| Author |
Johanna Abbou Gwénaël GUYONVARCH Alexandre Marty |
| Resource type | Replay |
| Publication year | 2025 |
Faced with increasingly extreme events, pressure on resources and rapid changes in lifestyles, the issue is no longer just one of environmental sustainability, but also of liveability: how can we maintain, transform and govern territories where people can continue to live, work and plan for the future?
This debate will highlight the profoundly human dimension of the ecological transition. Habitability cannot be reduced to resilient infrastructure or adapted economic models: it depends just as much on human capacity for adaptation, forms of local cooperation, social justice and a collective culture of change.
In a world of climate change, making territories habitable means above all rethinking together how we live there.
Between urgent imperatives, investment strategies and institutional innovations, this round table will explore the concrete levers for a renewed governance of territorial transition, with the aim of:
- Identify concrete levers of governance and human cooperation to adapt territories.
- Articulate institutional, economic and social vision around the climate challenge.
- Inspire collective reflection on human habitability: that of places, uses and connections.























