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Land for What? Land for Whom? Bonnie VandeSteeg

Land for What? Land for Whom? von Bonnie VandeSteeg

Land for What? Land for Whom? Bonnie VandeSteeg


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Zusammenfassung

An exploration of conflicts between recreation, conservation and livelihood in the Cairngorm region of Scotland, based on the author's ethnographic research. The book examines the origins of the conflicts as well as how to overcome them.

Land for What? Land for Whom? Zusammenfassung

Land for What? Land for Whom?: Senses of Place and Conflict in the Scottish Highlands Bonnie VandeSteeg

A thoughtful celebration of the Highlands of Scotland, both its people, including visitors who love the area, and its nature, Land for What? Land for Whom? is based on years of detailed ethnographic research in the Cairngorms. Exploring the many and varied conflicts between livelihood, recreation and conservation, Bonnie VandeSteeg expresses the views, concerns and feelings of people in the area, particularly those who often go unheard. She places them at the front of her study and considers how their differences might be overcome to ensure the future well-being of both people and planet.

Land for What? Land for Whom? Bewertungen

Chris Loynes in John Muir Trust Jourmal Autumn 2022: A year spent on the ground with people sharing their values and visions has allowed her, as an anthropologist, to paint a rich picture of the different communities. VandeSteeg's conversations uncover a much more nuanced and complex range of views about the landscape and its future that are silenced by the dominant positions and stakeholder groups. Beneath the conflicts, it offers a hopeful view that there are those working at an interpersonal level to resolve the future of the Cairngorms, for people and for nature. Neil Reil Review in Scottish Mountaineering: This is a fascinating book concentrating mainly on Strathspey and the northern Cairngorm area, examining conflicts between conservation and development. However, rather than retreading well-rehearsed arguments, the author takes an anthropological view of the whole area, considering local people, workers, landowners and visitors, revealing a picture more complex than most media reports. Having lived in the area for a number of years, VandeSteeg made it her business to get to know a wide range of people from landowners to waitresses and from visitors to those who could trace their families back through generations in the same area, as well as those who chose to make the area their home. She also examines the activities people take part in, including mountaineering, gamekeeping, stalking, farming, conservation work, tourism and land management, going into what first appears to be overly fussy academic detail but which ends up creating a greater understanding of the different people, their passions and motives. There is probably no one who will read this without feeling that 'their' views have not been properly represented in some respect, or that the 'other side' has been let off the hook- that's almost inevitable- but in its entirety the book makes a positive contribution to future debates through enabling a better understanding of different protagonists' views, fears and hopes- and through enabling how in the past some parties have managed to win the PR battle despite having less support than first appears while other parties have lost the battle despite having good arguments. Land for What? Land for Whom? is not a blueprint for the future of the Cairngorms or any other area, but it offers increased understanding of often complex issues and should be a valuable tool because of that. Jill Hobson Ardromie Farm, Perthsire I met Bonnie Vandesteeg when she stayed in my self-catering cottage in September 2021. We got chatting and she revealed that she had literally just published a book and kindly gave me a copy. I was very interested to read it and, knowing that Bonnie was returning in January 2022, it went straight to the top of my reading pile. Land for what? Land for whom? is a really interesting read for anyone who lives in, works in, visits or loves Scotland. Bonnie is an anthropologist and her book is the result of a research project. It is therefore written in a particular style and it comes from a scientific background. Bonnie addresses the issue of conflict around land use but unlike many other authors she is recording deeply held viewpoints from a diverse range of groups and individuals. It is so interesting to read about how people from different groups relate to the landscape; farmers, mountaineers, bird watchers, stalkers, conservationists, they are all deeply involved, hold the Scottish landscape dear and fundamentally have the same love and appreciation of the natural world. Is it inevitable that people with different priorities will end up in situations of conflict? Perhaps a lack of understanding or deeply ingrained prejudice or intolerance are part of the reason but somehow, we all have to share and work alongside each other (if not together) within the natural environment. Permeant residents, part time residents, visitors, landowners, conservationists, business owners, environmentalists, representatives of the Scottish Government, there are many, many people with interests in Scotland's future. Bonnie Vandesteeg's book sets out these issues and conflicting viewpoints in a clear and insightful way. Having read the book, I look at the countryside and contemporary issues in a different light.; Review by Professor Brian Morris For many, many decades anthropology, as a humanistic science, has been providing us with insightful and absorbing accounts of people's relationship to the natural world, in all its diversity. Such studies, based on detailed ethnographic (empirical) research have been undertaken in a wide variety of contexts, but especially among indigenous (tribal) people and peasant communities throughout the world. The present book, explicitly situated within an anthropological tradition that combined hermeneutics, history and sociological analysis, offers an absorbing and very readable account of the people of the Cairngorms in the Scottish Highlands and their relationship to the landscape. Based on detailed ethnographic research over several years, and an expansion of her Ph.D.thesis in environmental anthropology, Bonnie VandeSteeg's book provides us with an illuminating account of the people of the Cairngorms. Long involved in issues relating to land rights, housing and local livelihood (in London), VandeSteeg is also an avid mountain walker and rock climber. Both of these activities illuminate the present text. Well researched, and, unlike many academic texts, well-illustrated and engagingly written, the book is essentially in two parts. The first part of the book is focussed on giving an insightful account of what VandeSteeg describes as the sense of place of the three identifiable interest groups associated with the Cairngorms.These are, respectively: those people focussed on recreational pursuits, such as hill walking, rock climbing and skiing; those whose principal concern is the conservation of the region for its biodiversity and wildlife, especially those involved in bird watching (the RSPB) and wildlife tourism; and, finally, those people and interest groups who depend on the Cairngorms for their basic livelihood, the various sporting estates involved in the commercial shooting of grouse and red deer, and the local farming communities. As a committed anthropologist Vandesteeg became deeply and intimately involved in all these three spheres of activity. Her descriptions of her own experiences and of the local people she closely engaged with enliven the text throughout the book. The second part of the book is focussed on the protracted disputes and conflicts between these three interest groups, each with their own sense of place. Such political disputes emerged especially around two issues: the establishment in 2003 of the Cairngorms as a National Park (it has to be recognized that almost two million people visit the Cairngorms each year), and the construction of the funicular (mountain railway) to facilitate skiing activities. This later project involved a storm of local protest. VandeSteeg discusses these conflicting attitudes to land use in the Cairngorms with insight and equanimity, and offers suggestions as to how the competing interests of recreation, conservation and development (livelihood) may to some extent become reconciled. Besides being an excellent ethnography and offering insightful reflections on the recent environmental history of the Cairngorms, VandeSteeg's book constitutes an important contribution to anthropology.;Amazon Review. I bought this book because it investigates a problem bubbling away all over the UK, whether rural, suburban or urban. The book shines with the author's intimate love and knowledge of the Cairngorms and mountains climbing and will appeal to people sharing those interests. It also gives an illuminating case study of change and the polarized interests of groups experiencing it with different perspectives. Does change, and notably gentrification, rob existing populations when it hits or create new opportunities for them? Can the tensions between anglers and paddlers on the river or walkers and mountain bikers in woodland be resolved? Similarly, my concerns are about tensions between anglers and boaters on the canal or walkers and cyclists on the towpath. This book is both thought provoking and insightful in dissecting the reasons behind tensions. In the process, the author shows interests can be in common and grounds for hope. Land for What? Land for Whom? Is well written and I recommend it, with one reservation: the content is based on a dissertation therefore very thorough. However, sensible sub-headings assist navigation. Well worth the purchase.

