987 resultados para Common land
Resumo:
Los pueblos de la actual provincia de Buenos Aires se fueron conformando mayormente de manera espontánea, a medida que se asentaba la población y se avanzaba sobre el espacio apropiado a los indígenas; en la mayoría de los casos al amparo de los fuertes o las capillas. Los ejidos de esos pueblos existían de hecho como tierras de pan llevar pero se trazaron formalmente recién durante el siglo XIX. A lo largo de este trabajo se analizará el modo en que se operó la construcción de un cuerpo jurídico para los ejidos bonaerenses poniendo especial interés en la influencia del derecho indiano
Resumo:
El objetivo del trabajo es realizar un análisis sobre la construcción del poder político post-independiente en la campaña de Buenos Aires. Para ello se examinan conjuntamente dos variables significativas: la política de tierras públicas -especialmente las donaciones ejidales y condicionadas- y la distribución de la riqueza. Se abordan dos casos de estudio de forma confrontada: la Guardia de Luján y los partidos de Azul y Tapalqué, donde las modalidades de donación se implementaron, estudiando las características de la legislación y su aplicación, el perfil socio-económico de los sectores beneficiados y su relación con la formación de los consensos sociales necesarios para erigir la potestad del Estado. Se presta especial atención a la conformación de las nuevas comunidades políticas, específicamente, durante el gobierno de Juan Manuel de Rosas y la etapa inmediatamente posterior
Resumo:
El presente trabajo se propone indagar el proceso de ocupación de las tierra pública en la Guardia de Lujan desde mediados del siglo XVIII, época en que este paraje se constituyó en el más importante bastión militar en la frontera oeste bonaerense, hasta el período rosista. Por otra parte se analiza la constitución de un núcleo de población temprano y la formación del pueblo y su ejido mediante la política de donaciones implementada por los gobiernos de Buenos Aires, tendiente a conformar un mayor número de centros de población en la campaña y fomentar el cultivo.
Resumo:
Los pueblos de la actual provincia de Buenos Aires se fueron conformando mayormente de manera espontánea, a medida que se asentaba la población y se avanzaba sobre el espacio apropiado a los indígenas; en la mayoría de los casos al amparo de los fuertes o las capillas. Los ejidos de esos pueblos existían de hecho como tierras de pan llevar pero se trazaron formalmente recién durante el siglo XIX. A lo largo de este trabajo se analizará el modo en que se operó la construcción de un cuerpo jurídico para los ejidos bonaerenses poniendo especial interés en la influencia del derecho indiano
Resumo:
El objetivo del trabajo es realizar un análisis sobre la construcción del poder político post-independiente en la campaña de Buenos Aires. Para ello se examinan conjuntamente dos variables significativas: la política de tierras públicas -especialmente las donaciones ejidales y condicionadas- y la distribución de la riqueza. Se abordan dos casos de estudio de forma confrontada: la Guardia de Luján y los partidos de Azul y Tapalqué, donde las modalidades de donación se implementaron, estudiando las características de la legislación y su aplicación, el perfil socio-económico de los sectores beneficiados y su relación con la formación de los consensos sociales necesarios para erigir la potestad del Estado. Se presta especial atención a la conformación de las nuevas comunidades políticas, específicamente, durante el gobierno de Juan Manuel de Rosas y la etapa inmediatamente posterior
Resumo:
El presente trabajo se propone indagar el proceso de ocupación de las tierra pública en la Guardia de Lujan desde mediados del siglo XVIII, época en que este paraje se constituyó en el más importante bastión militar en la frontera oeste bonaerense, hasta el período rosista. Por otra parte se analiza la constitución de un núcleo de población temprano y la formación del pueblo y su ejido mediante la política de donaciones implementada por los gobiernos de Buenos Aires, tendiente a conformar un mayor número de centros de población en la campaña y fomentar el cultivo.
