BOOKS BY LAYE CAMARA

Angelo Turco, Laye Camara

Immaginari migratori

Il Pianeta Migrante è una forma di vita culturalmente evoluta. Il volume dà conto delle pratiche sociali, dei significati e delle logiche simboliche che definiscono e qualificano la mobilità, inglobando l’insieme delle condizioni geografiche, delle tradizioni storiche, dei modelli sociali ed economici, delle credenze religiose, degli immaginari, delle strutture mediali che ispirano il progetto migratorio. Componente strategica di questa cultura della migrazione è l’immaginario migratorio, la scena di rappresentazione individuale e collettiva dell’atto del migrare.

cod. 1810.2.32

Claudio Arbore, Marco Maggioli

Territorialità: concetti, narrazioni, pratiche

Saggi per Angelo Turco

Questo volume vuole rendere omaggio ad Angelo Turco. Le sue riflessioni vengono qui riprese da venti importanti autori, italiani e stranieri, che rileggono alcuni tra i principali nuclei interpretativi della ricerca socio-territoriale. A che punto siamo? Quali sono gli esiti e le prospettive della ricerca? Quali le implicazioni per le scienze del territorio e per quelle sociali? Con le sue plurime interrogazioni, il libro si presenta come un vero e proprio programma epistemologico e metodologico del sapere geografico.

cod. 1387.24

Traditional knowledge and environmental conservation: Malinké of Upper Niger-Guinea Conakry - The exclusion of local populations from the management of the ecosystems is responsible for human and ecological damages such as the destruction of ecosystems, soil impoverishment, disarticulation of traditional societies, rural exodus, etc. A fundamental stage prior to the enactment of any policy of sustainable development and preservation of natural resources is to understand the relation of man with the environment through the analysis of men’s socio-cognitive representations of the external world. Unfortunately, until now, the programs for the preservation of natural resources in Africa have neglected this work of reconstruction and valorisation of traditional modalities of preservation of the environment, and have limited themselves to the techno-scientific or purely ideological and visionary rationales suggested by the agents of development or the administrators. The populations that live and inhabit the environment are excluded, de facto when not also de iure, from its management. This gap has opened the way, on a large scale, to claims, often conflicts, that regard the acknowledgement of the territorial legitimacy of the basic actors in the management of the protected areas. Through the example of the Malinké in the Upper Niger and the experience of the Pnhn(National Park of the Upper Niger) management, the paper highlights the importance of valorising traditional African knowledge in environmental management projects. The present study introduces the Malinké cognitive system by focusing the attention on the intellectual control process of the environment, which is considered the foundation of all practices of transformation and, at the same time, of protection of natural resources in the peripheral zones of the Pnhn. These practices are real traditional techniques of sustainable management of the natural resources of the village territories.