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Dive into the research topics where Yves-François Le Lay is active.

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Featured researches published by Yves-François Le Lay.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2013

Perception of braided river landscapes: implications for public participation and sustainable management.

Yves-François Le Lay; Hervé Piégay; Anne Rivière-Honegger

Over the past century, the ecologically-diverse, braided Magra River in Italy has narrowed, incised, and lost many gravel bars due to the riparian vegetation encroachment following the decrease in bedload supply and channel degradation. Motivated by the European Water Framework Directive, river scientists and managers are beginning to plan projects to conserve and restore these dynamic mosaics of rare habitats and processes. To support this objective, a study was conducted to assess how braided rivers are perceived by different social groups in the area. In June, 2006, 127 people were surveyed using a photo-questionnaire consisting of ten photographs that depicted riverscapes with different proportions of water, vegetation, and bed material. Respondents were asked to score each photograph in terms of aesthetic value, beneficial uses, and river management needs. Results showed that the photographs depicting gravel bars were perceived as less aesthetically pleasing, so therefore they need an active management. However, these perceptions differed amongst groups of participants, reflecting their interests and objectives. This paper identifies a distance between scientific and popular attitudes and discusses implications for public participation, support for braided river restoration policy, and environmental education.


Reference Module in Earth Systems and Environmental Sciences#R##N#Treatise on Geomorphology | 2013

Wood entrance, deposition, transfer and effects on fluvial forms and processes: Problem statements and challenging issues

Yves-François Le Lay; Bertrand Moulin; Hervé Piégay

Throughout the world before the 1970s, in-channel large wood (hereafter LW), was generally considered a nuisance or a hazard to be avoided because of the hydraulic effects and consequential associated risks that it could produce. LW was systematically removed from channels for a perceived benefit to human activities. Over the last four decades, LW has received an increasing interest among scientists who recognise it as a significant structural and functional component of aquatic ecosystems. Research in geomorphology has addressed LW characters and its effects on flow hydraulics, on channel and valley forms and their evolution, on the storage and transfer of sediment and organic matter, as well as on associated habitats for aquatic communities. After considering the space-time framework within which the wood dynamics can be studied, we highlight the LW effects on channel morphology and fluvial processes, the ecological and societal consequences of wood in rivers and implications in terms of river management and restoration. After centuries of wood removal, LW is now introduced in rivers for ecological improvement in some areas of North America, Europe, Australia, and Japan.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2016

Ways forward for aquatic conservation: applications of environmental psychology to support management objectives

Kate Walker-Springett; Rebecca Jefferson; Kerstin Böck; Annette Breckwoldt; Emeline Comby; Marylise Cottet; Gundula Hübner; Yves-François Le Lay; Sylvie Shaw; Kayleigh J. Wyles

The success or failure of environmental management goals can be partially attributed to the support for such goals from the public. Despite this, environmental management is still dominated by a natural science approach with little input from disciplines that are concerned with the relationship between humans and the natural environment such as environmental psychology. Within the marine and freshwater environments, this is particularly concerning given the cultural and aesthetic significance of these environments to the public, coupled with the services delivered by freshwater and marine ecosystems, and the vulnerability of aquatic ecosystems to human-driven environmental perturbations. This paper documents nine case studies which use environmental psychology methods to support a range of aquatic management goals. Examples include understanding the drivers of public attitudes towards ecologically important but uncharismatic river species, impacts of marine litter on human well-being, efficacy of small-scale governance of tropical marine fisheries and the role of media in shaping attitudes towards. These case studies illustrate how environmental psychology and natural sciences can be used together to apply an interdisciplinary approach to the management of aquatic environments. Such an approach that actively takes into account the range of issues surrounding aquatic environment management is more likely to result in successful outcomes, from both human and environmental perspectives. Furthermore, the results illustrate that better understanding the societal importance of aquatic ecosystems can reduce conflict between social needs and ecological objectives, and help improve the governance of aquatic ecosystems. Thus, this paper concludes that an effective relationship between academics and practitioners requires fully utilising the skills, knowledge and experience from both sectors.


Science of The Total Environment | 2014

How chemical pollution becomes a social problem. Risk communication and assessment through regional newspapers during the management of PCB pollutions of the Rhône River (France).

