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| Autore: |
Laporte Antoine
|
| Titolo: |
Territorial Division for Public Action
|
| Pubblicazione: | Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2025 |
| ©2025 | |
| Edizione: | 1st ed. |
| Descrizione fisica: | 1 online resource (318 pages) |
| Disciplina: | 352.140944 |
| Altri autori: |
RibardièreAntonine
|
| Nota di contenuto: | Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Part 1. Territorial Division and the Political Project -- Chapter 1. France's Départements and Municipalities: Fossils or Phoenixes? -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. Republican equality embodied by regular territorial division -- 1.2.1. The invention of départements and communes or the territorial emanation of the revolution -- 1.2.2. An extremely solid administrative pyramid -- 1.2.3. From republican consensus to fragmentation: boundaries in question throughout the 20th century -- 1.3. The age of decentralization: the invention of regions and intermunicipal structures -- 1.3.1. The regional trigger -- 1.3.2. The development of EPCIs as a consequence to the fragmentation of the communal territory -- 1.3.3. Towards the end of the cohabitation between départements and regions -- 1.4. In the 2010s, continuing decentralization without eliminating any tiers -- 1.4.1. Territorial reform and its disruptive effects -- 1.4.2. Revenge for the municipalities? -- 1.4.3. A more complex administrative structure -- 1.5. Conclusion -- 1.6. References -- Chapter 2. Intermunicipal Division: An Ambiguous Revolution -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. The origin of the intermunicipal association: the inadequacies of an unbreakable municipal territorial division -- 2.2.1. A very fine-scale municipal division -- 2.2.2. Municipal fragmentation is becoming increasingly problematic -- 2.2.3. The immovability of municipal division -- 2.3. Intermunicipal division: the rapid but gradual construction of a new division at local level -- 2.3.1. The intermunicipality in France: brief reminders and basic definitions -- 2.3.2. The revival of the intermunicipality in the 1990s -- 2.3.3. As of 2010, completion, deepening and streamlining -- 2.4. Impacts, stakes and debates. |
| 2.4.1. A delicate and pointless evaluation -- 2.4.2. Relevant, coherent, expanded: the central question of borders -- 2.4.3. The political stakes -- 2.4.4. Intermunicipal division and other territorial divisions: what impact on the French territorial administrative system? -- 2.5. Conclusion -- 2.6. References -- Chapter 3. Contradictory Bets on a Greater Paris -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Bigger, more democratic? -- 3.3. Bigger, more coherent? -- 3.4. Conclusion: how the scale changes -- 3.5. References -- Chapter 4. Creating Neighborhoods for Participatory Democracy -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Neighborhoods at the National Assembly and the Senate: the grand narratives of republican territory reinterpreted -- 4.2.1. Fear of communal "gridding": Mirabeau's victory? -- 4.2.2. Scales of power: the return of Sieyès? -- 4.3. Setting up neighborhoods: elusive legality, uncertain pragmatism -- 4.3.1. Making neighborhoods: an act of sovereignty and a marker of political divisions -- 4.3.2. The gridding paradigm: Sieyès' final victory -- 4.4. Making territories: the facts of division -- 4.4.1. Four revindicated criteria for division -- 4.4.2. Putting a "grid" into practice -- 4.4.3. The borders of Parisian neighborhoods: the return of Mirabeau? -- 4.5. Conclusion -- 4.6. References -- Chapter 5. Division for Better Governance in Post-Revolution Tunisia -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. Genesis and evolution of territorial divisions in Tunisia -- 5.2.1. The blurred boundaries of tribal territories -- 5.2.2. Civil control: the basis for a dualist territorial division -- 5.2.3. Building and consolidating the modern state: shaping and reshaping the territory -- 5.2.4. An unequal and partial communal division -- 5.3. Land communalization in post-revolution Tunisia: the legal impasse, the political agenda and the technical solution. | |
| 5.3.1. Constitutionalizing of decentralization: progress and/or legal impasse -- 5.3.2. Communalizing the territory without changing the administrative division: a technical solution for a political agenda -- 5.4. Communalization: between past territorial heritage and future electoral implications -- 5.4.1. The difficult compromise between administrative and local authority boundaries -- 5.4.2. The electoral implications of communalization -- 5.5. Conclusion -- 5.6. References -- Part 2. Territorial Division and Access to Rights -- Chapter 6. The Challenges of the French Judicial Map -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Rationality, equality, technicality, profit: the multiple foundations of the French judicial map -- 6.2.1. The evolution of territorial division since the French Revolution -- 6.2.2. A dogmatic clash over court territorial divisions -- 6.2.3. Political divisions? -- 6.2.4. The