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Academic literature on the topic 'Paysage frontalier'
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Journal articles on the topic "Paysage frontalier"
Coste, Margault. "Acteurs et formes d’investissement de la frontière de 1258 entre le Fenouillèdes et le Roussillon-Conflent (milieu xiiie siècle-milieu xve siècle)." Investir la frontière, no. 4 (June 15, 2021): 6–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.35562/frontieres.581.
Full textGlad, Damien. "L'etat central et le ravitaillement des garnisons frontalieres (284-641 AP.J.-C.)." Starinar, no. 59 (2009): 181–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/sta0959181g.
Full textSevrin, Robert. "Les régions frontalières franco-belges." Cahiers de géographie du Québec 18, no. 43 (April 12, 2005): 35–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/021175ar.
Full textSt-Onge, Denis A., and Isabelle McMartin. "La Moraine du Lac Bluenose (Territoires du Nord-Ouest), une moraine à noyau de glace de glacier." Géographie physique et Quaternaire 53, no. 2 (October 2, 2002): 287–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/005696ar.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Paysage frontalier"
Pillant, Laurence. "La frontière comme assemblage : géographie critique du contrôle migratoire à la frontière orientale de la Grèce." Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017AIXM0268/document.
Full textSince the start of the millenium Greeceʼs eastern border has witnessed an increase in the flow of irregular migrants from Africa, the Middle East and Asia. Although the country entered Schengen a few years back, its immigration laws catered mainly for arrivals from Albania, an immigration that the autorities wanted to keep under control and where expulsions were possible. Throughout the noughties, new places of confinment were built in response to increasing numbers of migrants at the border between Greece and Turkey, and based on a combination of political decisions taken locally, nationally, at European level and even globally. This essay deciphers these trends, what is at stake and the consequences that they carry. From a theoretical and methodological point of view, encompassing a social and political approach in geography, borders are considered as an assemblage. This makes it easier to understand how migratory control expands beyond the geographical line of separation between Greece and Turkey and into new spaces involving new players. This expansion of the borders is the result of the legal framework, the policing practices at all levels and the sociocultural environment of these areas. The way in which these various elements come together to form a border that is both reticular and performative, enables us to position our thoughts within the geographical debate on new forms of contemporary borders and their localisation. From crossing the border to life inside the greek territory, this thesis presents the ways in which border situations are created and reproduced for the migrants in that country
Janson, Rébecca. "Frontières et identités : étude des décors céramiques dans la région des monts Mandara et de ses plaines (Nord-Cameroun/Nord-Nigéria) à l'Âge du Fer." Thèse, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/18428.
Full textFor the last 500 years at least, in the southern area of Lake Tchad, the Mandara Mountains region represents the geographical and cultural meeting point of two contrasting ways of thinking: the egalitarian and non-Muslim populations of the mountains; and the populations of the surrounding plains—dominated by the hierarchical authority of Islamic states, including Bornou and Wandala states. This thesis is the continuation of a long tradition of archaeological and ethnological research completed during the last 40 years in this region. Its aim is to document the ambiguous relationship that exists between these two socio-political systems, in the past and the present. Between 1993 and 2012, teams of archaeologists working on both the Projet Maya Wandala (PMW) and the Projet DGB (Diy-gyd-bay) established one of the largest ceramic databases in the region. Following a holistic, diachronic and regional approach regarding the issue of cultural contacts in the border area, the present thesis focuses on the analysis on ceramic decoration from this dataset. These potsherds (n=150,000), originating from eight key archaeological sites located in Northern Cameroon and Northern Nigeria, tell the story of the region spanning more than 3000 years, dating from the Neolithic to the end of the Late Iron Age (LIA). Methods of statistical analysis, such as cluster analysis by dynamic clustering (K-Means) and Ward aggregation, have been used in order to explore both similarities and differences present in these collections, through time and space. After a comparison of my results with the archaeological, ethnological and historical data of the study area, a chronology of these sites is proposed based on the ceramic data. On the DGB- 1/-2 site, the most important evidence of prehistoric occupation of the mountains, the domestic spaces, such as the cooking area, are differentiated from those used for redeposited materials, despite the similarity of ceramic decorations found there. The identification of four groups of distinct ceramic decorations underlines the differences that arise between the lowland populations and those from the mountains, as well as between the lowland populations associated with the Wandala elite, and other groups. In the context of the emergence of the first centralised states in this region, we can see how this important historical phenomenon had consequences, not only on occupation and the use of the landscape, but also on ceramic identity.