Alexandre Fauquette est docteur en science politique, rattaché au CERAPS (UMR 8026, et ingénieur de recherche en sociologie au GHU Paris. Il est un spécialiste des politiques de santé et d'action publique locale. Il travaille actuellement dans le domaine de la sociologie de la psychiatrie.
Christophe Gibout, Professeur des Universités en Aménagement et Urbanisme à l'ULCO, Directeur du Pôle Recherche "Humanités et Territoires Intégrés" de l'ULCO, Sociologue au laboratoire TVES (ULR 4477, ULille - ULCO). Ses thématiques principales de recherche portent sur les usages sociaux et la gouvernance des espaces publics, avec des focus sur des pratiques culturelles (festivals, carnavals, food courts, etc.), récréatives (rollers, skate, marche, activités physique de pleine nature, etc.) et environnementales (débat public autour des grands projets de territoire, gouvernance des risques industriels, etc.).
Documents
Sessions in which Alexandre Fauquette participates
Wednesday 31 August, 2022
"We must raise our heads and reveal the richness of our industrial past, which is what we want to do with our food court"; "Let's not forget that the elevators for the Eiffel Tower were built right here! At Fives, we have always innovated: that's what we are still doing today with the communal kitchen"; "This is where the hymn of the Workers' International was created".These are the words spoken here and there by the promoters of the Tast'in Fives project, which aims to transform a ...
Sessions in which Alexandre Fauquette attends
Sunday 28 August, 2022
Join the conference organisers and TICCIH board members for a welcome cocktail and some festive words of introduction, in the former forge of the École technique de Montréal, founded in 1909, now part of the Université du Québec à Montréal campus.
Tuesday 30 August, 2022
This session will allow us to explore, through nine international case studies, the different strategies for the development of industrial heritage as well as their impacts on communities and their territory. The analysis of museums, cultural spaces, itineraries and urban developments will be an opportunity to highlight the questions of identity, meaning, relevance and impact that animate all the actors of this heritage in transformation.
Friday 2 September, 2022
Walkers will meet at the entrance (there is only one) of Lionel Groulx Metro and from there walk along the canal to the St-Gabriel Locks. This was once the most heavily industrialized area in Canada. It is now a zone of affluence between the hardscrabble, but now gentrifying, Point Saint-Charles, historically Irish and French, and Little Burgundy, one of Montreal's first multi-racial neighbourhoods. Several former factories were converted into condominiums in the...