In this multi-authored book, senior practitioners and researchers offer an international overview of landscape character approaches for those working in research, policy and practice relating to landscape.
Over the last three decades, European practice in landscape has moved from a narrow, if relatively straightforward, focus on natural beauty or scenery to a much broader concept of landscape character constructed through human perception, and transcending any of its individual elements. Methods, tools and techniques have been developed to give practical meaning to this idea of landscape character.
The two main methods, Landscape Character Assessment (LCA) and Historic Landscape Characterisation (HLC) were applied first in the United Kingdom, but other methods are in use elsewhere in Europe, and beyond, to achieve similar ends. This book explores why different approaches exist, the extent to which disciplinary or cultural specificities in different countries affect approaches to land management and landscape planning, and highlights areas for reciprocal learning and knowledge transfer.
Contributors to the book focus on examples of European countries – such as Sweden, Turkey and Portugal – that have adopted and extended UK-style landscape characterisation, but also on countries with their own distinctive approaches that have developed from different conceptual roots, as in Germany, France and the Netherlands. The collection is completed by chapters looking at landscape approaches based on non-European concepts of landscape in North America, Australia and New Zealand.
Landscape character approaches in global, disciplinary and policy context: An introduction
Graham Fairclough, Ingrid Sarlöv Herlin, Carys Swanwick
Landscape character: Experience from Britain
Historic landscape characterisation: An archaeological approach to landscape heritage
Landscape characterisation in Sweden: Landscape in the planning system
Ingrid Sarlöv Herlin, Jenny Nord, Mattias Qviström
Landscape Character Assessment across scales: Insights from the Portuguese experience of policy and planning
Atlas du paysage: Landscape Atlases in France and Wallonia
The landscape biography approach to landscape characterisation: Dutch perspectives
He tangata, he tangata, he tangata 1: Landscape characterisation in Aotearoa-New Zealand
Caring for country: A new landscape paradigm in Australia
On calling place: Language, naming and the understanding of landscape character attributes of cultural places in the Asia-Pacific region
Perspectives on landscape: Some Canadian approaches
The embodied city and metropolitan landscape
Stephen L. Dobson
Landscape, local knowledge and democracy: The work of the Landscape Observatory of Catalonia
Conclusion: Seeing obstacles and finding ways ahead
Graham Fairclough, Ingrid Sarlöv Herlin, Carys Swanwick
© 2001-2026 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados