Raphaël Languillon-Aussel participe à la conférence intitulée « How to act responsable today? Politics of law in Europe and Japan » qui se tiendra le samedi 26 avril 2025 à Akasaka Intercity Conférence Center (AICC) « The Amphitheater » .

HOW TO ACT RESPONSIBLY TODAY? POLITICS OF LAW IN EUROPE AND JAPAN

Date & time: Saturday, April 26, 2025, 14:00-17:30 (Doors open at 13:45)
Format: Hybrid (In-person & Live streaming)
Language: English with simultaneous interpretation Japanese
Venue: Akasaka Intercity Conference Center (AICC) “The Amphitheater”
Quota: 80 in-person, 200 online
*Free Admission

Organizing Institution:
Nippon Institute for Research Advancement(NIRA)

Organizers / Originators:
Gilles CAMPAGNOLO(Professor, CNRS, Paris Pantheon-SorbonneUniversity)
Adrienne SALA(Assistant Professor, WasedaUniversity)

Program in English:
https://www.nira.or.jp/omnibus/event250426/Programm_EN.pdf

Registration:
https://www.nira.or.jp/omnibus/event250426/index.html

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Climate Responsibility and Local Planning

Raphaël LANGUILLON (Researcher, FRIJ-MFJ)

In August 2021, the French legislature enacted a new law that provides the country with a legal arsenal to more effectively combat climate change. In the spirit of the law, the artificialization of land attributable to urban sprawl fuels climate change, raising the question of the responsibility of local territories through their planning regimes and planning dynamics. The implementation of the law then questions the articulation between climate responsibility, spatial justice and social justice in the binding implementation of parsimonious land-use planning regimes. As part of a critical attention to the principle of responsibility, this presentation seeks to analyze land-efficient policies in France and Japan.

Raphaël LANGUILLON-AUSSEL is a researcher at the French Institute for Research on Japan in Tokyo, as well as an associate researcher at the University of Geneva and the University of Strasbourg. Alumni of the École Normale Supérieure, and PhD holder in geography and planning, he conducts work in critical political economy of planning on the relationships between urbanization dynamics, the nature of political regimes and the evolution of capitalist regimes that govern accumulation logics. He has been leading for two years a research project on the territorialization of parsimonious land use policies in a climate perspective and their social effects on the production of affordable housing in France (https://resizan.hypotheses.org/).