IGD

Institute of Geography and Sustainability of the University of Lausanne
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Mountain COMmons : questioning past and present Commons to address territorial development issues in MOUNTain areas (ComMount)

Research fields Cultures and natures of tourism
Keywords Commoning
Governance
Swiss Alps
Commons
Territorial development
Mountain
Sustainability
New commons
Funding Swiss National Science Foundation
Duration Mai 2023 - April 2027
Website https://wp.unil.ch/commount/
Researchers Reynard Emmanuel (Project co-coordinator)
Kebir Leïla (Principal Investigator)
Graziola Diego (Doctoral student)
Giaccone Loïc (Doctoral student)
Nenovska Nona (Research Advisory)
Nahrath Stéphane (Project co-coordinator)
Decorzant Yann (Research Advisory)
Lorenzetti Luigi (Project co-coordinator)
Leggero Roberto (Research Advisory)

In the context of global change, mountains are facing important economic, social and environmental issues. Contemporary forms of commons – that we name 'new mountain commons' – appear as potential levers for addressing them.

Commons are defined here as a model of resource organization and management gathering three socio-ecological components: a resource, a community and a set of rules regulating access, use and management of the resource. Commons are qualified as “new" by the fact that they are of recent creation and that they concern the provision of goods and services from resources other than natural. In a preparatory project, we have identified several cases of "new mountain commons" dealing for ex. with infrastructure (ski lifts or energy production), heritage, and the supply of local services (community groceries, maternity center, etc.).

The objective of the COMMOUNT project is to understand: how these new commons are structured and organised? What are the spatial, social, political and economic conditions of their emergence and development? How do they relate to the 'historical commons' that have existed and continue to exist in mountain regions? And finally, in what way do new mountain commons" constitute a lever for territorial development and the evolution of the governance of mountain territories?

To address these issues, we will notably create an interdisciplinary research protocol and conduct in-depth case studies in two regions of Swiss Alps.

Expected results

We expect (i) to develop cutting-edge knowledge on new commons in mountain areas as well as on their contribution to territorial development; (ii) to identify relations between historical and new commons; (iii) to identify good practices for and obstacles to the development of such commons.



Ski lift
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