The need for a strategic detour

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Mitu100@
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Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2025 4:30 am

The need for a strategic detour

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Finally, land returns to its origins and raises again the question of ownership and its declination, a concern very visible in the latest proposals for agricultural laws [3] and in particular on the questions of land ownership currently back on the agenda. Especially since the crisis caused by COVID but also the war in Ukraine has revealed our food dependencies, reiterating the challenges of preserving the agronomic and even biological and biochemical potential of land.


Land-ills, land-soil-uses, land-property. For LIFTI, these saudi arabia phone number list seemingly fragmented news items actually reveal the burning need for land strategies based on better targeted issues, based on more in-depth, more territorialized diagnoses... These debates illustrate a need for decompartmentalization, common benchmarks, methodologies, training. The development of a territorial strategy must make it possible to respond to this need for decompartmentalization. To do this, it must be based on an adequate territorial scale, in particular on the SCOTs, to benefit from a vision in terms of planning, but also on intercommunalities, to articulate both planning and operational skills.

This strategy must also develop a short, medium and long-term vision of the needs of the territory, by articulating the consideration of immediate needs with a real prospective vision. Indeed, the land issue has long been confined to development prospects focused on economic and housing issues, often quite immediate. The current complexity of our ways of living and their sustainability makes it obvious that we need to think more in terms of systems, in a more global approach, starting from the real and future needs of the territories, in a logic of sobriety. Projections of medium and long-term needs cannot be certain but must be constructed taking into account local specificities. Land then becomes the receptacle of other identified needs (food, energy, water/resilience, economy) leading to the preservation of a balance in its functions (and therefore its consumption).
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