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Date
Editeur
Auteur
Titre
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/ Nathalie MICHAUD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM
/ 07-07-2011
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
TSENKOVA Sasha
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Mot(s) clés libre(s) : logement social, marché de l'immobilier, politique du logement (Europe), politique sociale (logement)
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/ Nathalie MICHAUD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM
/ 07-06-2011
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
SCANLON Kathleen J.
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Mot(s) clés libre(s) : crédit immobilier, crise économique (2007-....), crise économique (Europe), économie du logement, marché immobilier (Europe), politique du logement
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/ Nathalie MICHAUD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM
/ 07-07-2011
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
RONALD Richard
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Mot(s) clés libre(s) : logement social (Asie de l'Est), marché de l'immobilier (Asie de l'Est), mixité sociale, politique du logement (21ème siècle)
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Implementing "Mixité". Discourses and experiences of politicians and stakeholders: Round Table [VF]
/ Nathalie MICHAUD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM
/ 08-07-2011
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
RENARD Vincent, ALLEN Barbara, GEINDRE François, MORA Béatrix
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Implementing "Mixité" : discourses and experiences of politicians and other stakeholders. Round Table [version en anglais avec deux interventions traduites en français en simultané]. In "Mixité : an urban and housing issue? Mixing people, housing and activities as urban challenge of the future", 23ème colloque international de l'European Network for Housing Research (ENHR), organisé pen simultanéar le Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Solidarités, Sociétés, Territoires (LISST) à l'Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, 5-8 juillet 2011. Avec :- Jean-Christophe Giesbert (chairman of Giesbert & Associés)- Vincent Renard (Institut du Développement Durable et des Relations Internationales, IDDRI)- Barbara Allen (Laboratoire Sociologie Urbaine Générative / CTBS)- François Geindre (Général inspector, General Council CGPE)- Béatrix Mora (Deputy director at the Social Union for Housing)- Stéphane Carassou (chairman of Toulouse-Habitat, deputy director of the Urban Community).>> La traduction des deux premières interventions est assurée par Mme Solange Hibbs (directrice du Département Centre de Traduction, d'Interprétation et de Médiation linguistique (CETIM) de l'université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, membre de l'Association Internationale des Interprètes de Conférence -AIIC). Mot(s) clés libre(s) : économie du logement, logement social, marché immobilier, mixité sociale, offices de l'habitation, politique du logement, politique sociale (logement), ségrégation urbaine, sociologie urbaine
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/ Nathalie MICHAUD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM
/ 07-07-2011
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
REINPRECHT Christoph
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Mot(s) clés libre(s) : économie du logement, logement social, marché immobilier, offices de l'habitation, politique du logement, ségrégation urbaine, sociologie de l'habitat
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/ Nathalie MICHAUD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM
/ 07-07-2011
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
LEES Loretta
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Mot(s) clés libre(s) : cohésion sociale, gentrification (Londres), Londres (quartier de Southwark), marché immobilier, politique du logement (Royaume-Uni), rénovation urbaine, rénovation urbaine (participation des citoyens), urbanisme (aspect social)
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The grammar of "mixed communities": urban injustice and the Aylesbury Estate [VF] / Loretta Lees
/ Nathalie MICHAUD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM
/ 07-07-2011
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
LEES Loretta
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Voir le résumé
The grammar of "mixed communities": urban injustice and the Aylesbury Estate [version française] / Loretta Lees. In "Mixité : an urban and housing issue? Mixing people, housing and activities as urban challenge of the future", 23ème colloque international de l'European Network for Housing Research (ENHR), organisé par le Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Solidarités, Sociétés, Territoires (LISST) à l'Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, 5-8 juillet 2011. Plénière 4 : Approaches, pratices and challenges of mixité in different urban contexts, 7 juillet 2011.Now that New Labour’s era of urban renaissance in the UK has hit the buffers of both an economic downturn and a change of government it is time to reflect on the urban injustices it has left in its wake. In this paper I focus on the urban injustices that have been practiced on the Aylesbury Estate in London. I look at how the sociomateriality of the Aylesbury was discursively constructed by those with power in order to further their goals of regeneration, that is state-led gentrification, into a new ‘mixed income’, new-build community. I question the truth claims that have been made about the Aylesbury as a ‘sink estate’ and argue that they served dominant interests. I look at how choices have been closed down for the estate’s residents and how their support for the regeneration programme has been misrepresented.In so doing I expose a variety of unjust practices that have been, and are being, enacted on the Aylesbury Estate. But importantly I look at what the residents think about the whole process (seeking alternative knowledges, imaginaries, logics) and how they are resisting dominant interests and practices. In so doing I question not just the policy of mixed communities (the new urban renewal) but also the way that it has been forced upon low income communities.> La communication est traduite en français en simultané par un interprète de l'Association Internationale des Interprètes de Conférence-AIIC). Mot(s) clés libre(s) : cohésion sociale, gentrification (Londres), Londres (quartier de Southwark), marché immobilier, politique du logement (Royaume-Uni), rénovation urbaine, rénovation urbaine (participation des citoyens), urbanisme (aspect social)
