Academic literature on the topic 'Territorialization of law'

Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles

Select a source type:

Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Territorialization of law.'

Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.

You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.

Journal articles on the topic "Territorialization of law"

1

TREVISANUT, SELINE. "The Principle ofNon-RefoulementAnd the De-Territorialization of Border Control at Sea." Leiden Journal of International Law 27, no. 3 (July 24, 2014): 661–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0922156514000259.

Full text
Abstract:
AbstractDestination states of irregular migration aim to prevent arrivals by controlling their borders outside their territory, specifically on the high seas. This practice may best be described as the de-territorialization of border control at sea. The de-territorialization impacts the applicable legal framework, in particular the safeguards to which individuals submitted to the control activities are entitled. This article posits that the principle ofnon-refoulementis a fundamental yardstick for the de-territorialization of border control and applies wherever competent state authorities perform border control measures. The argument develops in four steps. After outlining the content of the principle ofnon-refoulement, this article defines maritime borders and elucidates their functional nature. It then outlines how the principle ofnon-refoulementapplies at sea and translates into a ‘principle of non-rejection at the maritime frontier’. The article finally highlights the principle's legal and practical consequences in the context of de-territorialized border control.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
2

Lambach, Daniel. "The functional territorialization of the high seas." Marine Policy 130 (August 2021): 104579. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104579.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
3

Erol, Alkim. "Freedom and control in the digital age." Human Affairs 30, no. 4 (October 27, 2020): 570–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/humaff-2020-0050.

Full text
Abstract:
AbstractMany conceive information and communications technologies (ICT) as providing a free space which bolsters the freedom of individuals. This is because the technologies, and the ways we use them, are thought to be grounded in consent given by individuals. However, it will be argued that individuals, by their own self-regulated consent-based actions when using ICT, are actually alleviating their own individual freedoms. This novel phenomenon, which Deleuze and Guattari have drawn our attention to, is a consequence of the de-territorialization and re-territorialization of desires, shaped by power processes, and practiced within Control Societies. This process is disguised as ‘choices’ made by free and self-aware individuals who give their ‘consent’.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
4

Laponce, Jean. "Politics and the Law of Babel." Social Science Information 40, no. 2 (June 2001): 179–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/053901801040002001.

Full text
Abstract:
The world language system is profoundly affected by the increase in the frequency and density of communication on a world scale. Most of the languages spoken today are not expected to survive the century and most of those surviving will lose or fail to get control of some higher functions of communication, notably in the fields of commerce and science. The minority languages best able to resist the pressure of more powerful competitors are those having a government as their champion, and their best overall protective strategy remains territorialization, either within the boundaries of a unilingual state or, in the case of multilingual societies, on the territorial model of Switzerland and Belgium that juxtaposes rather than mixes languages at the regional level.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
5

Greeley, Robert W. B. "Conservation Territorialization and Sport Hunting in Lebanon’s Shouf Biosphere Reserve." Journal of International Wildlife Law & Policy 23, no. 4 (October 1, 2020): 286–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13880292.2020.1866237.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
6

Mundlak, Guy. "De-Territorializing Labor Law." Law & Ethics of Human Rights 3, no. 2 (July 1, 2009): 189–222. http://dx.doi.org/10.2202/1938-2545.1037.

Full text
Abstract:
Labor law was traditionally a domestic project, defined on the basis of a geographic territory or a synthetic community; its norms were determined by the state and applied to employers and workers who resided within the state. Commonly, labor law is administered on a territorial basis, applies to incoming workers, and stops at the borders in respect of other states' sovereignty when capital migrates. Globalization affects the background in which labor law operates, including the increased interdependence of markets, the constitution of communities that transcend national borders, and the development of institutions outside and within the nation-state, which displace the locus of regulation from the traditional state level. De-territoriality claims that territory and sovereignty should be understated within the dominion of labor law in order to correct a deep structural imbalance in labor markets. This imbalance was not created by globalization, and as long as it appeared in a consistent yet bounded manner in each and every state, labor law's project was rendered possible by territorial arrangements. With the process of globalization, the territorial solutions previously created within labor law are no longer adequate. When territoriality is adhered to, migrating workers receive partial protection, while migrating capital can easily choose its most convenient forum as a means, inter alia, of undermining labor law's protection to workers. De-territorialization seeks to restore the original intent of labor law's project, which is to level off the distinct strategies that are available to labor and capital in a globalized labor market.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
7