Resumo:
Los pueblos de la actual provincia de Buenos Aires se fueron conformando mayormente de manera espontánea, a medida que se asentaba la población y se avanzaba sobre el espacio apropiado a los indígenas; en la mayoría de los casos al amparo de los fuertes o las capillas. Los ejidos de esos pueblos existían de hecho como tierras de pan llevar pero se trazaron formalmente recién durante el siglo XIX. A lo largo de este trabajo se analizará el modo en que se operó la construcción de un cuerpo jurídico para los ejidos bonaerenses poniendo especial interés en la influencia del derecho indiano
Resumo:
Recent applications of Foucauldian categories in geography, spatial history and the history of town planning have opened up interesting new perspectives, with respect to both the evolution of spatial knowledge and the genealogy of territorial techniques and their relation to larger socio-political projects, that would be enriched if combined with other discursive traditions. This article proposes to conceptualise English parliamentary enclosureea favourite episode for Marxist historiography, frequently read in a strictly materialist fashioneas a precedent of a new form of sociospatial governmentality, a political technology that inaugurates a strategic manipulation of territory for social change on the threshold between feudal and capitalist spatial rationalities. I analyse the sociospatial dimensions of parliamentary enclosure’s technical and legal innovations and compare them to the forms of communal self-regulation of land use customs and everyday regionalisations that preceded it. Through a systematic, replicable mechanism of reterritorialisation, enclosure acts normalised spatial regulations, blurred regional differences in the social organisation of agriculture and erased the modes of autonomous social reproduction linked to common land. Their exercise of dispossession of material resources, social capital and community representations is interpreted therefore as an inaugural logic that would pervade the emergent spatial rationality later known as planning.
Resumo:
Recent applications of Foucauldian categories in geography, spatial history and the history of town planning have opened up interesting new perspectives, with respect to both the evolution of spatial knowledge and the genealogy of territorial techniques and their relation to larger socio-political projects, that would be enriched if combined with other discursive traditions. This article proposes to conceptualise English parliamentary enclosureea favourite episode for Marxist historiography, frequently read in a strictly materialist fashioneas a precedent of a new form of sociospatial governmentality, a political technology that inaugurates a strategic manipulation of territory for social change on the threshold between feudal and capitalist spatial rationalities. I analyse the sociospatial dimensions of parliamentary enclosure’s technical and legal innovations and compare them to the forms of communal self-regulation of land use customs and everyday regionalisations that preceded it. Through a systematic, replicable mechanism of reterritorialisation, enclosure acts normalised spatial regulations, blurred regional differences in the social organisation of agriculture and erased the modes of autonomous social reproduction linked to common land. Their exercise of dispossession of material resources, social capital and community representations is interpreted therefore as an inaugural logic that would pervade the emergent spatial rationality later known as planning.
Resumo:
Handwritten deed between a committee of the Proprietors of the Cambridge Common lands comprised of Samuel Danforth, Samuel Whittemore, Henry Prentice, Ebenezer Stedman, and Edward Marret to grantee Andrew Bordman for a strip of Cambridge common land.
Resumo:
A high proportion of amphibian species are threatened with extinction globally, and habitat loss and degradation are the most frequently implicated causes. Rapid deforestation for the establishment of agricultural production is a primary driver of habitat loss in tropical zones where amphibian diversity is highest. Land-cover change affects native assemblages, in part, through the reduction of habitat area and the reduction of movement among remnant populations. Decreased gene flow contributes to loss of genetic diversity, which limits the ability of local populations to respond to further environmental changes. The focus of this dissertation is on the degree to which common land uses in Sarapiquí, Costa Rica impede the movement of two common amphibian species. First, I used field experiments, including displacement trials, and a behavioral landscape ecology framework to investigate the resistance of pastures to movement of Oophaga pumilio. Results from experiments demonstrate that pastures do impede movement of O. pumilio relative to forest. Microclimatic effects on movement performance as well as limited perceptual ranges likely contribute to reduced return rates through pastures. Next, I linked local processes to landscape scale estimates of resistance. I conducted experiments to measure habitat-specific costs to movement for O. pumilio and Craugastor bransfodrii, and then used experimental results to parameterize connectivity models. Model validation indicated highest support for resistance estimates generated from responses to land-use specific microclimates for both species and to predator encounters for O. pumilio. Finally, I used abundance and experiment-derived resistance estimates to analyze the effects of prevalent land uses on population genetic structure of the two focal species. While O. pumilio did not exhibit a strong response to landscape heterogeneity and was primarily structured by distances among sites, C. bransfordii genetic variation was explained by resistance estimates from abundance and experiment data. Collectivity, this work demonstrates that common land uses can offer different levels of resistance to amphibian movements in Sarapiquí and illustrates the value of investigating local scales processes to inform interpretation of landscape-scale patterns.^
