378 research outputs found

    The "healthy dose" of nature: A cautionary tale

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available on open access from Wiley via the DOI in this recordGrowing crossā€disciplinary interest in understanding if, how, and why time spent with nature can contribute to human health and wellā€being has recently prompted efforts to identify an ideal healthy dose of nature; exposure to a specific type of nature at a specified frequency and duration. These efforts build on longstanding attempts to prescribe nature in some way, most recently in the form of soā€called ā€œgreen prescriptions.ā€ In this critical discussion paper, we draw on key examples from within the fields of health and cultural geography to encourage deeper and more critical reflection on the value of such reductionist doseā€response frameworks. By foregrounding the relationally emergent qualities of people's dynamic nature encounters, we suggest such efforts may be both illusory and potentially exclusionary for the many individuals and groups whose healthy nature interactions diverge from the statistical average or ā€œnormalā€ way of being. We suggest value in working towards alternative moreā€thanā€human approaches to health and wellā€being, drawing on posthumanist theories of social practice. We present two practice examplesā€”beachā€going and citizen scienceā€”to demonstrate how a focus on social practices can better cater for the diverse and dynamic ways in which people come to conceptualise, embody, and interpret nature in their everyday lives. We close by reflecting on the wider societal transformations required to foster greater respect for embodied difference and diversity.Economic and Social Research Council. Grant Number: ES/N015851/

    Chain gang conservation: young people and environmental volunteering

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from University of Hertfordshire Press via the ISBN in this recordThis chapter examines how young people come to be enrolled and engaged in programmes of unpaid environmental conservation in rural areas. Set within a theoretical debate regarding the nature of unpaid work and its relationship to voluntary and coercive forms of environmental action, the chapter considers the principal pathways through which people between the ages of 14-25 come to be involved in efforts to protect and enhance rural landscapes and locales. Drawing on a combination of extended survey and in-depth qualitative research in the west and south of rural England, the chapter considers the systems of governance that surround the organisation of these unpaid activities and considers how these activities are rationalised and designed as practical and embodied experiences of citizenship. The chapter argues that enhancing participation rests less on fostering more young participants into the conservation sector than structuring these activities in more productive ways. As a result the chapter argues for the need to include young people in designing programmes of environmental work that take into consideration the reciprocity between the natural and the social relations of environmental conservation.Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC

    Economies of space and the school geography curriculum

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    This paper is about the images of economic space that are found in school curricula. It suggests the importance for educators of evaluating these representations in terms of the messages they contain about how social processes operate. The paper uses school geography texts in Britain since the 1970s to illustrate the different ways in which economic space has been represented to students, before exploring some alternative resources that could be used to provide a wider range of representations of economic space. The paper highlights the continued importance of understanding the politics of school knowledge

    The Evolution of 3CR Radio Galaxies from z=1

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    We present the results of a comprehensive re-analysis of the images of a virtually complete sample of 28 powerful 3CR radio galaxies with redshifts 0.6<z<1.8 from the HST archive. Using a two-dimensional modelling technique we have derived scalelengths and absolute magnitudes for a total of 16 3CR galaxies with a median redshift of z=0.8. Our results confirm the basic conclusions of Best, Longair & R\"{o}ttgering (1997, 1998) in that we also find z=1 3CR galaxies to be massive, well-evolved ellipticals, whose infrared emission is dominated by starlight. However, we in fact find that the scalelength distribution of 3CR galaxies at z \simeq 1 is completely indistinguishable from that derived for their low-redshift counterparts from our own recently-completed HST study of AGN hosts at z \simeq 0.2. There is thus no evidence that 3CR radio galaxies at z \simeq 1 are dynamically different from 3CR galaxies at low redshift. Moreover, for a 10-object sub-sample we have determined the galaxy parameters with sufficient accuracy to demonstrate, for the first time, that the z \simeq 1 3CR galaxies follow a Kormendy relation which is indistinguishable from that displayed by low-redshift ellipticals if one allows for purely passive evolution. The implied rather modest level of passive evolution since z \simeq 1 is consistent with that predicted from spectrophotometric models provided one assumes a high formation redshift (z \ge 4) within a low-density Universe. We conclude that there is no convincing evidence for significant dynamical evolution among 3CR galaxies in the redshift interval 0<z<1, and that simple passive evolution remains an acceptable interpretation of the K-z relation for powerful radio galaxies.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, minor changes, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Finding the coast: environmental governance and the characterisation of land and sea

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.In environmental governance for land and sea, the cultural is increasingly imbricated with the natural in the language of ecosystem services and the promise of integrated management. We are witnessing accelerated efforts to bring cultural and natural landscape character assessments into dialogue with other sorts of planning and governance mechanisms for coastal and marine environments. As land, sea, nature and culture are brought into closer correspondence, the coast assumes ever greater significance as a site and object of decisionā€making in planning and environmental governance. In this paper, I draw on the critical analytical techniques of cultural geography to argue that coasts suffer from definitional ambiguity and conceptual insufficiency, both of which are exemplified by landscape and seascape characterisation, with specific consequences for environmental governance. I argue that we need to (1) both recognise and destabilise the unhelpful dichotomy between land and sea embodied in landscape and seascape character assessments, which have their provenance in landscape architecture; and (2) engage new language and conceptual tools that help us to rethink coasts critically. To this end, later on this paper, I briefly discuss alternative ways of conceptualising the coast, for example as a liminal space

    The potential of trading activity income to fund third sector organisations operating in deprived areas

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    In the United Kingdom, as in other countries, Third Sector Organisations (TSOs) have been drawn towards income sources associated with trading activities (Teasdale, 2010), but many remain reliant on grant funding to support such activities (Chell, 2007). Using a multivariate analysis approach and data from the National Survey of Charities and Social Enterprises (NSCSE), it is found that trading activities are used relatively commonly in deprived areas. These organisations are also more likely to attempt to access public sector funds. This suggests policy-makers need to consider the impact of funding cuts on TSOs in the most deprived areas as TSOs are unlikely achieve their objectives without continuing support
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