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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Perspective d'un développement rural durable : le cas des Hmongs du Laos

Bouapao, Lytou January 1994 (has links)
Sustainable development is an evolutionary process in which all ethnic groups live in harmony with a healthy environment. For approximately forty years, Laos has been subjected to many disruptions. Minority groups, like the Hmong, have felt the full impact of the numerous socio-political and economic changes that took place in the country. The Hmong, in particular, who live in mountainous regions and practice slash and burn agriculture, have suffered from economic and social inequality policies practiced by previous governments. The progressive transformation of their methods of land use, their mode of production and their migrant lifestyle must clearly be understood before any attempt at a sedentary lifestyle with a view to a sustainable development be undertaken. The underprivileged Hmong aspire to better living conditions comparable to those of people living in the plains.
2

Perspective d'un développement rural durable : le cas des Hmongs du Laos

Bouapao, Lytou January 1994 (has links)
Résumé : Le développement durable est un processus d'évolution dans lequel toutes les ethnies coexistent en harmonie avec un environnement sain. Depuis une quarantaine d'années, le Laos a connu de nombreux bouleversements. Des groupes minoritaires, dont les Hmongs, ont subi les contrecoups des changements socio-politiques et économiques. Les Hmongs, qui habitent les régions montagneuses et qui pratiquent l'agriculture itinérante, sont particulièrement touchés par des inégalités économiques et sociales malgré la politique d'égalité ethnique. Les transformations progressives de leur méthode d'utilisation du sol, de leur mode de production et de leur mode de vie itinérants en sédentarisation durable deviennent fondamentales et cruciales. Les Hmongs défavorisés aspirent fortement à de meilleures conditions de vie tout comme les populations qui vivent dans les plaines. En effet, les Hmongs, qui habitent dans les régions de Lakhasipsong et de Longsan, province de Vientiane, s'adaptent aux nouvelles conditions de transformation socio-économique, soient la sédentarisation du mode de production et du mode de vie. On peut affirmer que le développement rural et communautaire permet la sédentarisation des Hmongs et que ces derniers sont aptes à s'adapter à la vie moderne. La méthode d'enquête par entrevue sur la base d'un sondage employée sur le terrain nous a permis de découvrir les caractéristiques de développement durable autant socio-économique que politique dans la province de Vientiane avec application particulière aux Hmongs. Les résultats de l'enquête démontrent que les stratégies de sédentarisation sans relocalisation et avec relocalisation sur l'initiative soit personnelle soit gouvernementale ont fait leurs preuves. Des changements dans les modes de production et de vie ont non seulement permis une meilleure utilisation du sol, une augmentation de la production et une amélioration des conditions de vie mais aussi une meilleure préservation de l'écosystème.||Abstract : Sustainable development is an evolutionary process in which all ethnie groups live in harmony with a healthy environment. For approximately forty years, Laos has been subjected to many disruptions. Minority groups, like the Hmong, have felt the full impact of the numerous socio-political and economic changes that took place in the country. The Hmong, in particular, who live in mountainous regions and practice slash and burn agriculture, have suffered from economic and social inequality policies praticed by previous governments. The progressive transformation of their methods of land use, their mode of production and their migrant life style must clearly be understood before any attempt at a sedentary life style with a view to a sustainable development be undertaken. The underprivileged Hmong aspire to better living conditions comparable to those of people living in the plains. More precisely, the Hmong, who live in Lakhasipsong and Longsan in the province of Vientiane, adapt to their new conditions of social and economic transformation by fixing into place their mode of production and their lifestyle. We can state that the rural community development taking place allows an effective sédentarisation for the Hmong and, that they are able to adapt themselves to modem life. The survey method by interview and randown sampling on the ground permits us to discover elements of farming development within the socio-economic as well as political life in Vientiane province with a particular application to the Hmong. The survey results in showing that settling down strategies without relocation or with relocation on personal or governmental initiative are truly operational. Changes in the mode of production and life style have not only permitted a better land use, an increased production and a better life style but also, a better conservation of the environment.
3

The Great Opening of the West development strategy and its impact on the life and livelihood of Tibetan pastoralists

