05649 am 2201297 n 450 991030985080332120181102979-1-03-510205-010.4000/books.psorbonne.13848(CKB)4100000007598728(FrMaCLE)OB-psorbonne-13848(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/56097(PPN)267968922(EXLCZ)99410000000759872820190201j|||||||| ||| 0freuu||||||m||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierLe petit peuple dans l’Occident médiéval Terminologies, perceptions, réalités /Pierre Boglioni, Robert Delort, Claude GauvardParis Éditions de la Sorbonne20181 online resource (736 p.) 2-85944-477-7 Le petit peuple est le mal-aimé de l'histoire, soit que l'historiographie lui préfère les élites à qui profite leur propre discours, soit qu'elle le pousse en ses marges jusqu'à donner à ce très grand nombre la figure de l'exclu, soit qu'elle le qualifie de pauvre pour en faire un intermédiaire privilégié entre Dieu et les hommes. Pourtant le petit peuple existe au sein même du commun, et il se nourrit autant de la faiblesse de ses revenus, de ses souffrances et de ses aspirations que du jugement que portent sur lui les autres membres du corps social. Ces quarante-huit communications ont donc eu à cœur de cerner le vocabulaire complexe qui désigne le petit peuple au Moyen Âge, de décliner les perceptions d'une réalité sociale qui, loin d'être lisse, laisse apercevoir des strates internes, juridiques, économiques, culturelles, n'excluant ni des pratiques communes, ni la possibilité d'ascensions sociales, ni une certaine liberté. Elles se veulent un bilan sur les recherches en cours et une ouverture pour une histoire qui ne réduise pas la société médiévale à ses élites ou à ses marges. Si le pouvoir a été confisqué au petit peuple, sa capacité d'agir et de participer à l'équilibre social n'en demeure pas moins vivante. De ce livre, notre vision du petit peuple de l'Occident médiéval sort profondément renouvelée.petit peuple dans l’Occident médiéval HistoryMedieval & Renaissance Studiespetit peupleOccident médiévalvie quotidienneimage du paysanpauvretépaysanneriehistoriographiecorps socialOccident médiévalpauvretéhistoriographievie quotidiennecorps socialimage du paysanpetit peuplepaysannerieHistoryMedieval & Renaissance Studiespetit peupleOccident médiévalvie quotidienneimage du paysanpauvretépaysanneriehistoriographiecorps socialBendinelli Predelli Maria1290727Bériou Nicole416176Berlioz Jacques153094Bernardi Philippe1022083Boglioni Pierre1290728Bozóky Edina386655Cardini Franco37956Clarke Paula1290729Courtemanche Andrée388466Delort Robert150418Drendel John1290730Farmer Sharon1016133Fianu Kouky737562Filotas Bernadette1290731Fossier Robert147210Gauvard Claude155109Golinelli Paolo169699Guemara Raoudha705568Hébert Michel519301Jamme Armand732855Jaritz Gerhard152575Jeay Madeleine1261243Klapisch-Zuber Christiane143929Laurendeau Danielle1290732Leroy Béatrice388828Lusignan Serge157671Mayade-Claustre Julie1290733Menant François387212Michaud Francine1290734Michaud-Fréjaville Françoise1286955Monnet Pierre227921Montanari Massimo38269Montesano Marina166771Morsel Joseph1284491Nicoud Marilyn619606Nixon Virginia1290735Ortalli Gherardo143476O’Neil Mary R1290736Paradis Bruno1290737Pollina Vincent326398Polo de Beaulieu Marie-Anne1290738Prevenier Walter249475Schulze-Busacker Elisabeth158656Sosson Jean-Pierre139644Stella Alessandro1025936Thonon Sandrine1290739Van Hemelryck Tania1290740Vitale Brovarone Alessandro1290741Yante Jean-Marie1282109Boglioni Pierre1290728Delort Robert150418Gauvard Claude155109FR-FrMaCLEBOOK9910309850803321Le petit peuple dans l’Occident médiéval3021571UNINA05075nam 2200661Ia 450 991043834060332120200520144314.01-283-91145-094-007-4780-210.1007/978-94-007-4780-7(CKB)2670000000280559(EBL)1083526(OCoLC)821265779(SSID)ssj0000798766(PQKBManifestationID)11440638(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000798766(PQKBWorkID)10759654(PQKB)11550461(DE-He213)978-94-007-4780-7(MiAaPQ)EBC1083526(PPN)16833898X(EXLCZ)99267000000028055920121211d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrHuman-environment interactions current and future directions /Eduardo S. Brondizio, Emilio F. Moran, editors1st ed. 2013.Dordrecht ;New York Springer20131 online resource (426 p.)Human-environment interactions ;1Description based upon print version of record.94-007-9937-3 94-007-4779-9 Includes bibliographical references and index.Foreword by Elinor Ostrom -- Introduction -- Part I: Health and Adaptation Approaches -- 1. A Half-Century Portrait: Health Transition in the Xavante Indians from Central Brazil -- 2. Balancing People, Politics, and Resources in Rural Tibet -- 3. Human-Wildlife Contact and Emerging Infectious Diseases -- Part II: Land Change and Landscape Management Approaches -- 4. Change in Natural Resource Management: An Experiment with ‘Participatory GIS’ -- 5. Peopled Parks: Forest Change in India’s Protected Landscapes -- 6. Public-Private Interactions in the Conservation of Private Forests in the United States -- 7. The Monitoring of Land-Cover Change and Management across Gradient Landscapes in Africa -- Part III: Institutional and Political Ecology Approaches -- 8. Between Cooperation and Conflict: The Implementation of Agro-Extractive Settlements in the Lower Amazonian Floodplain -- 9. Conservation of Natural Resources: Which Matters –Having a Regulation or the Size of the Penalty Imposed?