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Mixité, an urban and housing issue: introduction au colloque [VO]/ M.-C. Jaillet, Jean-Claude Driant
/ Nathalie MICHAUD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM
/ 05-07-2011
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
JAILLET Marie-Christine, DRIANT Jean-Claude
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Mixité, an urban and housing issue : introduction au colloque [version originale] / Marie-Christine Jaillet, Jean-Claude Driant. In "Mixité : an urban and housing issue? Mixing people, housing and activities as urban challenge of the future", 23ème colloque international de l'European Network for Housing Research (ENHR), organisé par le Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Solidarités, Sociétés, Territoires (LISST) à l'Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, 5-8 juillet 2011. 1. Debating around ‘Mixité’ in Toulouse: An appropriate place to speak of it / Marie-Christine Jaillet The term 'Mixité', most often qualified by either 'functional' or 'social', has taken on a prominent position in the field of public policies on housing. It has come to represent the antidote to social or ethnic segregation as well as the trend in urban zoning that has separated housing, work places, and shops and services. Though researchers are very hesitant on a form of ideal 'mixité', one that is supposed to remedy the ills of contemporary society (segregation, ghettoisation, the dislocation of social ties, matching with its peers), they are even more dubitative on the normative or prescriptive dimension of social mixity’s injunction, one that inspires a certain number of public policy’s dispositions. Nevertheless, in the name of mixity, myriad efforts are currently undertaken in urban contexts: for example, within urban renovation or regeneration policies, or in the framework of the redistribution of social housing. Though we can question the very pertinence of the notion of mixity and its ideological foundations, it is also interesting to consider what its implementation produces. Beyond its mobilizing effect, does it render the manner in which housing is organized more efficient and effective? What does it produce, 'side by side' situations or social interactions? Mobilizing in Toulouse academic debate from various European countries is all the more interesting Young metropolis, barely a millionaire city, with one of the highest rates of population growth in France, its urbain development is characterised by a more and more visible social space division. Toulouse embodies the paradox of metropolitan societies where the greater social diversity, a form of cosmopolitanism, generates distancing or avoidance attitudes or strategies rather than producing "friction" or interaction. In such a world, what could constitute a physical and metaphorical "common space"? It would have to be a space that allows cities to carry out their integrative functions, not through "fusion" or by overcoming differences, but rather through the emergence of a common identity and the capacity to live together. Metropolitan, social strategies of aggregation by affinity, whether territorial or reticular, do not necessarily oppose this process; but they do not really contribute to developing it either. How can public action help reestablish "convivienca" in our metropolitan era? By fighting against processes of self-segregation by imposing a "diversity" that is less and less accepted? Toulouse is attempting to address this question by struggling in the social housing neighborhoods against the processus of ghettoization and by developping solidarity policies that attempt to distribute social housing more evenly. The challenge for Toulouse is then to try to reduce the clubbization trends of the urban spaces and to produce, on a daily basis, if not a “mix” city at least a city that is socially "sustainable". 2. The housing situation in France: The main issues / Jean-Claude Driant The object of this opening presentation is the housing situation in France and the main issues of the current housing debate in France. With less than a year to go before the next presidential election, France is entering into an important political period and, judging from what party leaders have been saying so far, the housing crisis looks to be one of the main items on the agenda for this election year. We are going to try to understand why and pinpoint the principal subjects of the current housing debate. This presentation is in three parts: why has the issue of housing reemerged in the political debate?, why is the housing situation in France widely referred to as a crisis?, what are the most important issues to address in present and future housing policies? Those housing policy choices, in turn, involve answering four key questions: To what extent should efforts be made to promote owner-occupied housing? Is the French social housing model jeopardized by the pauperization of the population and by the right to housing now enshrined in French law? What policies might help regulate real estate prices and rents? To what extent should housing policies be decentralized in order to satisfy a very wide range of housing needs? Mot(s) clés libre(s) : accession à la propriété (France), économie du logement, habitations à loyer modéré, logement social, marché immobilier, mixité sociale, offices publics de l'habitat, pauvres (logement), politique du logement, ségrégation urbaine
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Mixité, an urban and housing issue: introduction au colloque [VF]/ M.-C. Jaillet, Jean-Claude Driant