Huizenga, Daniel. "Rival jurisdictions on a resource frontier: Law, territorialization, and inscription in the Eastern Cape, South Africa." Geoforum 133 (July 2022): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2022.04.010.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
8

Ricca, Mario. "Cultures in Orbit, or Justi-fying Differences in Cosmic Space: On Categorization, Territorialization and Rights Recognition." International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue internationale de Sémiotique juridique 31, no. 4 (July 28, 2018): 829–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11196-018-9578-5.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
9

Martínez, Hepzibah Muñoz. "State, capital and “second nature:” re-territorialization in the Plan Puebla Panama*." Capitalism Nature Socialism 15, no. 1 (March 2004): 67–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1045575032000189000.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
10

Buchanan, Ruth M. "‘ ‘Passing through the Mirror’’: Dead Man, Legal Pluralism and the De-territorialization of the West." Law, Culture and the Humanities 7, no. 2 (November 2010): 289–309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1743872109360122.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles

Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Territorialization of law"

1

Carniama, Mathieu. "La préférence locale." Electronic Thesis or Diss., La Réunion, 2022. http://www.theses.fr/2022LARE0025.

Full text
Abstract:
La préférence locale est une question sensible. Elle fascine ceux qui la revendiquent. Elle crispe ceux qui la rejettent. Dans l’ordre juridique français, cette mesure de faveur s’assimile comme une discrimination positive porteuse d’un différencialisme territorial. En un sens, la préférence locale serait le phénomène juridique où convergent les limites respectives des principes d’égalité et d’indivisibilité de la République. La préférence locale serait donc par nature suspecte. L’objectif de la thèse s’inscrit en rupture de ces prémices. La préférence locale peut se concilier avec le modèle républicain, universaliste et indivisible français. À cet effet, il convenait, en premier lieu, d’identifier les traits caractéristiques de la préférence locale. Cette étape a permis de révéler que la préférence locale, comme toute discrimination positive, est porteuse de fonctions typiques : à la fois légitimes et subversives. Néanmoins, ses bénéficiaires restent atypiques. La préférence locale est moins qu’une préférence ethnique, mais plus qu’une préférence territoriale. En second lieu, il convenait de s’intéresser au régime applicable. À ce titre, la préférence locale se caractérise par une forme de dualité. Son intégration repose, d’abord, sur habilitation constitutionnelle positive. Dans ce cas, la préférence locale relève, dans une certaine mesure, de la compétence du pouvoir local. Elle repose, ensuite, sur une habilitation constitutionnelle négative. Dans ce cas, la préférence locale relève, par principe, de la compétence du pouvoir central. Ces régimes d’intégration interrogent les apories du modèle républicain qui, tout en reconnaissant, aisément, un droit de préférence locale, peine à réaliser un droit à la préférence locale
Local preference is a sensitive issue. It fascinates those who claim it. It tenses up those who reject it. In the French legal order, this favorable measure is assimilated as a positive discrimination carrying a territorial differentialism. In a sense, local preference would be the legal phenomenon where the respective limits of the principles of equality and indivisibility of the Republic converge. Local preference would therefore be inherently suspect. The objective of the thesis breaks with these premises. Local preference can be reconciled with the French republican, universalist and indivisible model. To this end, it was first necessary to identify the characteristic features of local preference. This step revealed that local preference, like any positive discrimination, carries typical functions: both legitimate and subversive. Nevertheless, its beneficiaries remain atypical. Local preference is less than an ethnic preference, but more than a territorial preference. Secondly, it was necessary to consider the applicable regime. As such, local preference is characterized by a form of duality. Its integration is based, first, on positive constitutional authorization. In this case, the local preference falls, to some extent, within the competence of the local government. It is then based on a negative constitutional authorization. In this case, local preference falls, in principle, within the competence of the central power. These integration regimes question the aporias of the republican model which, while easily recognizing a right of local preference, struggles to realize a right to local preference
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
2

Stewart, Lynn Alison. "Law-in-spacing : geographies of territorialization and resistance." Thesis, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1474.

