Documents found
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391.More information
The public maritime domain is legally well defined. The space which it recovers is at the crossroads of major stakes, between land and sea. Natural risks, as technological risks, affect this area. The integrated coastal zone management submits the competent authorities to renew their approach of these areas. Consequently, it can be noticed that the traditional approach of the public maritime domain reveals its own limits, but the appreciation must be moderated and leads to distinguish between a question of natural risks or technological risks. On the other hand, it appears significantly that the stakes inherent to the situation of the public maritime domain require an integrated approach, taking into account particularly the contrasted objectives of which it is the stake. This resulted in redefining the methods of the governorship there. In conclusion, it appears well that economic, social and ecological impact of climate change on these fragile areas also implies to stick finally to causalities of these phenomena.
Keywords: domaine public, risques, inondation, submersion, contrôle des activités, constructions, naturels, dégradation, retrait stratégique, responsabilité, zones côtières, gestion intégrée, Risks, public domain, inundation, activity control, construction, natural, degradation, responsibility, coastal zones, integrated management
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392.More information
This contribution focuses on the sustainable dimensions of food policies and discourses in France. The rise of sustainable food in recent years and its media coverage have caused a paradigmatic shift from healthy to good to eat, leading to changes in public policies and social representations. This research is carried out within the framework of the implementation of a territorial policy of a medium-sized French metropolis around sustainable food. Several methodologies are deployed (discourses analysis, semi-structured interviews, focus-groups, online survey) here to, first of all, capture the discourses circulating in the public and media space concerning sustainable food. In a second step, it is a question of understanding the practices, the social representations and of implementing a participative device allowing a reconfiguration of public policies at the local level for food democracy. The work as a whole highlights the political and communication dimensions of sustainable food.
Keywords: alimentation, durable, démocratie alimentaire, politiques publiques, food, sustainability, food democracy, public policies
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394.
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396.More information
Public policy concerning the management of ethnocultural diversity is being redefined in Canada as well as in Quebec. Over and above policy statements, these changes lead to concrete impacts not only on the specifies of the intervention framework, but also on the mandates and even on the very existence of non-governmental organizations (NGOs), in the context of this redefinition in Quebec. This reflects the fact that despite a number of reservations concerning the definition of a common heritage and of national identity on the part of the State, the NGOs adhere to a procedural definition of citizenship and support the changes under way.
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397.More information
Unlike Anglo-Saxon countries, France has adopted only very recently (Sapin 2 Law, 2016) its official definition and a legal framework about corporate lobbying activities. Using the concept of coregulation, this article will focus on analyzing the link (or the interaction) between voluntary and binding standards which regulate lobbying. It will also identify public and private actors who initiated these standards. Finally, the limits of this new type of lobbying regulations will be underlined by studying them in a broader perspective on the CSR stakes (or challenges) of lobbying and on the paradoxes of the recent concept of responsible lobbying.
Keywords: Lobbying, RSE, corégulation, régulation, règlementation, Lobbying, CSR, coregulation, regulation, rules, Lobbying, RSE, corregulación, regulación, reglamentación
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400.More information
ABSTRACTThis article describes the ways in which conceptualisations, notions, and new or renewed vocabularies, deriving legitimacy from their circulation in transnational and international circuits, come up against particular national circumstances. The case study focuses on the Canadian federal government's importation of the concept of social cohesion, describing the domestication of the concept and the adjustments in its meaning so as to take into account and address the particularities of Canada and its cultural pluralism.