Emeline Comby; Yves-François Le Lay; Hervé Piégay

The case study of the polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) pollutions of the Rhône River (France) offers the possibility of studying criteria for the construction of social problems that result from chemical pollution (2005-2010). We investigated the dynamics of competition that create and define pollution as a social problem and entail its decline. News outlets are crucial for determining how an environmental issue emerges locally or nationally; this study used newspapers to highlight the potential of new outlets as a data source to analyze discourse variability, science-policy-media connections and the hydrosphere. Media coverage was based on a content analysis and textual data analysis of 75 articles. Analytical frameworks such as the Downs Model and the Public Arena Model (Hilgartner and Bosk, 1988) that consider time and stakeholders were tested to determine how human alteration of the hydrosphere can become a social problem and to analyze different communication strategies held by stakeholders. In terms of management, we described the temporal dynamics of the social problem based on the case study and considered an explanation of the selections. We considered the organization of particular stakeholders who define the social problem from its beginning to end by focusing on their discourses, relationships, decision-making and political choices, and scientific studies. Despite some biases, newspapers are useful for retrospectively evaluating the emergence of a social problem in the public arena by describing it through discourse and then understanding the temporal patterns of information. Despite uncertainties and information flow, decisions are made and science is translated to the public.


Environmental Management | 2014

The Achievement of a Decentralized Water Management Through Stakeholder Participation: An Example from the Drôme River Catchment Area in France (1981–2008)

Emeline Comby; Yves-François Le Lay; Hervé Piégay

Different water Acts (e.g., the European Water Framework Directive) and stakeholders involved in aquatic affairs have promoted integrated river basin management over recent decades. However, few studies have provided feedback on these policies. The aim of the current article is to fill this gap by exploring how local newspapers reflect the implementation of a broad public participation within a catchment of France known for its innovation with regard to this domain. The media coverage of a water management strategy in the Drôme watershed from 1981 to 2008 was investigated using a content analysis and a geographic information system. We sought to determine what public participation and decentralized decision-making can be in practice. The results showed that this policy was integrated because of its social perspective, the high number of involved stakeholders, the willingness to handle water issues, and the local scale suitable for participation. We emphasized the prominence of the watershed scale guaranteed by the local water authority. This area was also characterized by compromise, arrangements, and power dynamics on a fine scale. We examined the most politically engaged writings regarding water management, which topics of each group emphasized, and how the groups agreed and disagreed on issues based on their values and context. The temporal pattern of participation implementation was progressive but worked by fits and starts.


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2018

The social dimensions of a river’s environmental quality assessment

Anne-Lise Boyer; Emeline Comby; Silvia Flaminio; Yves-François Le Lay; Marylise Cottet

Integrated water resources management, promoted in developed countries, obliges to integrate social aspects with hydrological and ecological dimensions when assessing river quality. To better understand these social aspects, we propose a mixed-method to study public perceptions of an impounded river. Since the 1930s, the management of the Ain river (France) has been challenged by conflicts about the river’s quality. We surveyed (using interviews and mental maps) various stakeholders along the river. The results based on textual and content analysis show variations in the public’s perceptions according to the residence area, practices, and the degree of emotional attachment to the river. The assessment of environmental quality needs to take into account different types of knowledge, sometimes conflicting, that reveal and shape the variety of waterscapes which compose the Ain River. The social dimensions highlight integrated water management’s inherent complexity by considering the river basin as a place to live and by involving multiple stakeholders.


Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers | 2008

Variations in cross‐cultural perception of riverscapes in relation to in‐channel wood

Yves-François Le Lay; Hervé Piégay; Kenneth Gregory; Anne Chin; Sylvain Dolédec; Arturo Elosegi; Michael Mutz; Bartłomiej Wyżga; Joanna Zawiejska


Journal of Environmental Management | 2009

Influence of academic education on the perception of wood in watercourses.

Bartłomiej Wyżga; Joanna Zawiejska; Yves-François Le Lay


Fluvial Remote Sensing for Science and Management | 2012

Ground imagery and environmental perception: using photo-questionnaires to evaluate river management strategies

Yves-François Le Lay; Marylise Cottet; Hervé Piégay; Anne Rivière-Honegger


L’Espace géographique | 2007

Le bois mort dans les paysages fluviaux français : éléments pour une gestion renouvelée

Yves-François Le Lay; Hervé Piégay

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Marylise Cottet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Anne Rivière-Honegger

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Marylise Cottet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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