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This open access book discusses urban agriculture initiatives
integrated in public space of dense inner-city neighbourhoods,
thereby ensuring its accessibility for large and diverse segments
of urban populations. It specifically focuses on the potential
impacts of urban agriculture on human well-being (both on
individual and community levels), and how planning, design, policy
and management practices can maximize these impacts. The book
addresses urban agriculture on both a micro and macro
scale to facilitate a transition to more sustainable
lifestyles and enhance the quality of urban life. It also discusses
ways to permanently integrate urban agriculture in existing and
planned public spaces in a visually attractive, socially inclusive,
and democratic manner to claim and reclaim the right to the
city. Based on the research outcomes of the project
“Cultivating Public Space: urban agriculture as a basis for human
flourishing and sustainability transition in Norwegian cities”
funded by the Research Council of Norway, the book emerges from a
Norwegian context, but extends to include international urban
agriculture cases from the Netherlands, Denmark, the UK and more.
By including a diversity of voices and cultural perspectives, the
editors aimed to make this book engaging and relevant to an
international audience of researchers, policy makers, urban
designers, planners, educators, community activists, residents, and
public space users of the sustainable, compact city of today and
the future.
This stimulating book explores the intersection of landscape,
democracy and spatial justice on an international scale to offer an
overarching definition and examination of the emerging field of
landscape democracy. The concept of landscape in academia, policy
and practice is being met with growing interest and a wider
understanding that it is a complex living environment, moulded by
tangible and intangible mediums, processes and systems. This book
examines how physical, mental, emotional, economic, social and
cultural wellbeing depend in large part on inclusive planning and
management of landscapes. Through a broad set of theoretical and
conceptual frameworks and international case studies, the authors
of Defining Landscape Democracy address critical questions, such
as: Why is democracy relevant to landscape? How do we democratise
landscape? How might we achieve landscape and spatial justice? This
work will provide new knowledge and insights for researchers in the
fields of landscape architecture, human geography, planning, public
policy, sociology, landscape management, and designers and planners
actively engaged in shaping democratic public spaces and
communities. Contributors include: A. Aagaard Christensen, R.
Alomar, P. Angelstam, F. Arler, M. Bose, A. Butler, B. Castiglioni,
M. Clemetsen, S. Egoz, M. Elbakidze, V. Ferrario, C. Geisler, P.
Horrigan, K. Jogensen, M. Jones, N.T. King, U. Krippner, L.C.
Knudtzon, J. Langhorst, L. Licka, E. Lopez-Bahut, J. Makhzoumi, D.
Mitchell, K.R. Olwig, E. Oureilidou, L. Paz Agras, J. Primdahl, D.
Ruggeri, E. Schwab, B. Sirowy, L. Soderkvist Kristensen, K.B.
Stokke, T. Waterman, B. Yigit Turan
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