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Defining Landscape Democracy
A Path to Spatial Justice
Edited by Shelley Egoz, Karsten Jørgensen and Deni Ruggeri
This stimulating book explores theories, conceptual frameworks, and cultural approaches with the purpose of uncovering a cross-cultural understanding of landscape democracy, a concept at the intersection of landscape, democracy and spatial justice. The authors of Defining Landscape Democracy address a number of questions that are critical to the contemporary discourse on the right to landscape: Why is democracy relevant to landscape? How do we democratise landscape? How might we achieve landscape and spatial justice?
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- Defining Landscape Democracy
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: Democratic theories and potential for influence for civil society in spatial planning processes
- Chapter 2: Landscape democracy: more than public participation?
- Chapter 3: Landscape architecture and the discourse of democracy in the Arab Middle East
- Chapter 4: Exploring the concept of ‘democratic landscape’
- Chapter 5: Shatter-zone democracy? What rising sea levels portend for future governance
- Chapter 6: Making the case for landscape democracy: context and nuances
- Chapter 7: Towards democratic professionalism in landscape architecture
- Chapter 8: Landscape assessment as conflict and consensus
- Chapter 9: Invisible and visible lines: landscape democracy and landscape practice
- Chapter 10: Enacting landscape democracy: assembling public open space and asserting the right to the city
- Chapter 11: Public space and social ideals: revisiting Vienna’s Donaupark
- Chapter 12: Storytelling as a catalyst for democratic landscape change in a Modernist utopia
- Chapter 13: Democracy and trespass: political dimensions of landscape access
- Chapter 14: Rural landscape governance and expertise: on landscape agents and democracy
- Chapter 15: Managing cherished landscapes across legal boundaries
- Chapter 16: Landscape as the spatial materialisation of democracy in Marinaleda, Spain
- Chapter 17: Planning the cultural and social reactivation of urban open spaces in Greek metropoles of crisis
- Chapter 18: Landscape democracy in the upgrading of informal settlements in Medell'n, Colombia
- Chapter 19: Learning from Occupy Gezi Park: redefining landscape democracy in an age of ‘planetary urbanism’
- Chapter 20: Democracy and the communicative dimension of public art
- List of reviewers
- Index
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Chapter 1: Democratic theories and potential for influence for civil society in spatial planning processes
Lillin Knudtzon
Monograph Chapter
- Published:
- 29 June 2018
- Category:
- Monograph Chapter
- Pages:
- 3–15 (13 total)
Collection:
Social and Political Science 2018
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- Defining Landscape Democracy
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: Democratic theories and potential for influence for civil society in spatial planning processes
- Chapter 2: Landscape democracy: more than public participation?
- Chapter 3: Landscape architecture and the discourse of democracy in the Arab Middle East
- Chapter 4: Exploring the concept of ‘democratic landscape’
- Chapter 5: Shatter-zone democracy? What rising sea levels portend for future governance
- Chapter 6: Making the case for landscape democracy: context and nuances
- Chapter 7: Towards democratic professionalism in landscape architecture
- Chapter 8: Landscape assessment as conflict and consensus
- Chapter 9: Invisible and visible lines: landscape democracy and landscape practice
- Chapter 10: Enacting landscape democracy: assembling public open space and asserting the right to the city
- Chapter 11: Public space and social ideals: revisiting Vienna’s Donaupark
- Chapter 12: Storytelling as a catalyst for democratic landscape change in a Modernist utopia
- Chapter 13: Democracy and trespass: political dimensions of landscape access
- Chapter 14: Rural landscape governance and expertise: on landscape agents and democracy
- Chapter 15: Managing cherished landscapes across legal boundaries
- Chapter 16: Landscape as the spatial materialisation of democracy in Marinaleda, Spain
- Chapter 17: Planning the cultural and social reactivation of urban open spaces in Greek metropoles of crisis
- Chapter 18: Landscape democracy in the upgrading of informal settlements in Medell'n, Colombia
- Chapter 19: Learning from Occupy Gezi Park: redefining landscape democracy in an age of ‘planetary urbanism’
- Chapter 20: Democracy and the communicative dimension of public art
- List of reviewers
- Index