Building a shared diagnosis of land use within a multi‐stakeholder platform in a pastoral mountainous area in the western Pyrenees
Multifunctionality of pastoral areas entails the development of multi‐stakeholder platforms that aim at designing multipurpose management projects by combining multiple viewpoints, uses and expectations about the resources of these areas.Putting forward learning issues ( Roling, 1994 ; Walker, 2002 ), such temporary working groups have been investigated in terms of the impact of.community participation and learning that occur during conflicts (Fraser et al., 2006) or through the hybridisation of local and scientific knowledge ( Thomas and Twyman, 2004 ).However, these platforms generally confront researchers with local stakeholders (mainly farmers) for the duration of the project, with a low participation of extension agents and decision‐makers.In the Western Pyrenees, a permanent network of consultants, each of them competent in a specific sphere of activity ( tourism, agriculture and pastoralism, hunting, forestry, environment, etc.), has been established in order to design a common and operational methodology for dealing with multipurpose land use in pastoral areas.The objective of this paper is to analyse the methodology they use in collaboration with local stakeholders within a territorial case study.
multipurpose land use pastoral areas shared knowledge platform for learning
N.Girard D.Magda P.Gascouat D.Lassalle
INRA,UMR 1248 A G IR,B.P.52627 31326 Castanet Tolosan,France Lycée Agricoled Oloron,Quartier Soeix,B P 144,64400 Oloron Sainte Marie,FRA NCE
国际会议
呼和浩特
英文
2008-06-29(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)