/ Nathalie MICHAUD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM
/ 05-07-2011
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
JAILLET Marie-Christine, DRIANT Jean-Claude
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Voir le résumé
Mixité, an urban and housing issue : introduction au colloque [version française avec traduction consécutive ou simultanée] / Marie-Christine Jaillet, Jean-Claude Driant. In "Mixité : an urban and housing issue? Mixing people, housing and activities as urban challenge of the future", 23ème colloque international de l'European Network for Housing Research (ENHR), organisé par le Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Solidarités, Sociétés, Territoires (LISST) à l'Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, 5-8 juillet 2011.1. Debating around ‘Mixité’ in Toulouse: An appropriate place to speak of it / Marie-Christine Jaillet The term 'Mixité', most often qualified by either 'functional' or 'social', has taken on a prominent position in the field of public policies on housing. It has come to represent the antidote to social or ethnic segregation as well as the trend in urban zoning that has separated housing, work places, and shops and services. Though researchers are very hesitant on a form of ideal 'mixité', one that is supposed to remedy the ills of contemporary society (segregation, ghettoisation, the dislocation of social ties, matching with its peers), they are even more dubitative on the normative or prescriptive dimension of social mixity’s injunction, one that inspires a certain number of public policy’s dispositions. Nevertheless, in the name of mixity, myriad efforts are currently undertaken in urban contexts: for example, within urban renovation or regeneration policies, or in the framework of the redistribution of social housing. Though we can question the very pertinence of the notion of mixity and its ideological foundations, it is also interesting to consider what its implementation produces. Beyond its mobilizing effect, does it render the manner in which housing is organized more efficient and effective? What does it produce, 'side by side' situations or social interactions? Mobilizing in Toulouse academic debate from various European countries is all the more interesting Young metropolis, barely a millionaire city, with one of the highest rates of population growth in France, its urbain development is characterised by a more and more visible social space division. Toulouse embodies the paradox of metropolitan societies where the greater social diversity, a form of cosmopolitanism, generates distancing or avoidance attitudes or strategies rather than producing "friction" or interaction. In such a world, what could constitute a physical and metaphorical "common space"? It would have to be a space that allows cities to carry out their integrative functions, not through "fusion" or by overcoming differences, but rather through the emergence of a common identity and the capacity to live together. Metropolitan, social strategies of aggregation by affinity, whether territorial or reticular, do not necessarily oppose this process; but they do not really contribute to developing it either. How can public action help reestablish "convivienca" in our metropolitan era? By fighting against processes of self-segregation by imposing a "diversity" that is less and less accepted? Toulouse is attempting to address this question by struggling in the social housing neighborhoods against the processus of ghettoization and by developping solidarity policies that attempt to distribute social housing more evenly. The challenge for Toulouse is then to try to reduce the clubbization trends of the urban spaces and to produce, on a daily basis, if not a “mix” city at least a city that is socially "sustainable".2. The housing situation in France: The main issues / Jean-Claude Driant The object of this opening presentation is the housing situation in France and the main issues of the current housing debate in France. With less than a year to go before the next presidential election, France is entering into an important political period and, judging from what party leaders have been saying so far, the housing crisis looks to be one of the main items on the agenda for this election year. We are going to try to understand why and pinpoint the principal subjects of the current housing debate. This presentation is in three parts: why has the issue of housing reemerged in the political debate?, why is the housing situation in France widely referred to as a crisis?, what are the most important issues to address in present and future housing policies? Those housing policy choices, in turn, involve answering four key questions: To what extent should efforts be made to promote owner-occupied housing? Is the French social housing model jeopardized by the pauperization of the population and by the right to housing now enshrined in French law? What policies might help regulate real estate prices and rents? To what extent should housing policies be decentralized in order to satisfy a very wide range of housing needs?>> La traduction consécutive en anglais de la première communication est assurée par Mme Solange Hibbs (directrice du Département Centre de Traduction, d'Interprétation et de Médiation linguistique (CETIM) de l'université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, membre de l'Association Internationale des Interprètes de Conférence -AIIC). Mot(s) clés libre(s) : accession à la propriété (France), discrimination dans le logement, économie du logement, habitations à loyer modéré, logement social, marché immobilier (France), mixité sociale, pauvres (logement), politique du logement (France), ségrégation urbaine
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/ Nathalie MICHAUD, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail SCPAM
/ 07-07-2011
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
GILMOUR Tony
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Voir le résumé
Mot(s) clés libre(s) : économie du logement, logement social (Australie), marché immobilier, offices d'habitation, politique du logement (Australie)
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