Semi-automatic Maps for 2015 French Riviera Floods

Author(s):  
Frédéric Pons ◽  
Mathieu Alquier ◽  
Isabelle Roux
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Alessandro Araldi ◽  
Giovanni Fusco

The Nine Forms of the French Riviera: Classifying Urban Fabrics from the Pedestrian Perspective. Giovanni Fusco, Alessandro Araldi ¹Université Côte-Azur, CNRS, ESPACE - Bd. Eduard Herriot 98. 06200 Nice E-mail: [email protected], [email protected] Keywords: French Riviera, Urban Fabrics, Urban Form Recognition, Geoprocessing Conference topics and scale: Tools of analysis in urban morphology     Recent metropolitan growth produces new kinds of urban fabric, revealing different logics in the organization of urban space, but coexisting with more traditional urban fabrics in central cities and older suburbs. Having an overall view of the spatial patterns of urban fabrics in a vast metropolitan area is paramount for understanding the emerging spatial organization of the contemporary metropolis. The French Riviera is a polycentric metropolitan area of more than 1200 km2 structured around the old coastal cities of Nice, Cannes, Antibes and Monaco. XIX century and early XX century urban growth is now complemented by modern developments and more recent suburban areas. A large-scale analysis of urban fabrics can only be carried out through a new geoprocessing protocol, combining indicators of spatial relations within urban fabrics, geo-statistical analysis and Bayesian data-mining. Applied to the French Riviera, nine families of urban fabrics are identified and correlated to the historical periods of their production. Central cities are thus characterized by the combination of different families of pre-modern, dense, continuous built-up fabrics, as well as by modern discontinuous forms. More interestingly, fringe-belts in Nice and Cannes, as well as the techno-park of Sophia-Antipolis, combine a spinal cord of connective artificial fabrics having sparse specialized buildings, with the already mentioned discontinuous fabrics of modern urbanism. Further forms are identified in the suburban and “rurban” spaces around central cities. The proposed geoprocessing procedure is not intended to supersede traditional expert-base analysis of urban fabric. Rather, it should be considered as a complementary tool for large urban space analysis and as an input for studying urban form relation to socioeconomic phenomena. References   Conzen, M.R.G (1960) Alnwick, Northumberland : A Study in Town-Planning Analysis. (London, George Philip). Conzen, M.P. (2009) “How cities internalize their former urban fringe. A cross-cultural comparison”. Urban Morphology, 13, 29-54. Graff, P. (2014) Une ville d’exception. Nice, dans l'effervescence du 20° siècle. (Serre, Nice). Yamada I., Thill J.C. (2010) “Local indicators of network-constrained clusters in spatial patterns represented by a link attribute.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 100(2), 269-285. Levy, A. (1999) “Urban morphology and the problem of modern urban fabric : some questions for research”, Urban Morphology, 3(2), 79-85. Okabe, A. Sugihara, K. (2012) Spatial Analysis along Networks: Statistical and Computational Methods. (John Wiley and sons, UK).


2018 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 11-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yann Ourmieres ◽  
Jérémy Mansui ◽  
Anne Molcard ◽  
François Galgani ◽  
Isabelle Poitou

Chemosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 258 ◽  
pp. 127232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariia V. Petrova ◽  
Mélanie Ourgaud ◽  
Joana R.H. Boavida ◽  
Aurèlie Dufour ◽  
Javier A. Tesán Onrubia ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Emanuele Sica

This chapter examines Italy’s Jewish policy in France. Foreign Jews, arguably the most famous aspect of the Italian occupation of the French Riviera, found a sanctuary in the former free zone. Thanks to the organizational skill and powerful networking of an Italian Jewish banker, Angelo Mordechai Donati, and the effective complicity of Italian military and civilian authorities alike, thousands of Jews found a needed respite from both Gestapo and Vichy chasers that were hunting them. However, this idyllic scenario was abruptly ended by the disintegration of the Italian Army in September 1943, a consequence of the botched negotiations between the Allies and the Italian military government following the ouster of Benito Mussolini on July 25, 1943. This chapter first considers how the Vichy regime’s hatred for the Jews influenced the Italian Jewish policy in France and how the Jewish question shaped the overall Italian occupation policy in southeastern France.


Author(s):  
Emanuele Sica

This chapter examines the concept of “collaboration” in the Italian occupation of the French Riviera, with particular emphasis on the range of opportunities for unscrupulous and desperate individuals to better their interests. The Vichy government fully embraced state-level collaboration, whereby it actively sought a collaboration beyond the armistice treaty in order to be considered a reliable partner in the prospective Nazi New Order. However, ordinary French also interacted with various degrees with the occupier, be it German or Italian. Philippe Burrin has divided these relationships into roughly three categories, which he labeled “accommodations”: structural accommodations, opportunist accommodations, and political accommodations. This chapter shows that, as in other parts of France, the majority of the “collaborators” were not ideologically motivated and that their real motivations remain unclear; this is evident in the ambivalent and complex relationships between Italian soldiers and local women. It also suggests that the Fourth Army on the French Riviera was bent on opportunist accommodations.


Author(s):  
Emanuele Sica

This book examines the Italian army’s occupation of the French Riviera during the period 1940–1943 at three different levels, each involving a triangular relationship. At a more general level, it analyzes the military occupation with the lens of historical sociology, making references to the triangular comparison of the Italian occupation of France to the German occupation of France and to the Italian occupation of the Balkans. It also considers “the structural effects of occupation on the occupied society’s environment and living conditions,” with particular emphasis on the triangular and rocky relationship between the representatives of the French state, especially the prefects and mayors, and the Italian military authorities, the officers of Italian units deployed on French soil, and Italian civilian authorities who were officially dispatched by Rome to supervise the implementation of the Franco-Italian armistice and to secretly prepare for the annexation of the occupied territories. Finally, at a grassroots level, the book explores the “face-to-face interaction between occupiers and occupied people” and how it was shaped by both groups’ habits, culture, prejudices, and tensions.


2009 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christelle Pomares-Estran ◽  
Pascal Delaunay ◽  
Annie Mottard ◽  
Eric Cua ◽  
Pierre-Marie Roger ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

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