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Author Topic: French Demographic Maps  (Read 31202 times)
Colbert
Jr. Member
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Posts: 474
France


« on: February 27, 2012, 04:41:24 AM »

the nucleated map like the vote FN map. Some explainaitions?
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Colbert
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 474
France


« Reply #1 on: March 01, 2012, 02:37:51 AM »

theire is no political connexion between individually exploited farms and ideology.

The connexion is more hill/moutain country vs plain country (globally speaking)


(with the surprising exception of Jura, Larzac and Armorican west mountains)
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Colbert
Jr. Member
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Posts: 474
France


« Reply #2 on: March 01, 2012, 06:29:18 PM »

For once, I agree with Colbert.

As for Armorican mountains, well, there are absolutely no muntains there Tongue
As for Jura, it's not an agricultural mountain.
Larzac is more surprising.


I said "moutains" but, indeed, I would better had speak about hills. (I come from Finistère, and it's not the germano-polish plain^^)


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Colbert
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 474
France


« Reply #3 on: March 01, 2012, 06:33:38 PM »

Dordogne, Correze, Vendee, Ariege, Hautes-Pyrenees, Creuse, Haute-Vienne, Indre, Haute-Saone, Var (to an extent), Aveyron, Lozere (to an extent), Ardennes, Vaucluse, Herault, Gard (both to a limited extent), Lot; even Cantal, Puy-de-Dome, Pyrenees-Atlantiques, Pyrenees-Orientales and Charente don't exist guys? I'm not saying this is the cause of anything or that it explains all much or that the correlation is even strong; but denying that there's just no connection is stupid. And I hope you're just denying the link in a modern context; because if you're denying the existence of any link, ever; you don't understand French history. Certainly the connection is much, much weaker now and isn't a good explanation for modern stuff, but...



But what political correlation are you talking about ? What's connexion between normandy, Alpes, Pyrenees, Ardenne, Dordogne, Corse, Upper Languedoc ?
leftism ? no (normandy, Alpes)
rightism ? no (upper languedoc, dordogne, pyrenees)
catholicism ? no (normandy, dordogne, upper languedoc)
protestantism ? no (corse, alpes, ardennes)

centrism ? communism ? far-right ?


I search this relation, but I don't find it anywere
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Colbert
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 474
France


« Reply #4 on: March 02, 2012, 11:16:28 PM »

Big bad fab let me down, but s'il n'en reste qu'un seul, je serais celui-là, as Victor Hugo said. For me, the correlation of this map is geographical and not political, EVEN globally

seeing some left-wing patterns on red zones, even globally, is simply false. (or, at least, uncorrect)
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