À qui appartient la montagne ? Trajectoires de la propriété collective en Slovaquie

The agricultural landscape of the Slovakian mountains is defined by a particular type of agricultural and forestry community property: the urbariat forestry association. The history of this establishment tells of conflicts between the regimes of property of the estate (public or seigniorial) and pea...

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Main Author: Michel Lompech
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut de Géographie Alpine 2021-05-01
Series:Revue de Géographie Alpine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/rga/8086
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author Michel Lompech
author_facet Michel Lompech
author_sort Michel Lompech
collection DOAJ
description The agricultural landscape of the Slovakian mountains is defined by a particular type of agricultural and forestry community property: the urbariat forestry association. The history of this establishment tells of conflicts between the regimes of property of the estate (public or seigniorial) and peasant property for the control of forestry resources. This article explains how this method of community management has been incorporated into the socialist system and how it has been restored during a transition stage. The vitality of the urbariat is a testament to the strength of mobilisation among local actors.
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institution Kabale University
issn 0035-1121
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publishDate 2021-05-01
publisher Institut de Géographie Alpine
record_format Article
series Revue de Géographie Alpine
spelling doaj-art-76c568a1769849939524fd5df32847d82025-01-10T15:54:21ZengInstitut de Géographie AlpineRevue de Géographie Alpine0035-11211760-74262021-05-01109110.4000/rga.8086À qui appartient la montagne ? Trajectoires de la propriété collective en SlovaquieMichel LompechThe agricultural landscape of the Slovakian mountains is defined by a particular type of agricultural and forestry community property: the urbariat forestry association. The history of this establishment tells of conflicts between the regimes of property of the estate (public or seigniorial) and peasant property for the control of forestry resources. This article explains how this method of community management has been incorporated into the socialist system and how it has been restored during a transition stage. The vitality of the urbariat is a testament to the strength of mobilisation among local actors.https://journals.openedition.org/rga/8086commonscollective landcollective agricultureprivatization
spellingShingle Michel Lompech
À qui appartient la montagne ? Trajectoires de la propriété collective en Slovaquie
Revue de Géographie Alpine
commons
collective land
collective agriculture
privatization
title À qui appartient la montagne ? Trajectoires de la propriété collective en Slovaquie
title_full À qui appartient la montagne ? Trajectoires de la propriété collective en Slovaquie
title_fullStr À qui appartient la montagne ? Trajectoires de la propriété collective en Slovaquie
title_full_unstemmed À qui appartient la montagne ? Trajectoires de la propriété collective en Slovaquie
title_short À qui appartient la montagne ? Trajectoires de la propriété collective en Slovaquie
title_sort a qui appartient la montagne trajectoires de la propriete collective en slovaquie
topic commons
collective land
collective agriculture
privatization
url https://journals.openedition.org/rga/8086
work_keys_str_mv AT michellompech aquiappartientlamontagnetrajectoiresdelaproprietecollectiveenslovaquie