ACTIVITIES AND PROSPECTS OF RESEARCH ACTIVITIES CONCERNING TOOLS OF TERRITORIAL INTELLIGENCE FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ACTORS. Work Package 6 "Tools for Actors" of CAENTI (original) (raw)

Activities and prospects of research activities concerning tools of territorial intelligence for sustainable developments actors

Tools for Actors” of CAENTI”, in: Acts of …, 2006

Cette communication fait état des activités de coordination réalisées par le 6 e work package « Outils pour les acteurs » de la CAENTI, Action de Coordination du Réseau Européen d'Intelligence Territoriale. Le WP6 concerne la conception et la dissémination des méthodes et des outils d'intelligence territoriale accessibles aux acteurs territoriaux respectueux de l'éthique du développement durable. En 2006, son activité est concentrée sur la définition des spécifications d'une valise « CATALYSE » à partir de l'expérience des participants de la CAENTI qui ont contribué au développement de ces outils depuis le début des années 1990. Les premiers mois de la CAENTI ont été consacrés à la définition des spécifications des contenus du guide de diagnostic et d'évaluation, outil déterminant de la méthode. Les résultats de cette recherche, qui font l'objet d'une communication distincte, permettent à présent d'orienter la recherche vers les protocoles de traitements statistiques et spatiaux et vers les spécifications des outils informatiques.

Territorial Intelligence, a Collective Challenge for Sustainable Development: A Scoping Review

Social Sciences, 2020

Territorial Intelligence is a practice devoted to obtaining, analysing and valuing information and knowledge about a territory and its environment to design and implement territorial plans on strategic matters. The purpose of this article is to provide a broad overview about the meaning of Territorial Intelligence in academic literature covering the definitions of the concept and the main topics involved. A scoping review following the PRISMA-ScR method has been carried out. Online databases were used to identify scientific articles and theses published between 2000 and 2020, from which, after screening, 33 key documents were selected, mainly of French origin. Qualitative analyses were performed following the technique of the Seven Key Questions (7W). Territorial Intelligence began in France as an application of Economic Intelligence, but it is becoming an autonomous discipline, expanding to other countries and generating specific applications, such as Tourist Intelligence, in the l...

International Conference of Territorial Intelligence, Alba Iulia 2006. Vol.1, Papers on region, identity and sustainable development (deliverable 12 of caENTI, project funded under FP6 research program of the European Union), Aeternitas, Alba Iulia, 2007

2007

These acts gather the communications of the International Conference of Territorial Intelligence that took place in ALBA IULIA in Romania, from September, the 20th to September, the 22nd 2006. This conference was the fourth conference of territorial intelligence, but the conference of ALBA IULIA is the first one that took place in the CAENTI, Coordination Action of the European Network of Territorial Intelligence, framework. Consequently, it has a particular organization. A part is devoted to the presentation of the CAENTI research activities and of their prospects. The CAENTI specific communications are published in another volume.

Contribution ID # 136-Theme : Indicators , tools and methods for territorial intelligence

2013

The deliberate simplicity of this approach an ‘intelligent’, transparent and intentional management of elements of analytical and intervention fields, funded on their exhaustive qualitative descriptions and on explicit statements of interests and purposes prioritises the political side of decision – making. Thus, the paper also seeks to contribute to the reflection on the roles and views of social actors when defining and constructing urban public scenarios.

International Conference of Territorial Intelligence of Huelva

2007

Territorial intelligence approach to sustainable development is largely relying on two major paradigms of modern social sciences: social constructivism and systems theory as keys to manage complexity. But, whether in current definitions or practical applications, that is implicitly assessed by authors. The aim of this communication is to re-visit some of the key concepts and principles of socio-technical systems theory to build up a consistent, explicit and practical framework of territorial intelligence achievements in order to contribute to a general theory of that new field of knowledge.

