River Restoration. Группа авторов
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Название: River Restoration

Автор: Группа авторов

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: География

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isbn: 9781119410003

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СКАЧАТЬ

       Marylise Cottet, Bertrand Morandi, and Hervé Piégay

       Université de Lyon, CNRS, ENS de Lyon, Environnement Ville Société, Lyon, France

      1.1.1 River restoration at the heart of river management policies

      Faced with the ever‐increasing impact of human activities on the environment, the biologist E.O. Wilson (1992) announced, probably with much hope, the opening of an era of ecological restoration in the 21st century. Although its scope and consequences may be a matter of debate (Choi 2007; Sudding 2011), the realization of this hope seems to be currently confirmed. In response to the observed degradation of ecosystems (Palmer et al. 2004; Steffen et al. 2007; Cardinale et al. 2012), ecological restoration measures have become a structuring element of environmental management policies in both developed and developing countries (Aronson et al. 2006; Wortley et al. 2013). In the field of river management, they have been actively deployed since the 1970s (Gore 1985; Boon et al. 1992) because of particularly significant degradation resulting from the use of water and hydraulic installations, both old and increasingly numerous (e.g. Dudgeon et al. 2005; Vörösmarty et al. 2010; Grizzetti et al. 2017). Faced with significant water pollution and profound physical modifications of river ecosystems, many countries, particularly Western ones, have taken legislative and regulatory measures to preserve or restore a certain environmental quality to rivers. These measures consider, often in an integrated manner, physicochemical, biological, and hydromorphological issues (e.g. the US Clean Water Act, 1972; UK Water Act, 1973; French Water Laws, 1992, 2006; EU Water Framework Directive, 2000; Australian Water Act, 2007). These legislative frameworks have provided a fertile ground for the multiplication of restoration projects, as shown by several reviews conducted around the world (e.g. Bernhardt et al. 2005; Nakamura et al. 2006; Brooks and Lake 2007; Morandi et al. 2017; Szałkiewicz et al. 2018).

      1.1.2 An evolution in the positioning of societal issues in debates on river restoration

      The debates, and often polemics (e.g. Normile 2010), concerning what is and is not river restoration are numerous (e.g. Roni and Beechie 2013; Wohl et al. 2015). These debates on the definition of restoration have been fueled by the proliferation of concepts that are now widely used in the literature, such as “rehabilitation,” “renaturation,” “revitalization,” “enhancement,” and “improvement.” If there is one certainty emerging from these debates, it is that attempts to provide an unequivocal and definitive answer to the question “What is restoration?” are doomed to failure. There has never been a consensus on definitions, and there certainly never will be. The concepts of restoration, rehabilitation, or renaturation are “essentially contested concepts” (Gallie 1956, p. 169), that is to say, “concepts the proper use of which inevitably involves endless disputes about their proper uses on the part of their users.” The interest in the debates lies not in their conclusions but in the debates themselves and the ideas that emerge from them.