Reher Díez, Guillermo Sven
Simon, Véronique Karine
Smid Hribar, Mateja
Kristensen, Lone Søderkvist
Primdahl, Jorgen
2021-09-14T21:02:06Z
2021-09-14T21:02:06Z
01/09/2020
2452-1051
10.5117/JEL.2020.1.56265
http://hdl.handle.net/11531/61371
Artículos en revistas
Este artículo ofrece bases para estudiar el paradigma de participación pública en el campo de paisaje y patrimonio cultural.
This paper aims to ground the research paradigm of public engagement within the field of landscape and heritage. Both the European Landscape Convention and the Faro Convention, major international agreements that shape both these dimensions, stress the need to reinforce the democratic nature of projects. This participation needs to go beyond informing stakeholders and formal hearings, and community values and ideas should be included in the planning process. This entails addressing the complexities of stakeholder deliberation and the solution of thorny problems. The present study examines in detail four case studies from the Netherlands, Slovenia and Denmark, in which public participation was crucial in different stages of the project development. The methodologies employed, as well as the effect that such engagement had on the general results, will be highlighted. Finally, the discussion of results will evaluate the findings through the lens of deliberative democracy within territorial planning.
application/pdf
en-GB
Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-SinObraDerivada España
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/
Revista: Journal of European Landscapes, Periodo: 12, Volumen: 1, Número: , Página inicial: 49, Página final: 63
Approaches to collaborative landscape analysis and planning
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
participación pública, paisaje, Convenio Europeo del Paisaje, planificación
public participation, landscape, European Landscape Convention, planning