Methodological proposal of a procedure supporting decisions for territorial risk mitigation

2018

L'intelligence territoriale est le projet scientifique « polydisciplinaire » dont l'objet est le développement durable des territoires et dont les communautés territoriales sont les sujets. Elle se fonde sur une vision systémique du territoire, intégrant un espace géographique, une communauté, ses représentations et ses comportements. Elle accorde une importance à l'échelle locale dans une logique interscalaire, du local au global. C'est une intelligence collective qui se fonde, d'une part sur l'interaction entre chaque être humain et son environnement et, d'autre part, sur les relations entre les personnes. Elle bénéficie aujourd'hui du puissant artefact des technologies de l'information. Elle influence la gouvernance et les comportements de chaque individu, des organismes et des collectivités. La gouvernance territoriale peut élargir ou restreindre son expression, la participation de tous, l'équilibre entre la collaboration ou la compétition ; un accès équitable et durable au ressources ; le bien être et « l'empowerment » de chacun et de tous. Outil de la gouvernance, l'observation doit permettre, à l'aide des technologies de partage des informations et des connaissances, un accès égal et durable à l'information et à la co-constrution de la résilience et du développement durable des territoires.

Territorial Intelligence and Governance

2007

As with European experiments, in various regions in France, territorial intelligence projects have been initiated since 2003. (see the regions of Lower Normandy, Lorraine, Reunion Island, the Aquitaine region, etc.).The objective of these is to gather and exploit information which is not confined to particular sectors and the collective processing of which can contribute to durable development. Apart from institutions, civil society and the inhabitants of the territory, it is observed that companies and in particular small and medium sized enterprises are natural partners who show interest in such initiatives. Both the different economic chains and the participating organizations thus derive considerable benefit in terms of the anticipation of threats and in the reaffirmation of the territory as a common resource worth defending. Above and beyond the information processing systems operating within these organizations or economic chains, the articulation of internal actions to genera...

Territorial intelligence of vulnerability systems -A transitional viewpoint of sustainable development

The use of vulnerability as a main concept, especially as an essential component of risk, has been generalized from a decade or so. Together with resilience properties of human structures, it therefore constitutes the principal entry for crossing environmental and social sustainability factors, mostly apprehended from environmental harmfulness and risk perspectives, as shown in the related works in environmental psychology. The vulnerability of a system depends on the state of the system itself, on the capacity of a hazard to affect this state taking into account the exposure, the sensitivity and the adaptive capacity of the system to this event and on the undesired consequences the combination of the hazard and the vulnerability will eventually lead to. The aim of this paper is to propose a truly integrated approach, combining the economic, socio-cultural, and ecological aspects of territorial vulnerability, including its counterclock dynamics, that is to say its resilience. Thus, ...

Territorial intelligence in Algeria, between network structuring and sustainable development

Management and Entrepreneurship Trends of Development, 2024

Territorial intelligence in Algeria represents a captivating and crucial field of study, situated at the intersection of network structuring and sustainable development. In a context where territories play a vital role in achieving national objectives, territorial intelligence emerges as a strategic component. This study explores the complex dynamics related to the network structuring of territorial actors and its impact on sustainable development. Algeria, with its geographical, social, and economic diversity, provides a fertile ground to understand how territorial intelligence can catalyze cooperation among different actors and promote sustainable initiatives. This exploration will seek to shed light on the challenges and opportunities presented by territorial intelligence in the specific context of Algeria, emphasizing its potential role as a lever for harmonious and sustainable development. This work pursues two fundamental objectives. Firstly, it aims to clarify the concept of territorial intelligence by highlighting its collective, transformative, and interactionist dimensions. We have endeavored to demonstrate the existence of interdependencies and reciprocal links between the network structuring of actors and the local industrial dynamics. Secondly, we delve into the question of sustainable development in territories in Algeria, particularly in the province of Blida, known for its specific entrepreneurial dynamics. Our exploratory study is based on a quantitative statistical survey through a questionnaire, conducted with a sample of 110 companies located in various industrial and business zones in the province of Blida. The main results of this research highlight that the geographical concentration of companies provides an opportunity to strengthen competitive interactions and foster the emergence of ecosystems conducive to exchange, knowledge transfer, innovation, and the creation of added value at the local level. We observe that the deployment of territorial intelligence and network structuring processes requires a specific industrial organization, including the establishment of open and collaborative networks or clusters of companies.