Translating policy to place: exploring cultural ecosystem services in areas of Green Belt through participatory mapping

被引:3
|
作者
Kirby, Matthew G. [1 ]
Scott, Alister J. [1 ]
Walsh, Claire L. [2 ]
机构
[1] Northumbria Univ, Dept Geog & Environm Sci, Newcastle Upon Tyne, England
[2] Newcastle Univ, Sch Engn, Newcastle Upon Tyne, England
关键词
Catharina Schulp; Public Participatory Geographic Information Systems (PPGIS); public participatory mapping; ecosystem services; peri-urban; recreation; Green Belt; COUNTRYSIDE RECREATION; WIDER FUNCTIONS; BENEFITS; VALUES; GIS;
D O I
10.1080/26395916.2023.2276752
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Green Belts are longstanding planning designations, which primarily seek to prevent urban sprawl. Importantly, they form the open spaces close to where most people live, but we lack clarity over how Green Belts are used and valued by publics, and the cultural ecosystem services they provide. To address this policy and research gap, a public participatory mapping survey was conducted on the North-East England Green Belt, with 779 respondents plotting 2388 points. The results show for the first time that in addition to being a planning policy zone, Green Belts are important, and widely used open spaces for 'everyday nature', providing several cultural ecosystem services including recreation, connection with nature, sense of place and aesthetic value. Several factors were found to influence the supply of cultural ecosystem services in Green Belts, including proximity to urban areas, woodland land cover and access designations. Whereas most demand pressures on Green Belts were on public rights-of-way, nature designations and deciduous woodlands. Pervasive barriers inhibiting Green Belt's full potential were identified including management issues, concerns over personal safety and lack of access. We argue that opportunities to further enhance the cultural ecosystem services provided Green Belts and peri-urban landscapes more broadly, not only come from planning policies themselves, but from the design and delivery of approaches integrating urban, rural and land-use policy silos. The findings have wider implications for policy including potential conflict with future development, and opportunities for greater access to greenspace. As well as their primary policy purpose to prevent sprawl, Green Belts protect important open and greenspaces for people to enjoy and interact with nature, exercise and escape from pressures of everyday life. To understand how people physically use and interact with Green Belts, primary data on use are needed, as relying on access designations alone will not account adequately for use patterns. Public participatory mapping which involves people answering questions by placing points on a map can provide a useful way to identifying areas that are important; areas which may require improved management in the Green Belt, and opportunity areas for future improvements. The areas of Green Belt closest to where people live where found to be some of the most heavily used and important in terms of being in nature.
引用
收藏
页数:19
相关论文
共 32 条
  • [21] Advancing Sustainability through Urban Green Space: Cultural Ecosystem Services, Equity, and Social Determinants of Health
    Jennings, Viniece
    Larson, Lincoln
    Yun, Jessica
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2016, 13 (02)
  • [22] Modeling risks in marine protected areas: Mapping of habitats, biodiversity, and cultural ecosystem services in the southernmost atlantic coral reef
    Niz, Willians C.
    Laurino, Ivan R. A.
    de Freitas, Debora M.
    Rolim, Fernanda A.
    Motta, Fabio S.
    Pereira-Filho, Guilherme H.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2023, 345
  • [23] Mapping indicators of cultural ecosystem services use in urban green spaces based on text classification of geosocial media data
    Gugulica, Madalina
    Burghardt, Dirk
    ECOSYSTEM SERVICES, 2023, 60
  • [24] Social Valuation of Mediterranean Cultural Landscapes: Exploring Landscape Preferences and Ecosystem Services Perceptions through a Visual Approach
    Bidegain, Inigo
    Lopez-Santiago, Cesar A.
    Gonzalez, Jose A.
    Martinez-Sastre, Rodrigo
    Ravera, Federica
    Cerda, Claudia
    LAND, 2020, 9 (10) : 1 - 22
  • [25] Point, polygon, or marker? In search of the best geographic entity for mapping cultural ecosystem services using the online public participation geographic information systems tool, "My Green Place"
    Ramirez Aranda, Nohemi
    De Waegemaeker, Jeroen
    Venhorst, Viktor
    Leendertse, Wim
    Kerselaers, Eva
    van de Weghe, Nico
    CARTOGRAPHY AND GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SCIENCE, 2021, 48 (06) : 491 - 511
  • [26] Clustering public urban green spaces through ecosystem services potential: A typology proposal for place-based interventions
    Vidal, Diogo Guedes
    Dias, Ricardo Cunha
    Teixeira, Catarina Patoilo
    Fernandes, Claudia Oliveira
    Leal Filho, Walter
    Barros, Nelson
    Maia, Rui Leandro
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY, 2022, 132 : 262 - 272
  • [27] Mapping Cultural Ecosystem Services (CESs) and key urban landscape features: a pilot study for land use policy and planning review
    Bachi, Laura
    Faria, Diomira M. C. P.
    Horta, Marise Barreiros
    Carvalho-Ribeiro, Sonia
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, 2021, 13 (02) : 420 - 434
  • [28] Participatory mapping of uses and ecosystem services as a useful tool for the identification of conflicts in Marine Protected Areas: The case of the Cíes Islands archipelago (NW Spain)
    Molina-Urruela, J.
    Fernández, E.
    Castro, A.J.
    Expósito-Granados, M.
    Ovejero-Campos, A.
    Villasante, S.
    Méndez-Martínez, G.
    Ocean and Coastal Management, 2024, 259
  • [29] Revealing Cultural Ecosystem Services through Instagram Images: The Potential of Social Media Volunteered Geographic Information for Urban Green Infrastructure Planning and Governance
    Guerrero, Paulina
    Moller, Maja Steen
    Olafsson, Anton Stahl
    Snizek, Bernhard
    URBAN PLANNING, 2016, 1 (02): : 1 - 17
  • [30] Cultural Ecosystem Services of Urban Green Spaces-Supply and Demand in The Densely Built-Up Areas. Poznan Old Town Case Study
    Ponizy, Lidia
    Majchrzak, Weronika
    Zwierzchowska, Iwona
    WORLD MULTIDISCIPLINARY EARTH SCIENCES SYMPOSIUM (WMESS 2017), 2017, 95