areas.
Via a time-dependent – and necessarily comparative – approach, this session sets out to verify how territorial transformations of valley floors have impacted the relationships between the low-lying and high-lying lands, modifying the verticality specific to mountain areas. Taking into account the modification of global socio-economic contexts, the session seeks to confirm the impacts of the increased value of high-lying lands on the valley floors.
This will involve verifying the various transformation modalities, depending on the valley, and in particular understanding the impacts on the land of its different usages, which influence the weight of land ownership in decisions. Finally, we must examine how these transformations have modified the system of vertical relations between high lands and low lands, and how they have fuelled innovation processes both on a territorial level and on a social and economic level.
More generally, the session seeks to verify the idea of alpine valley floors sliding from a "fringe" situation (albeit one in continuity with, and highly integrated in, the alpine territory) to one in which their increased value has gone hand in hand with a growing disconnection from the territory to which they belong, or, on the contrary, whether new economic activities have effectively re-connected them to the corresponding territory. Comparisons will serve to gauge the diversity of situations within mountain regions, and to envisage the specificity of these territories based on other criteria.
Session (2) Valley floors and high-altitude areas: reinterpreting territorial construction and land value dynamics |
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Wednesday 11 January
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Introduction - Luigi Lorenzetti, Università della Svizzera italiana | ||
Panel 1 : 14h45 - 15h40 - Relations between top and bottom Chairman : Luigi Lorenzetti, Discussant : Sylvie Duvillard, UGA-PACTE |
A reversal of fortune: highlands in Italian Western Alps (XXth-XXIth centuries) (Un revers de fortune: les hautes terres dans les Alpes italiennes occidentales) Luca Mocarelli, Università di Milano Bicocca |
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The relation between valley and upland in abruzzo mountain areas: the case of middle aterno valley (La relation entre fond de vallée et espace d’altitude dans l’espace montagneux des Abruzzes: le cas de la moyenne vallée Aterno) FUSCHI Marina, MEDA Alejandra, Università "G. d'Annunzio" Chieti-Pescara - Dipartimento di Economia - Pescara |
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Discussions | ||
COFFE BREAK - 15:40 - 16:00 | ||
Panel 2 : 16h00 - 18h00 - The top and bottom : variety of appropriations Discussant : Yann Decorzant. CREPA |
Quand le bas domine le haut. Le processus sidérurgique en basse Maurienne (fin XVIIIe-fin XIXe siècle) (When the bottom of the valley dominates the top. The steelmaking process in Maurienne (End XVIIIe- late nineteenth century)) JUDET Pierre, LARHRA, Université Grenoble-Alpes |
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Verticalité ou horizontalité de l’espace montagnard ? La réorganisation des relations entre le « bas » et le « haut » dans les Tatras (Verticality versus horizontality of mountain areas ? The reorganization of the relationship between) LOMPECH Michel, RICARD Daniel, CERAMAC, Université Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand; MINTALOVA Tatiana, , Université Palacky d'Olomouc |
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Des vallées suspendues ? Entre terres d’en haut et d’en bas, itinéraires comparés de trois vallées en Vercors : Furon, Bourne et Gervanne (Suspended valleys? Between uplands and lowlands, compared itineraries of three Vercors valleys: the Furon, the Bourne, and the Gervanne) MOURET Emma-Sophie, LARHRA, Université Grenoble Alpes |
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Le poids du territoire dans la construction du risque : les avalanches de moyenne montagne occultées par l’archétype alpin (The Territorial Importance in Risk Construction: the Medium-high Avalanches in the Shadow of the Alpine Archetype) GIACONA Florie, MARTIN Brice, CRESAT, Université de Haute Alsace; ECKERT Nicolas, UR ETNA, Irstea Grenoble |
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Discussions | ||
Thursday 12 January
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Panel 3 : 10h45 - 12h15 The top and bottom: localized approaches to a comprehensive understanding Chairman : Luca Mocarelli, Discussant : Anne-Marie Granet |
Le val de Bagnes en mutations : XIXe-XXe siècles (Val de Bagnes mutations: nineteenth and twentieth centuries) DECORZANT Yann, FELLAY Jean-Charles, Centre régional d’études des populations alpines (CREPA) ; Bertrand Deslarzes, Musée de Bagnes |
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L’urbanisation de la montagne par le tourisme : exemple des stations touristiques de Zermatt et de Finhaut. (The urbanisation of mountains through tourism. Exemple of the tourist resorts Zermatt and Finhaut) STOCK Mathis, Institut de Géographie & Durabilité, Université de Lausanne |
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Restructuration territoriale et résilience dans les Carpates Orientales roumaines. Etude de cas: la Dépression de Hangu (Territorial restructuring and resilience in the Romanian Eastern Carpathians. Case Study: Hangu Depression) MUNTELE Ionel, GROZAVU Adrian, Faculté de Géographie et Géologie, Université Alexandru Ioan Cuza de Iasi |
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Originalité et dynamique des villages montagneux du Haut Tell tunisien : étude du cas des Dachras HAMZA Ayari, BiCADE, Faculté des Sciences Humaines et Sociales de Tunis |
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Friday 13 January Reread the territorial structure and dynamics of land valuation |
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Panel 4 : 9h00 - 11h00 - Dynamic upper and lower dynamic Chairman : François Walter, Discussant : Daniel Ricard |
LAZARO Lucie, EYCHENNE Corinne, PIBOU Elsa, LISST - Dynamiques Rurales, Université Toulouse 2 - Jean Jaurès ; |
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The parks role in the land transformation: evidences from the central Apennines. (Le rôle des parcs dans la transformation des espaces territoriaux: l’exemple des Apennins central.) CAVUTA Giacomo, DI MATTEO Dante, Università degli Studi "G. d'Annunzio", Chieti-Pescara |
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La "modernité", un enjeu pour les fonds de vallées en mutation. COMBAL Cécile, LAHRHA, Université de Grenoble-Alpes |
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Les patrimoines des alpes occidentales italiennes: paysages, territoires et architectures à réactiver (Heritage in the Italian Western Alps: landscapes, territories and architectures to reactivate) DINI Roberto, Istituto di Architettura Montana - Centre de recherche "Institut d'Architecture de Montagne", Politecnico di Torino |
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Discussions | ||
Conclusion : Anne-Marie Granet, UGA-UMR LARHRA et Sylvie Duvillard, UGA-PACTE |