Full text
Abstract:
My thesis revolves around the extension of Anglo-American common law to the newly acquired territories of the Old Northwest and Louisiana. Both of these territories had French-speaking populations with traditions of European Civil law systems. I suggest that the extension of common law to these territories highlighted a process of law-in-spacing, a process by which the private law principles of common law became increasingly visible in the context of these traditionally Civil law populations. I also show that the common law had specific and unforeseen consequences for these French-speaking populations. I use concrete issues such as land and slavery to suggest that there are not only geographies of law, but geographies of custom. I also discuss the production of space as it relates to slavery.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles

Books on the topic "Territorialization of law"

1

FitzGerald, David Scott. Refuge beyond Reach. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190874155.001.0001.

Full text
Abstract:
The core of the asylum regime is the principle of non-refoulement that prohibits governments from sending refugees back to their persecutors. Governments attempt to evade this legal obligation to which they have explicitly agreed by manipulating territoriality. A remote control strategy of “extraterritorialization” pushes border control functions hundreds or even thousands of kilometers beyond the state’s territory. Simultaneously, states restrict access to asylum and other rights enjoyed by virtue of presence on a state’s territory, by making micro-distinctions down to the meter at the borderline in a process of “hyper-territorialization.” This study analyzes remote controls since the 1930s in Palestine, North America, Europe, and Australia to identify the origins of different forms of remote control, explain how they work together as a system of control, and establish the conditions that enable or constrain them in practice. It argues that foreign policy issue linkages and transnational advocacy networks promoting a humanitarian norm that is less susceptible to the legal manipulation of territoriality constrains remote controls more than the law itself. The degree of constraint varies widely by the technique of remote control.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles

Book chapters on the topic "Territorialization of law"

1

Venditti, Valeria. "Exponential territorialization." In Law, Politics and the Gender Binary, 21–32. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351047005-3.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
2

Antsygina, Ekaterina, and Bernardo Pérez-Salazar. "Maritime Territorialization and Governance: Geopolitical and Legal Issues Concerning Delimitation of Extended Continental Shelves in the Caribbean Sea and the Arctic Ocean." In Frontiers – Law, Theory and Cases, 33–69. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-13607-8_3.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
3

Kelly, Ashley Scott, and Xiaoxuan Lu. "Northern Scientific Knowledge and Indigenous Knowledge." In Critical Landscape Planning during the Belt and Road Initiative, 193–249. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-4067-4_8.

Full text
Abstract:
AbstractThis chapter features three planning proposals focused on the ideological friction between Northern scientific knowledge and indigenous knowledge. Northern scientific knowledge has enabled and legitimized various territorialization projects since the establishment of the Lao PDR. Over the past decade, the application of such knowledge has diversified and expanded along with Laos’s increasing integration into the socio-economic geography of the China-Indochina Peninsula Economic Corridor. Unlike World Bank-funded green-neoliberal development that dominated Laos in the 1990s and 2000s, some China-funded projects are furthering the green neoliberal valuation of ecosystems in monetary terms and these ecosystems’ conservation by means of market dynamics. These ecosystem territories inevitably overlap with the country’s indigenous territories and their natural resource-dependent communities. The three planning proposals featured in this chapter foreground Laos’s remarkable human diversity and local communities’ valuable traditional ecological knowledge and practices. These planning proposals are situated in a diverse range of socio-ecological contexts, namely Nam Ha National Protected Area, a protected forest in Luang Prabang, and agricultural land within the capital Vientiane. Collectively, these proposals focus on agrarian populations influenced by old or new forms of land enclosure, investigating possible scenarios that may lead to more equal power relationships between the scientific and indigenous knowledge regimes.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
4

Ben-Ari, Rephael Harel. "II. Globalization and De-Territorialization." In The Normative Position of International Non-Governmental Organizations under International Law, 181–204. Brill | Nijhoff, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004229228_014.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
5

Martinsen, Dorte Sindbjerg. "Social Security Regulation in the EU: The De-Territorialization of Welfare?" In EU Law and the Welfare State, 89–110. Oxford University Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199287413.003.0004.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
6

Lund, Christian. "Indirect Recognition." In Nine-Tenths of the Law, 52–77. Yale University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300251074.003.0003.

