The Swiss Vote on Limiting Second Homes

The Alps have an important role in defining the Swiss national identity, and play a major part in forging the country’s image from the beginning of tourism in the 18th and 19th centuries. In a federalist country which assigns large decision powers to the cantonal and communal levels, local and natio...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Martin Schuler, Pierre Dessemontet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut de Géographie Alpine 2013-02-01
Series:Revue de Géographie Alpine
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/rga/1872
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841546739934298112
author Martin Schuler
Pierre Dessemontet
author_facet Martin Schuler
Pierre Dessemontet
author_sort Martin Schuler
collection DOAJ
description The Alps have an important role in defining the Swiss national identity, and play a major part in forging the country’s image from the beginning of tourism in the 18th and 19th centuries. In a federalist country which assigns large decision powers to the cantonal and communal levels, local and national interests as to how to develop this particular space can profoundly diverge. The vote held on March 11th, 2012 on the Franz Weber initiative introducing a ban on building new holiday residences in touristic communes was a blatant example of such an opposition. The success of the initiative, albeit with a tiny majority, was a great shock; its territorial imprint was evident, drawing a line between alpine and prealpine cantons on one side, and mainland cantons on the other side. This paper proposes a spatial analysis of this vote and put it in context through a historical perspective. Indeed, of all the votes held since 1950 with an environmental or landscape component, we can find only one with the same territorial pattern – in 1965, “against inflation in the building industry” – as the 2012 vote. In all the other votes held on those subjects, other splits – linguistic, religious, or regional – manifested themselves, allowing the alpine populations to find allies. This paper asks thus the question as to whether the long-lived solidarity of mainland Switzerland with the Alps tends to dissipate.
format Article
id doaj-art-92caf84e642349b9a1e646a8f10cbb4c
institution Kabale University
issn 0035-1121
1760-7426
language English
publishDate 2013-02-01
publisher Institut de Géographie Alpine
record_format Article
series Revue de Géographie Alpine
spelling doaj-art-92caf84e642349b9a1e646a8f10cbb4c2025-01-10T15:54:38ZengInstitut de Géographie AlpineRevue de Géographie Alpine0035-11211760-74262013-02-0110.4000/rga.1872The Swiss Vote on Limiting Second HomesMartin SchulerPierre DessemontetThe Alps have an important role in defining the Swiss national identity, and play a major part in forging the country’s image from the beginning of tourism in the 18th and 19th centuries. In a federalist country which assigns large decision powers to the cantonal and communal levels, local and national interests as to how to develop this particular space can profoundly diverge. The vote held on March 11th, 2012 on the Franz Weber initiative introducing a ban on building new holiday residences in touristic communes was a blatant example of such an opposition. The success of the initiative, albeit with a tiny majority, was a great shock; its territorial imprint was evident, drawing a line between alpine and prealpine cantons on one side, and mainland cantons on the other side. This paper proposes a spatial analysis of this vote and put it in context through a historical perspective. Indeed, of all the votes held since 1950 with an environmental or landscape component, we can find only one with the same territorial pattern – in 1965, “against inflation in the building industry” – as the 2012 vote. In all the other votes held on those subjects, other splits – linguistic, religious, or regional – manifested themselves, allowing the alpine populations to find allies. This paper asks thus the question as to whether the long-lived solidarity of mainland Switzerland with the Alps tends to dissipate.https://journals.openedition.org/rga/1872
spellingShingle Martin Schuler
Pierre Dessemontet
The Swiss Vote on Limiting Second Homes
Revue de Géographie Alpine
title The Swiss Vote on Limiting Second Homes
title_full The Swiss Vote on Limiting Second Homes
title_fullStr The Swiss Vote on Limiting Second Homes
title_full_unstemmed The Swiss Vote on Limiting Second Homes
title_short The Swiss Vote on Limiting Second Homes
title_sort swiss vote on limiting second homes
url https://journals.openedition.org/rga/1872
work_keys_str_mv AT martinschuler theswissvoteonlimitingsecondhomes
AT pierredessemontet theswissvoteonlimitingsecondhomes
AT martinschuler swissvoteonlimitingsecondhomes
AT pierredessemontet swissvoteonlimitingsecondhomes