Keynote address: Modern agricultural landscapes – a perspective on their past, present and future
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Keynote address: Modern agricultural landscapes – a perspective on their past, present and future. / Christensen, Andreas Aagaard.
2016. Abstract from The 2nd International Conference of IALE Iran, Isfahan, Iran, Islamic Republic of.Research output: Contribution to conference › Conference abstract for conference › Research
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TY - ABST
T1 - Keynote address: Modern agricultural landscapes – a perspective on their past, present and future
AU - Christensen, Andreas Aagaard
N1 - Conference code: 2
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - Since the 16th century agricultural landscapes across the world have been restructured and aligned with modern modes of production and social organization. The introduction of new technologies, tenure regimes and modes of sociopolitical organization among other factors has fostered dramatic changes of landscape patterns in affected territories, leading to the creation of a new type of landscape. A distinctly modern agricultural landscape, characterized by rectilinear spatial forms, functionally segregated, specialized land use patterns, individualized decision making practices and an agricultural economy embedded within regional, globalizing networks of economic, technological and cultural exchange. In such landscapes, patterns of land use have since converged to an increasing extent, forming flows of correlated practices and associated ecological impairments observable across extensive arrays of otherwise discrete landscape contexts. This raises a number of questions for landscape ecology, including how to engage analytically with landscape change trajectories in a situation where decision making is resolved at an interface between local agency and deeply entrenched institutions and infrastructures of a capitalist modern origin. In this context, the purpose of this keynote address is to explore how the relationship between institutional and physical legacies of land use modernization affects decision making in contemporary agricultural landscapes. On the basis of a selection of European and postcolonial examples, it is discussed how alternative landscape futures formulated and aimed for by local decision makers are aligned with established conditions for landscape management, and how this can be conceptualized within a landscape ecological perspective.
AB - Since the 16th century agricultural landscapes across the world have been restructured and aligned with modern modes of production and social organization. The introduction of new technologies, tenure regimes and modes of sociopolitical organization among other factors has fostered dramatic changes of landscape patterns in affected territories, leading to the creation of a new type of landscape. A distinctly modern agricultural landscape, characterized by rectilinear spatial forms, functionally segregated, specialized land use patterns, individualized decision making practices and an agricultural economy embedded within regional, globalizing networks of economic, technological and cultural exchange. In such landscapes, patterns of land use have since converged to an increasing extent, forming flows of correlated practices and associated ecological impairments observable across extensive arrays of otherwise discrete landscape contexts. This raises a number of questions for landscape ecology, including how to engage analytically with landscape change trajectories in a situation where decision making is resolved at an interface between local agency and deeply entrenched institutions and infrastructures of a capitalist modern origin. In this context, the purpose of this keynote address is to explore how the relationship between institutional and physical legacies of land use modernization affects decision making in contemporary agricultural landscapes. On the basis of a selection of European and postcolonial examples, it is discussed how alternative landscape futures formulated and aimed for by local decision makers are aligned with established conditions for landscape management, and how this can be conceptualized within a landscape ecological perspective.
KW - Faculty of Science
KW - Modernity
KW - Environmental change
KW - Land use and land cover change
KW - Landscape management
KW - Cultural Analysis
KW - Structural change
M3 - Conference abstract for conference
T2 - The 2nd International Conference of IALE Iran
Y2 - 26 October 2016 through 27 October 2016
ER -
ID: 188955530