Full text
Abstract:
This chapter evaluates the impact of the declaration of Mount Halimun-Salak as a national park by the Indonesian government on the property and citizenship of the local population. It analyzes government–citizen encounters in West Java and the dynamics of recognition in the fields of government territorialization, taxation, local organization, and identity politics. If direct claims to resources were impossible to pursue, people would instead lodge indirect claims. In everyday situations, indirect recognition can perform important legal and political work. After the authoritarian New Order regime, in particular, claims to citizenship worked as indirect property claims and as pragmatic proxies for formal property rights. The chapter examines how people struggle over the past, negotiating the constraints of social propriety for legitimation and indirect recognition of their claims.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
7

Wagner, Ines. "Posted Worker Voice and Transnational Action." In Workers without Borders, 76–95. Cornell University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501729157.003.0005.

Full text
Abstract:
Chapter 4 shifts the perspective to power and mobilization theory to demonstrate how workers foster community and media support to address contentious workplace issues within the transnational space. Through an exemplary case, this chapter traces the process and explores the conditions under which re-territorialization can evolve in these transnational workspaces. The case examines an alliance in the meat industry between transnational posted workers, a local civil society organization, and the trade union. From an analytical perspective, the chapter considers these coalitions as examples of re-territorialization that is a form of resistance in increasingly de-territorialized labor markets. The case demonstrates that the transnational nature of posted workers’ employment relationship and living situation requires a different approach to organizing resistance beyond the traditional institutional perspectives on German trade unionism. The case goes against arguments that German trade unions traditionally refrain from forming coalitions because of their institutional position and Germany’s strong employment law.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
8

Grosby, Steven. "Hebraism." In Hebraism in Religion, History, and Politics, 47–85. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199640317.003.0002.

Full text
Abstract:
This chapter examines Hebraism as the ‘third culture’, distinct from Greek and Roman Christianity, as a kind of Jewish Christianity. Hebraism, as a current of intellectual history, is expressed in the work of the Christian Hebraists of early modern Europe, the quintessential example being John Selden. Hebraism’s focus on life in this world led to the problems of how life should be organized through law, the territorialization of tradition, and the paradoxical national monotheism of the ‘new Israel’. A different interpretation of the Old Testament emerged, influencing the relation between the Old and New Testaments. The theological, political, legal, and social characteristics of Hebraic culture are clarified.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
9

Fracasso, Liliana, and Francisco Cabanzo. "Lo “patrimoniable”: el patrimonio cultural de lo cotidiano." In Paisajes patrimoniales. Resiliencia, resistencia y metrópoli en América Latina, 48–67. Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana (México). Unidad Azcapotzalco. División de Ciencias y Artes para el Diseño. Departamento del Medio Ambiente. Área de Investigación Arquitectura del Paisaje., 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.24275/uama.5821.7593.

Full text
Abstract:
This work stems from a reflection around the conceptual relationship established between heritage education, cultural heritage, popular and contemporary ancestral habitat and artistic practices merging from a researchcreation project “Experiential artistic practices for the recognition of ‘the heritageable’ in Colombia: popular habitat and contemporary ancestral habitat in pilot places (Municipality of Choachí, neihborhoods Pardo Rubio, Minuto de Dios, Las Cruces, El Pañuelito, the locality of Rafael Uribe Uribe). The arguments are formulated from case studies, articulated in the “Heritageable Network”: coformed by observatory places that belong to urban and rural contexts of Bogotá and its edges. The need to confer and defend the significance of places in the ordinary or ancestral world based on aesthetic practices is argued in this chapter. “The heritageable” - recognized by the community - is arbitrated and located in space and time, past, present and future, restoring common sense and social value to territorialization processes.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
10

Hamerow, Helena. "Land and Power: Settlements in the Territorial Context." In Early Medieval Settlements. Oxford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199246977.003.0008.

