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. Jøgensen, M. Jones, N.T. King, U. Krippner, L.C. Knudtzon, J. Langhorst, L. Licka, E. López-Bahut, J. Makhzoumi, D. Mitchell, K.R. Olwig, E. Oureilidou, L. Paz Agras, J. Primdahl, D. Ruggeri, E. Schwab, B. Sirowy, L. Søderkvist Kristensen, K.B. Stokke, T. Waterman, B. Yigit Turan
Defining Landscape Democracy : A Path to Spatial Justice
Description
Table of Contents
Contents:
Foreword
Preface
Introduction
SECTION A FRAMING THE DISCOURSE
1. Democratic theories and potential for influence for civil society in spatial planning processes
Lillin Knudtzon
2. Landscape democracy: more than public participation?
Michael Jones
3. Landscape architecture and the discourse of democracy in the Arab Middle East
Jala Makhzoumi
4. Exploring the concept of ‘democratic landscape’
Benedetta Castiglioni and Viviana Ferrario
5. Shatter-zone democracy? What rising sea levels portend for future governance
Charles Geisler
6. Making the case for landscape democracy: context and nuances
Shelley Egoz, Karsten Jørgensen and Deni Ruggeri
SECTION B CONTEXTUALISING LANDSCAPE DEMOCRACY
7. Towards democratic professionalism in landscape architecture
Paula Horrigan and Mallika Bose
8. Landscape assessment as conflict and consensus
Andrew Butler
9. Invisible and visible lines: landscape democracy and landscape practice
Richard Alomar
10. Enacting landscape democracy: assembling public open space and asserting the right to the city
Joern Langhorst
11. Public space and social ideals: revisiting Vienna’s Donaupark
Lilli Lička, Ulrike Krippner and Nicole Theresa King
12. Storytelling as a catalyst for democratic landscape change in a Modernist utopia
Deni Ruggeri
13. Democracy and trespass: political dimensions of landscape access
Tim Waterman
14. Rural landscape governance and expertise: on landscape agents and democracy
Jørgen Primdahl, Lone Søderkvist Kristensen, Finn Arler, Per Angelstam, Andreas Aagaard Christensen and Marine Elbakidze
15. Managing cherished landscapes across legal boundaries
Morten Clemetsen and Knut Bjørn Stokke
16. Landscape as the spatial materialisation of democracy in Marinaleda, Spain
Emma López-Bahut and Luz Paz-Agras
17. Planning the cultural and social reactivation of urban open spaces in Greek metropoles of crisis
Eleni Oureilidou
18. Landscape democracy in the upgrading of informal settlements in Medelín, Colombia
Eva Schwab
19. Learning from Occupy Gezi Park: redefining landscape democracy in an age of ‘planetary urbanism’
Burcu Yiğit-Turan
20. Democracy and the communicative dimension of public art
Beata Sirowy
Index
Author Description
Edited by Shelley Egoz, Karsten Jørgensen, School of Landscape Architecture, Faculty of Landscape and Society, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås, Norway and Deni Ruggeri, Assistant Professor, Plant Science and Landscape Architecture, University of Maryland, US