Resumo:
A high proportion of amphibian species are threatened with extinction globally, and habitat loss and degradation are the most frequently implicated causes. Rapid deforestation for the establishment of agricultural production is a primary driver of habitat loss in tropical zones where amphibian diversity is highest. Land-cover change affects native assemblages, in part, through the reduction of habitat area and the reduction of movement among remnant populations. Decreased gene flow contributes to loss of genetic diversity, which limits the ability of local populations to respond to further environmental changes. The focus of this dissertation is on the degree to which common land uses in Sarapiquí, Costa Rica impede the movement of two common amphibian species. First, I used field experiments, including displacement trials, and a behavioral landscape ecology framework to investigate the resistance of pastures to movement of Oophaga pumilio. Results from experiments demonstrate that pastures do impede movement of O. pumilio relative to forest. Microclimatic effects on movement performance as well as limited perceptual ranges likely contribute to reduced return rates through pastures. Next, I linked local processes to landscape scale estimates of resistance. I conducted experiments to measure habitat-specific costs to movement for O. pumilio and Craugastor bransfodrii, and then used experimental results to parameterize connectivity models. Model validation indicated highest support for resistance estimates generated from responses to land-use specific microclimates for both species and to predator encounters for O. pumilio. Finally, I used abundance and experiment-derived resistance estimates to analyze the effects of prevalent land uses on population genetic structure of the two focal species. While O. pumilio did not exhibit a strong response to landscape heterogeneity and was primarily structured by distances among sites, C. bransfordii genetic variation was explained by resistance estimates from abundance and experiment data. Collectivity, this work demonstrates that common land uses can offer different levels of resistance to amphibian movements in Sarapiquí and illustrates the value of investigating local scales processes to inform interpretation of landscape-scale patterns.
Resumo:
El régimen de propiedad y los derechos y usos de la tierra se encontraban, a fines del período medieval, directamente condicionados por las circunstancias físicas, pero también, y sobre todo, por la superposición de los intereses de los distintos sectores sociales. La situación se presentaba especialmente compleja en aquellos territorios de tradicional explotación comunitaria, donde el proceso de diferenciación social, con la consolidación de una oligarquía urbana, la presencia del campesinado, y de un sector enriquecido en el mismo, y la implantación de una poderosa nobleza señorial, determinó un panorama de imprecisión y multiplicación de los derechos sobre la tierra, en medio de fuertes tensiones. El caso de Cuenca, en el sector centro-oriental de la Extremadura castellana, presenta particular interés, y constituye un escenario muy adecuado para observar los procesos por los que la propiedad particular y los usos privatizados se abrieron paso, produciendo la ruptura del sistema de organización comunal.
Resumo:
This article provides an in-depth analysis of selective land use and resource management policies in the Province of Ontario, Canada. It examines their relative capacity to recognize the rights of First Nations and Aboriginal peoples and their treaty rights, as well as their embodiment of past Crown–First Nations relationships. An analytical framework was developed to evaluate the manifest and latent content of 337 provincial texts, including 32 provincial acts, 269 regulatory documents, 16 policy statements, and 5 provincial plans. This comprehensive document analysis classified and assessed how current provincial policies address First Nation issues and identified common trends and areas of improvement. The authors conclude that there is an immediate need for guidance on how provincial authorities can improve policy to make relationship-building a priority to enhance and sustain relationships between First Nations and other jurisdictions.
Resumo:
The assessment of the potential landscape impacts of the latest Common Agricultural Policy reforms constitutes a challenge for policy makers and it requires the development of models that can reliably project the likely spatial distribution of land uses. The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of 2003 CAP reforms to land uses and rural landscapes across England. For this purpose we modified an existing economic model of agriculture, the Land-Use Allocation Model (LUAM) to provide outputs at a scale appropriate for informing a semi-quantitative landscape assessment at the level of ‘Joint Character Areas’ (JCAs). Overall a decline in the cereal and oilseed production area is projected but intensive arable production will persist in specific locations (East of England, East Midlands and South East), having ongoing negative effects on the character of many JCAs. The impacts of de-coupling will be far more profound on the livestock sector; extensification of production will occur in traditional mixed farming regions (e.g. the South West), a partial displacement of cattle by sheep in the upland regions and an increase in the sheep numbers is expected in the lowlands (South East, Eastern and East Midlands). This extensification process will affect positively those JCAs of mixed farming conditions, but it will have negative impacts on the JCAs of historically low intensity farming (e.g. the uplands of north-west) because they will suffer from under-management and land idling. Our analysis shows that the territorialisation between intensively and extensively agricultural landscapes will continue.