Full text
Abstract:
As settlements became more clearly bounded and fixed in the landscape, so too did territories based on landed production, which became increasingly intensive and politically controlled (as we shall see in Chapter 5). These territories became formalized when leaders were able to exercise authority within them by protecting clients through juridical and/or military means, and by extracting surplus from, and controlling access to, landed resources. The identification of communities and individuals with a particular territory or region, whether this was defined by shared markets, dialect, military allegiances, or other commonalities, must also have grown in importance in this period, as ties of ethnicity and kinship began to give ground to bonds of clientship and rank. The formalization of territories was of course key to the formation of early kingdoms. What can archaeology tell us about the effects of territorialization and estate formation on rural communities? Certain regular features govern territorial formation in pre-industrial societies. In particular, universal ‘push–pull’ factors underlie the territorial structure and settlement pattern of agrarian communities. Briefly stated, every community needs to establish a territory in order to keep neighbouring communities at a distance and preserve its resources (‘push’ factors), but the necessity of maintaining certain social ties between communities, such as marriage, trade, and shared defence (‘pull’ factors), will act to minimize the distance between them (Heidinga 1987, 157). For example, the distribution of settlement in the Veluwe district of the central Netherlands shows that the northeast and the southwest regions were largely empty in the seventh century, even though their soils were suitable for farming and they were occupied both before and after this period. They lay outside the core area of the seventh-century resettlement of the Veluwe, however, and it appears that communities chose not to spread out thinly across the entire territory, but rather to remain relatively close to one another (Heidinga 1987, 162). In the Netherlands, Germany, and England, early territories could, under certain circumstances, be remarkably stable and survive to be detected in much later boundaries (e.g. Waterbolk 1982 and 1991a; Cunliffe 1973; Janssen 1976). In view of this stability and the behavioural ‘rules’ which appear to govern territorial formation, some archaeologists have attempted to reconstruct proto-historic territories. Several presuppositions underlie such reconstruction. The first is that the ‘push–pull’ factors already mentioned invariably operate between neighbouring communities.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles

Conference papers on the topic "Territorialization of law"

1

Jolly, Jean-François. "A propósito del "trinomio imperfecto" políticas públicas, planeación y territorio: algunas reflexiones sobre el desarrollo de un esquema para el análisis de las políticas públicas en el territorio fundamentado en la interdeterminación entre territorio, territorialidad y territorialización de las políticas públicas." In Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Barcelona: Maestría en Planeación Urbana y Regional. Pontificia Universidad Javeriana de Bogotá, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.6024.

Full text
Abstract:
Este artículo no tiene como propósito presentar un “primer balance” de los avances que ha tenido el Grupo de investigación PU sobre el desarrollo del esquema para el análisis de las políticas públicas en el territorio fundamentado en la interdeterminación entre territorio, territorialidad y territorialización de las políticas públicas o “sistema socio territorial” de Monnet (Jolly, 2012), sino presentar algunas reflexiones a partir de los mismos. Recuerda los nueve “consideraciones” o ideas fundamentales de la propuesta de esquema y su relación con el esquema de análisis de las políticas públicas en el territorio (Jolly, 2007) y con la planeación, y presenta avances y resultados conceptuales e instrumentales de las utilizaciones de esta propuesta realizados por miembros del Grupo y las perspectivas e interrogantes que plantean el desarrollo del esquema en cuanto a sus aspectos analíticos y a sus utilizaciones normativas e instrumentales como manera de entender mejor las complejas interrelaciones entre políticas públicas, planeación y territorio y responder así a los retos de la territorialización de la acción pública “desde abajo y del “despliegue territorial” de las políticas públicas formuladas “desde arriba”. This paper does not aims to present an “initial assessment” of the progress that has been PU research group (in terms of the development of the scheme for the analysis of public policies in the territory based on the interdeterminacion between territory, territoriality and territorialization of public policies ("territorial social system" of Monnet) (Jolly, 2012), but to offer some reflections from them. Remembers the nine “considerations” or fundamental ideas of the proposed scheme and its relationship with scheme analysis of public policies in the territory (Jolly, 2007) and with the planning and presents conceptual and instrumental advances and results of the uses of this proposal that have been members of the group and perspectives and questions posed by the development of the scheme in terms of its analytical aspects and their policy uses and instruments as a way to better understand the complex interrelationships between public policies, planning and territory to meet the challenges of the territorialization of public action bottom up and the territorial deployment top down.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
2