Ptackova, Jarmila 19 September 2013 (has links)
‚Die Große Öffnung des Westens bedeutet eine große Entwicklung für Qinghai’. Seit einigen Jahren begrüßen solche Parolen die Besucher der Provinz Qinghai und sind ebenfalls in administrativen Zentren aller Ebenen in tibetischen Nomadengebieten zu finden. Diese Parolen kündigen die Implementierung der Entwicklungsstrategie, die als die Große Öffnung des Westens (GÖW) bekannt wurde, an und versprechen allen Bewohnern von Chinas Westen eine blühende und reiche Zukunft. Aber wie genau sieht die Entwicklung in tibetischen Nomadengebieten aus? Wie kann sich die Lokalbevölkerung in diesen Entwicklungsprozeß einbinden und die versprochenen Vorteile nutzen? Welche Auswirkung wird die Entwicklungsstrategie auf das Leben und die Existenzgrundlage der tibetischen Nomaden haben? Im Kontrast zu den größeren Urbanzentren und ökonomisch wichtigen Lokalitäten, wo die Entwicklungsmaßnahmen sofort eingeleitet wurden, konnte man während der ersten Jahren nach der Implementierung der GÖW auf dem Grasland von Qinghai keine signifikanten Veränderungen feststellen. Erst später wurde der wichtigste und direkte Einfluß in den Nomadengebieten sichtbar. Es wurden neue Siedlungen um bereits existierende Städte oder direkt im Grasland errichtet und die Anzahl der neuen Häuser steigt jedes Jahr. Die Ansiedlungsstrategie dient Zwecken, wie der ökonomischen und sozialen Entwicklung, dem Umweltschutz und der politischen Kontrolle. Für die Nomaden bedeutet die Teilnahme an Ansiedlungsprojekten aber nicht nur Vorteile im Form von neuem Haus, sondern sie stellt auch eine enorme Herausforderung für die Haushalte, die sich an eine komplett neue, urbane Umgebung anpassen müssen, dar. Die verheißungsvollen Parolen über die GÖW mögen vielleicht aus der Sicht der Regierung, nach der Auswertung der nationalen Einkommensstatistiken der Wahrheit entsprechen, aus der Sicht der tibetischen Nomaden jedoch, bleibt die erzwungene Entwicklung auf dem Grasland ein umstrittenes und widersprüchliches Thema. / ‘The Great Opening of the West means great development for Qinghai.’ For several years now, signs bearing such slogans have been welcoming people entering the western Chinese Province of Qinghai and other administrative centres in Tibetan pastoral areas. They announce the implementation of the development strategy known as the Great Opening of the West (GOW) and promise a beneficial, prosperous and comfortable future to all inhabitants of rural regions in China’s West. But, what exactly does development in the Tibetan pastoral areas mean? In what way can the local people involve themselves in the processes of development and the benefits they promise? What impact is the development strategy likely to have on the lifestyle and livelihood of the Tibetan pastoralists? In contrast to the major urban areas and economically important localities, where the development work has begun in full scale, not many changes were observed on the grasslands of Qinghai Province during the early years of the GOW. Only later did the main, direct impact of the development strategy in the pastoral areas become visible. It consisted of an annually increasing number of settlement sites emerging around existing administrative centres or even in the middle of the grasslands. Sedentarisation methods are implemented for the purpose of economical or social development, or to solve the issues of environmental and political control. For the Tibetan pastoralists, participation in a sedentarisation project does not mean solely the provision of concrete benefits in the form of a house supplied by the government, but also the extraordinary adjustment of households to a new, urban environment. While the promising slogans promoting the GOW might appear true from the general point of view of the government when evaluating national income statistics, from the perspective of pastoral households, the forced development in pastoral areas remains a matter of contention and contradiction.
4

Security and belonging: reconceptualising Aboriginal spatial mobilities in Yamatji country, Western Australia

Prout, Sarah January 2007 (has links)
"December 2006". / Thesis (PhD) -- Macquarie University, Division of Environmental and Life Sciences, Department of Human Geography, 2007. / Bibliography: p. 284-307. / Introduction -- Case-study area profile and methodology -- A walkabout race?: contemporary Aboriginal mobilities in Yamatji country -- State service provision and Aboriginal mobilities -- Security and belonging: re-conceptualising Aboriginal mobilities -- Security and belonging and the mainstream economy -- The ties that bind: negotiating security and belonging through family -- Conclusion. / This dissertation explores contemporary Aboriginal spatial practices in Yamatji country, Western Australia, within the context of rural service provision by the State government. The central themes with which it engages are a) historical and contemporary conceptualisations of Aboriginal spatialities; b) the lived experiences of Aboriginal mobilities in the region; and c) the dialectical, and often contentious, relationship between Aboriginal spatial practices and public health, housing, and education services. Drawing primarily on a range of field interviews, the thesis opens up a discursive space for examining the cultural content and hidden assumptions in constructions of 'appropriate' models of spatial mobility. In taking a policy-oriented focus, it argues that the appropriate provision of basic government services requires a shift away from overly simplistic assumptions and discourses of Aboriginal mobility. Until the often subtle practices of rendering particular Aboriginal mobilities as irrational, deviant, and/or mysterious are challenged and replaced, deep-colonising practices in rural and remote Australia will persist. --The thesis reconceptualises contemporary Aboriginal spatial practices in Yamatji country based upon an examination of dynamics and circumstances that undergird Aboriginal mobilities in the region. With this empirical focus, it argues that Aboriginal spatial practices are fashioned by the processes of procuring, cultivating and contesting a sense of security and belonging. Case study material presented suggests that two primary considerations inform these processes. A post-settlement history of contested alienation from family and country (both sources from which belonging and security were traditionally derived), and a changing engagement with mainstream social and economic institutions, have produced a context in which security and belonging are iteratively derived from a number of sources. Contemporary Aboriginal spatial practices therefore take a complex variety of forms. The thesis concludes that adopting the framework of security and belonging for interpreting contemporary Aboriginal mobilities provides a starting point for engaging more effectively and intentionally with dynamic Aboriginal spatial practices in service delivery policy and practice. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / x, 320 p. ill., maps

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