Über Bonnie VandeSteeg

Dr Bonnie VandeSteeg lives in London but is still a regular visitor to Badenoch and Strathspey. She was a teacher for over 30 years and taught many subjects in a range of educational institutions, including English as a Foreign Language in adult education, economics for the Open University and latterly A-level philosophy and anthropology in a London sixth form college. Her anthropology studies and research were sandwiched between these work commitments. Retirement has brought time to devote to writing and involvement in campaigning on issues discussed in her book such as land use, the environment, housing, and improving local community participation in decision-making. She also continues her hillwalking and climbing interests and is an active member of a number of mountaineering clubs, including the Strathspey Mountain Club.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Introduction Chapter One: A New Place Chapter Two: Sense of Place and Mountaineering Chapter Three: Sense of Place and Conservation Chapter Four: Sense of Place and Livelihood Chapter Five: Disputes Chapter Six: Conflict and Power Chapter Seven: Travelling between Places: Finding Common Ground Chapter Eight: Beyond Livelihood, Conservation and Recreation Conclusion: Where to Now? Appendix: The Why and the How Bibliography

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR013164321
9781838225001
1838225005
Land for What? Land for Whom?: Senses of Place and Conflict in the Scottish Highlands Bonnie VandeSteeg
Gebraucht - Sehr Gut
Broschiert
Stormy Petrel Books
20210915
356
N/A
Die Abbildung des Buches dient nur Illustrationszwecken, die tatsächliche Bindung, das Cover und die Auflage können sich davon unterscheiden.
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