Serrano Romero, Ronal Orlando. "Hacia una conceptualización integral de la movilidad urbana: primera aproximación a la construcción de instrumentos de planificación para la integración y consolidación del espacio público en la movilidad urbana." In Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Barcelona: Maestría en Planeación Urbana y Regional. Pontificia Universidad Javeriana de Bogotá, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.5981.

Full text
Abstract:
El enfoque de la movilidad con el cual se ha planificado la infraestructura, ha consolidado una concepción de este factor funcional que no es acorde a las racionalidades del transporte, del urbanismo y planificación, causando el desequilibrio de la trama urbana. En consecuencia, se hace necesario generar estudios que mejoren la relación alojamiento-movimiento en el ámbito urbano, buscando proponer nuevas concepciones a partir de los elementos contextuales de la ciudad, promoviendo su revalorización, pues la movilidad se debe constituir como herramienta de recualificación urbana. El objetivo de la propuesta es realizar una primera aproximación teórica al tema de la movilidad con miras a construir un concepto integral, considerando las implicaciones anteriores, de tal manera que sirva de fundamento para la elaboración de instrumentos de planificación que permitan la integración del espacio público y la movilidad urbana, a partir de referenciales soportados en el territorio, territorialidad y territorialización. The focus of the mobility which the infrastructure is planned, has established a conception of this functional factor which is not according to the rationality of transport, urban development and planning, causing the imbalance of the urban network. Consequently, it is necessary to generate studies to improve the relation housing -movement in urban areas, trying to propose new concepts from contextual elements of the city, promoting its enhancement, since mobility should be considered as a tool for urban requalification. The scope of the proposal is carried out a theoretical approach looking forward to build an integral concept, considering the previous implications, such that be useful to the development of planning tools that allow the integration of public space and urban mobility through referential aspects supported in the territory, territoriality and territorialization.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles

Reports on the topic "Territorialization of law"

1

Schorung, Matthieu. A Geographical Contribution on Interurban Passenger Rail Transportation in the United States. Mineta Transportation Institute, February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31979/mti.2022.2212.

Full text
Abstract:
Why does the rail infrastructure of the United States lag behind those of many other developed countries? Where is U.S. high-speed rail? This research approaches this in a dilemma by exploring Amtrak’s traditional rail services and high-speed rail projects in the nation to understand the workings of public rail transportation policies, what they contain, and how they are developed and pursued by the different stakeholders. This research utilizes case studies and a multiscale approach to analyze the territorialization of intercity rail transportation policies. The analysis demonstrates the emergence of a bottom-up approach to projects, notably apparent in the California HSR project and in the modernization of the Cascades corridor. Furthermore, this research concluded that, first, the development of uniform arguments and recommendations to encourage new rail policies emphasizes structuring effects and economic role of high-speed rail, congestion reduction, modal shift. Second, a tangible though uneven pro-rail position exists among public actors at all levels. Stakeholders prioritize improving and modernizing existing corridors for the launch of higher-speed services, and then on hybrid networks that combine different types of infrastructures. Although there are no publicly backed projects for new lines exclusively dedicated to high-speed rail, most of the high-speed corridors are in fact “higher-speed” corridors, some of which are intended to become high-speed at some time in the future.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
We offer discounts on all premium plans for authors whose works are included in thematic literature selections. Contact us to get a unique promo code!

To the bibliography