- 10. Small-Scale Farmers and the Challenges of Environmental Conservation and Rural Development: Case Studies from the State of São Paulo and the Amazon Region -- 11. Institutional Evolution, Forest Conservation, and Rapid Change in Rural Honduras -- 12. Land-Use Institutions and Natural Resources in Fast-Growing Communities at the Urban-Rural Fringe -- Part IV: Historical and Archeological Approaches -- 13. Agroforestry in Tomé-Açu—An Alternative to Pasture in the Amazon -- 14. Changing Driving Forces, Imposed Tenure Regimes, and Tree-Cover Change on Village Landscapes in the West Mengo Region of Uganda, 1890 to 2002 -- 15. Was Agriculture a Key Productive Activity in Precolonial Amazonia? The Stable Productive Basis for Social Equality in the Central Amazon -- Part V. Future Directions -- 16. Human-Environment Research: Past Trends, Current Challenges and Future Directions -- Index.Human-environment interaction (HEI) provides a framework that brings together scholarship sharing both disciplinary depth and interdisciplinary scope to examine past, present, and future social and environmental change in different parts of the world. This volume brings senior and junior scholars together, and in so doing connects these historically influential traditions to new and cutting-edge approaches that give us a glimpse into current and future trends in interdisciplinary science of human-environment interaction. The volume offers a microcosm of contemporary HEI research in terms of thematic, theory and methodology, level of analysis, and regional coverage.   Drawing on research from eleven countries across four continents, the 16 chapters in the volume bring perspectives from various specialties in anthropology and human ecology, institutional analysis, historical and political ecology, geography, archaeology, and land change sciences. The four sections of the volume reflect complementary approaches to HEI: health and adaptation approaches, land change and landscape management approaches, institutional and political-ecology approaches, and historical and archaeological approaches.Human-Environment Interactions,2214-2339 ;1Human ecologySocial ecologySustainable developmentAnthropologyHuman ecology.Social ecology.Sustainable development.Anthropology.304.2Brondizio Eduardo S1282587Moran Emilio F860082MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910438340603321Human-environment interactions4186595UNINA02435nam 2200517z- 450 991055750640332120211118(CKB)5400000000044492(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/73402(oapen)doab73402(EXLCZ)99540000000004449220202111d2020 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierCharcoal, Food, and Water Production in the Tropics: Applying Nexus Thinking to Improve Research and Policy Approaches in Complex LandscapesFrontiers Media SA20201 online resource (123 p.)2-88963-247-4 This eBook is a collection of articles from a Frontiers Research Topic. Frontiers Research Topics are very popular trademarks of the Frontiers Journals Series: they are collections of at least ten articles, all centered on a particular subject. With their unique mix of varied contributions from Original Research to Review Articles, Frontiers Research Topics unify the most influential researchers, the latest key findings and historical advances in a hot research area! Find out more on how to host your own Frontiers Research Topic or contribute to one as an author by contacting the Frontiers Editorial Office: frontiersin.org/about/contactCharcoal, Food, and Water Production in the TropicsEnvironmental science, engineering & technologybicsscScience: general issuesbicsscagriculturecharcoalcharcoal productionfood productionhydrologypolicytropical countriestropicswater consumptionEnvironmental science, engineering & technologyScience: general issuesHeita Mwampamba Tuyeniedt1303774Ghilardi AdrianedtBailis RobedtHeita Mwampamba TuyeniothGhilardi AdrianothBailis RobothBOOK9910557506403321Charcoal, Food, and Water Production in the Tropics: Applying Nexus Thinking to Improve Research and Policy Approaches in Complex Landscapes3027202UNINA