000 01959cam a2200217 4500500
005 20250112045103.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aDeverre, Christian
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aThe New Social Links to Territories
260 _c2004.
500 _a23
520 _aThe growing of concerns about the effects of agricultural activities on the quality of environment questions the trend towards social and spatial specialisation established by the process of agricultural modernisation. This process aimed at the maximisation of food production. Itwas supported by important territorial planning and infrastructures (irrigation systems, land reclamation, land consolidation) and by laws which provided farmers with pre-eminent rights of access to rural space to the detriment of other potential users. In the scientific and technical fields, agronomy and rural economy played a dominant part in establishing this spatial and social specialisation. Environmental concerns question both the monofunctionality of territorial use and the priority of farmers’access rights. The multifunctionality of territories goes with the institutionalisation of new relation systems between farmers and other rural space stakeholders. In these circumstances, agronomy has to come to terms with other scientific disciplines, such as ecology, in the field of technical recommendations. This questioning of productive spatial and social specialisation increasingly provides rural territories with the status of public goods. But market forces can also lead to new environmental specialisation and land privatisation.
690 _asocial tie
690 _aagronomy
690 _aagricultural modernisation
690 _aenvironment
690 _arural territory
786 0 _nNatures Sciences Sociétés | 12 | 2 | 2004-06-01 | p. 172-178 | 1240-1307
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-natures-sciences-societes-2004-2-page-172?lang=en
999 _c193359
_d193359