judicial map, a State monopoly -- 6.3. What impact do judicial territorial divisions have on access to the courts and the delivery of justice? -- 6.3.1. The 2009 reform of the judicial map: a limited and exceptional impact on theoretical accessibility to the courts -- 6.3.2. Tighter or looser territorial division has little impact on actual accessibility to the courts -- 6.3.3. Judicial territorial division, a powerful factor in inequalities and the delivery of justice -- 6.4. Conclusion -- 6.5. References -- Chapter 7. School Sectorization, the Territorial Division of the French Republic's Schools? -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. From Jules Ferry to the collège unique: standardizing public secondary education and financing private schools -- 7.2.1. The Third Republic: elitist secondary education -- 7.2.2. The introduction of public funding for private education under Vichy -- 7.2.3. The Gaullist Fifth Republic: modernization, massification, sectorization. | |
| 7.2.4. The turning point of the collège unique -- 7.3. Opening up education and sectorization (1981-2007) -- 7.3.1. Persistent disparities between institutions -- 7.3.2. Priority education districts -- 7.3.3. Sectorization reaffirmed -- 7.3.4. Easing the constraint -- 7.4. 2007-2012: pseudo-de-sectorization and its consequences -- 7.4.1. The announcement of the "abolition of school mapping" -- 7.4.2. Increasing school segregation in urban areas -- 7.4.3. The boom in private education and the changing relationship between families and schools -- 7.5. 2012-2020: Believing that sectorization is a good thing, but that current boundaries are wrong and lead to segregation -- 7.5.1. A poorly thought-out territorial division -- 7.5.2. Modernizing school sectorization in a context of inequality -- 7.6. Conclusion: when the framework hides the territorial division -- 7.7. References -- Chapter 8. The Territorial Division of Social Action to Promote Cohesion and Reduce Inequalities -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. Professional territorial division, unstable by nature? -- 8.3. From specialized administrative zoning to the territorialization of the département's public action -- 8.4. Towards infra-département division? -- 8.5. Conclusion -- 8.6. References -- Chapter 9. France's Territorial Frameworks for Public Health Policy -- 9.1. Introduction -- 9.2. When the territorial division of healthcare translates into state oversight -- 9.2.1. The commune and the département: the first organizational units -- 9.2.2. Towards gradual centralization -- 9.3. Division as a tool for redistribution -- 9.3.1. The turnaround of the 1970s: proactive planning and healthcare mapping 186 -- 9.3.2. From State planner to State facilitator, the regional level reaffirmed -- 9.3.3. From the healthcare sector to experimentation with new, more inclusive territorial divisions. | |
| 9.4. Towards multi-form territories? -- 9.4.1. The 2009 HPST law: the territory as a tool for bringing all actors together -- 9.4.2. Mobilizing local resources to meet requirements: the ambiguity of a new "territory" tool -- 9.4.3. GHT and CPTS: territorial divisions as vectors for structuring territories? 194 -- 9.5. Conclusion -- 9.6. References -- Part 3. Sharing Public Action: From Territorial Division to Zoning -- Chapter 10. Selecting and Acting upon "Priority Neighborhoods" to Reduce Inequalities? -- 10.1. Introduction -- 10.2. Urban policy or the construction of a territorialized public problem -- 10.2.1. The neighborhood as a category for public action -- 10.2.2. From public categorization to "neighborhood effects" -- 10.2.3. Social development and social diversity to reduce inequalities? -- 10.3. "Priority geography" as a tool for decentralized public action -- 10.3.1. The 2014 reform: meaning and effects of the poverty criterion? -- 10.3.2. The impossibility of intermunicipal zoning -- 10.4. Acting on "priority neighborhoods" to combat inequality? -- 10.4.1. Tensions and adjustments on recurring issues -- 10.4.2. What are the alternatives to a zoning system that is constantly being called into question? -- 10.5. Conclusion -- 10.6. References -- Chapter 11. Demarcate to Preserve: Zoning Protected Areas in France -- 11.1. Introduction: territorial division and nature: an oxymoron? -- 11.2. From naturalistic and deterministic presuppositions to the political boundaries of protected areas: an ongoing negotiation -- 11.2.1. The "grammar" of spatial demarcation -- 11.2.2. Justification for the boundary despite infrastructure -- 11.2.3. Entering the territorial division and marking the boundary: airlocks, gates, milestones and markers. | |
| 11.3. Inside and outside: the territorial division of protected spaces or the shaping of compromise through space. | |
| Titolo autorizzato: | Territorial Division for Public Action ![]() |
| ISBN: | 1-394-37265-5 |
| 1-394-37263-9 | |
| Formato: | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione: | Inglese |
| Record Nr.: | 9911018797203321 |
| Lo trovi qui: | Univ. Federico II |
| Opac: | Controlla la disponibilità qui |