Anne Sourdril
Institut national de la recherche agronomique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anne Sourdril.
Ecology and Society | 2012
Anne Sourdril; Emilie Andrieu; Alain Cabanettes; Bernard Elyakime; Sylvie Ladet
The management of small private forests in the Western World has been under threat owing to rural and agricultural transformations since the Second World War. The actions put in place to preserve those forests are hard to implement because the forests are managed essentially in an unofficial way that is not clearly understood. Through multidisciplinary approaches, our aims were to understand local forest management processes, to assess the continuities and discontinuities of usages and practices in the Coteaux de Gascogne area of France, and to propose guidelines for future forest management. Forest management is shaped by a traditional but unrecognized social system called the house-centered system, which has contributed to a high degree of domesticity and diversity in forestry practices in this area. If forest management guidelines are to be effective, any guidelines put in place should take into account the roots of the traditional management system and attempt to comply with local social organizations. This is a major challenge regarding the long-term preservation of small private forests.
Ecology and Society | 2007
Marc Deconchat; Annick Gibon; Alain Cabanettes; Gaëtan du Bus de Warnaffe; Mark Hewison; Eric Garine; André Gavaland; Jean-Paul Lacombe; Sylvie Ladet; Claude Monteil; Annie Ouin; Jean-Pierre Sarthou; Anne Sourdril; Gérard Balent
Interdisciplinary research frameworks can be useful in providing answers to the environmental challenges facing rural environments, but concrete implementation of them remains empirical and requires better control. We present our practical experience of an interdisciplinary research project dealing with non-industrial private forestry in rural landscapes. The theoretical background, management, and methodological aspects, as well as results of the project, are presented in order to identify practical key factors that may influence its outcomes. Landscape ecology plays a central role in organizing the project. The efforts allocated for communication between scientists from different disciplines must be clearly stated in order to earn reciprocal trust. Sharing the same nested sampling areas, common approaches, and analytical tools (GIS) is important, but has to be balanced by autonomy for actual implementation of field work and data analysis in a modular and evolving framework. Data sets are at the heart of the collaboration and GIS is necessary to ensure their long-term management and sharing. The experience acquired from practical development of such projects should be shared more often in networks of teams to compare their behavior and identify common rules of functioning.
Small-scale Forestry | 2006
Anne Sourdril; Gaëtan du Bus de Warnaffe; Marc Deconchat; Gérard Balent; Eric Garine
The importance of the ecological functions of farm forests in France calls for a better understanding of the social systems influencing forest management. The traditional ‘house-centred system’ involved a sharing of activities in farm forestry between fathers and their sons. Retired farmers were traditionally managers of the forests while their sons dealt with farming activities. The evolution of this relationship since World War 2 has been investigated with an ethnologic approach in two villages in south-western France where the traditional ‘house-centred system’ constrains the social rules. This system has led to a lifetime status for fathers as head of the farm and of the household. Before WW2, sons played a secondary role in relation to their fathers who took strategic decisions. After WW2, sons became more involved in the forest work and decisions which led to a more frequent use of agricultural methods in forests. This created differences of opinion between fathers and sons, with the fathers considering their sons’ management too intensive. The social consequence was that the fathers felt that their role as forest managers and as head of the farm was reduced. In future, farm forest management might become more dependent on agricultural activities, with the traditional social systems losing importance.
Cahiers Agricultures | 2010
Jean-Philippe Choisis; Anne Sourdril; Marc Deconchat; Gérard Balent; Annick Gibon
Revue Forestière Française | 2008
E. Andrieu; G. Du Bus De Warnaffe; Sylvie Ladet; W. Heintz; Anne Sourdril; Marc Deconchat
Ateliers d'anthropologie. Revue éditée par le Laboratoire d'ethnologie et de sociologie comparative | 2008
Anne Sourdril; Sylvie Ladet
Landscape and Urban Planning | 2018
Julien Blanco; Anne Sourdril; Marc Deconchat; Sylvie Ladet; Emilie Andrieu
Archive | 2017
Julien Blanco; Anne Sourdril; Marc Deconchat; Emilie Andrieu
Archive | 2017
Julien Blanco; Anne Sourdril; Marc Deconchat; Sylvie Ladet; Emilie Andrieu
Approches territorialisées des usages de la forêt | 2017
Marc Deconchat; Julien Blanco; Anne Sourdril; Emilie Andrieu; Angel'S Nangwa Kwetchou; Martin Vigan; Ama Corinne Corcher; Aude Vialatte; Mehdi Bounab