Terres et eaux entre coutume, police et droit au xixe siècle. Solidarisme écologique ou solidarités matérielles ?

« Ecological solidarity » has been promoted as a conceptual tool for rethinking ecological and social interdependence and for sketching new relations between humans and non-humans. In so doing, the promotors of the notion challenge the division between subjects and objects which structures the jurid...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alice Ingold
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: ENS Éditions 2017-09-01
Series:Tracés
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/traces/7011
_version_ 1827351791483748352
author Alice Ingold
author_facet Alice Ingold
author_sort Alice Ingold
collection DOAJ
description « Ecological solidarity » has been promoted as a conceptual tool for rethinking ecological and social interdependence and for sketching new relations between humans and non-humans. In so doing, the promotors of the notion challenge the division between subjects and objects which structures the juridical architecture of our modern legal and property order. Ecological solidarity is a multidimensional phenomenon: it is based on the recognition of the interdependences between natural organisms and their physical environment, but it also tends to express a political sense of solidarity (solidarisme) that gives humans the responsibility to become representatives or spokespersons for non-humans. This paper sets out to demonstrate that other forms of ecological solidarity have historically existed, that were neither based on the will of individuals nor on political representation, but were rooted in material forms inscribed in things. Such material solidarities are best observed in the management of water in France after 1789: local institutions, namely associations of private owners that outlived the Revolution, granted rights to pieces of land rather than human subjects; the commoners of these water associations were not humans but pieces of land. Such institutions occupy a privileged place in Ostrom’s literature, where they are presented as integral to any lasting management success for land and resources by local or regional communities: Ostrom described them as “empirical alternatives” to the “Tragedy of the Commons.” Distancing itself from the property system imposed during the nineteenth century, which put the subject’s will at the heart of the relation between man and land, this historical inquiry shows a reverse image of the relation between man and nature. Contrary to man’s traditional representation as master and possessor of nature, the inquiry shows that human actors inscribed themselves within a generational chain and can be viewed as heirs and guests of a previous ecological and social system.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T02:30:59Z
format Article
id doaj.art-7fd8dddb612849c3a2ad41ce49e3a71d
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1763-0061
1963-1812
language fra
last_indexed 2024-03-08T02:30:59Z
publishDate 2017-09-01
publisher ENS Éditions
record_format Article
series Tracés
spelling doaj.art-7fd8dddb612849c3a2ad41ce49e3a71d2024-02-13T14:05:32ZfraENS ÉditionsTracés1763-00611963-18122017-09-01339712610.4000/traces.7011Terres et eaux entre coutume, police et droit au xixe siècle. Solidarisme écologique ou solidarités matérielles ?Alice Ingold« Ecological solidarity » has been promoted as a conceptual tool for rethinking ecological and social interdependence and for sketching new relations between humans and non-humans. In so doing, the promotors of the notion challenge the division between subjects and objects which structures the juridical architecture of our modern legal and property order. Ecological solidarity is a multidimensional phenomenon: it is based on the recognition of the interdependences between natural organisms and their physical environment, but it also tends to express a political sense of solidarity (solidarisme) that gives humans the responsibility to become representatives or spokespersons for non-humans. This paper sets out to demonstrate that other forms of ecological solidarity have historically existed, that were neither based on the will of individuals nor on political representation, but were rooted in material forms inscribed in things. Such material solidarities are best observed in the management of water in France after 1789: local institutions, namely associations of private owners that outlived the Revolution, granted rights to pieces of land rather than human subjects; the commoners of these water associations were not humans but pieces of land. Such institutions occupy a privileged place in Ostrom’s literature, where they are presented as integral to any lasting management success for land and resources by local or regional communities: Ostrom described them as “empirical alternatives” to the “Tragedy of the Commons.” Distancing itself from the property system imposed during the nineteenth century, which put the subject’s will at the heart of the relation between man and land, this historical inquiry shows a reverse image of the relation between man and nature. Contrary to man’s traditional representation as master and possessor of nature, the inquiry shows that human actors inscribed themselves within a generational chain and can be viewed as heirs and guests of a previous ecological and social system.https://journals.openedition.org/traces/7011associationsmaterialitypropertycommonssolidarityGeorges Sorel
spellingShingle Alice Ingold
Terres et eaux entre coutume, police et droit au xixe siècle. Solidarisme écologique ou solidarités matérielles ?
Tracés
associations
materiality
property
commons
solidarity
Georges Sorel
title Terres et eaux entre coutume, police et droit au xixe siècle. Solidarisme écologique ou solidarités matérielles ?
title_full Terres et eaux entre coutume, police et droit au xixe siècle. Solidarisme écologique ou solidarités matérielles ?
title_fullStr Terres et eaux entre coutume, police et droit au xixe siècle. Solidarisme écologique ou solidarités matérielles ?
title_full_unstemmed Terres et eaux entre coutume, police et droit au xixe siècle. Solidarisme écologique ou solidarités matérielles ?
title_short Terres et eaux entre coutume, police et droit au xixe siècle. Solidarisme écologique ou solidarités matérielles ?
title_sort terres et eaux entre coutume police et droit au xixe siecle solidarisme ecologique ou solidarites materielles
topic associations
materiality
property
commons
solidarity
Georges Sorel
url https://journals.openedition.org/traces/7011
work_keys_str_mv AT aliceingold terreseteauxentrecoutumepoliceetdroitauxixesieclesolidarismeecologiqueousolidaritesmaterielles