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Ecological and community areas
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by
CIPRA International
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published
May 31, 2022
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last modified
Jul 27, 2022 03:03 PM
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filed under:
Soil sealing,
Spatial Planning,
Saving:Soils,
soil conservation
With its ecological commons zone (“Zone d'écologie communale”, ZEC), the Free Quarter of Lentillères in Dijon/F invents a legal tool to legalise land occupation and thus prevent construction.
Located in
Good Practice
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Keeping free spaces free
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by
Hannah Richlik
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published
Jul 24, 2019
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last modified
Jul 07, 2021 01:12 AM
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filed under:
alpMonitor,
Spatial Planning
How an association in Vorarlberg, Austria came up with the idea of buying land in order to save it from being built on.
Located in
Good Practice
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Abandoned and uncultivated
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by
CIPRA International
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published
Oct 06, 2021
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filed under:
rural economy,
Spatial Planning,
Migration,
alpMedia 6/2021,
mountain pastures
Remote mountain villages in Piedmont/I have been struggling with heavy emigration for years. The region is now supporting people moving back to the mountains. A study from Austria shows how endangered Alpine agriculture actually is.
Located in
News
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Climate protection: from plan to action
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by
CIPRA International
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published
Jul 13, 2021
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last modified
Jul 13, 2021 01:38 PM
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filed under:
Climate Change,
alpMedia 4/2021,
Alpine Convention,
Climate Change Adaptation,
Spatial Planning
The Alps as a climate-neutral, climate-resistant region by 2050: this is the objective of the newly launched “Climate Action Plan 2.0” of the Alpine Convention. Concrete steps will now follow in such areas as mountain farming, spatial planning and biodiversity.
Located in
News
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Point of view: Let’s create an “Alpine Plan” for all Alpine regions!
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by
[email protected] [email protected]
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published
Nov 07, 2022
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last modified
Nov 09, 2022 09:38 AM
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filed under:
CIPRA Österreich,
Point of view,
Alpine politics,
Meldung CIPRA Deutschland,
Soil sealing,
alpMedia 7/2022,
Spatial Planning
The Bavarian Alpine Plan celebrates its 50th anniversary in 2022. Alpine spatial planning has proven here that it is predestined to find solutions to the pressing issues of the day. Similar planning instruments are lacking in many Alpine regions, although we need them more urgently than ever, claim Paul Kuncio, Executive Director of CIPRA Austria, and Uwe Roth, Executive Director of CIPRA Germany.
Located in
News