03781nam a22004575i 4500001001800000003000900018005001700027007001500044008004100059020001800100020001900118024003500137082001400172100003100186245015000217264004600367300002100413336002600434337002600460338003600486347002400522490004500546505098100591520122301572650002302795650001802818650003002836650002102866650003002887650002102917650004302938650002802981650001403009650003003023700003403053710003403087773002003121776003603141830004503177856010103222978-1-4020-5849-3DE-He21320260521092129.0cr nn 008mamaa100301s2008 ne | s |||| 0|eng d a9781402058493 a997814020584937 a10.1007/978-1-4020-5849-32doi04a304.22231 aWescoat, James L.eeditor.10aPolitical Economies of Landscape Changeh[electronic resource] :bPlaces of Integrative Power /cedited by James L. Wescoat, Douglas M. Johnston. 1aDordrecht :bSpringer Netherlands,c2008. bonline resource. atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier atext filebPDF2rda1 aThe GeoJournal Library,x0924-5499 ;v890 aLandscapes of Struggle, Possibility and Prosperity -- Introduction: Three Faces of Power in Landscape Change -- New Axioms for Reading the Landscape: Paying Attention to Political Economy and Social Justice -- Landscapes of Possibility? Livelihood and Intervention in the Production of Andean Landscapes -- Moving to the Mountains: Amenity Migration in the Sierra and Southern Appalachian Mountains -- Political and Economic Driving Forces of Landscape Change -- Constructing the Politics of Landscape Change -- Institutional Dynamics, Spatial Organization, and Landscape Change -- Green Landscapes: Exogenous Economic Benefi ts of Environmental Improvement -- Pricing the Economic Landscape: Global Financial Markets and the Communities and Institutions of Risk Management -- Integrative Landscape Change -- The Globalized Landscape: Rural Landscape Change and Policy in the United States and European Union -- Implications for Future Landscape Inquiry, Planning, and Design. a"Places of Power" contributes to the Landscape Architecture Foundation's Landscape Futures Initiative, which explores driving forces of landscape change that societies and designers will face in the 21st century. Politics and economics exert profoundly important, and dynamic, influences on land use, landcover, and landscape experience. Likewise, landscapes shape political economies from the site to global scales. This book examines the complex relationships between political economy and landscape change. It encompasses perspectives ranging from radical landscape interpretation to sustainable livelihoods, real estate economics, institutions, international landscape policies, and global finance. It asks what difference "design", can make within the broader structural contexts of landscape change. The perspectives in this book share a common concern for what economist and futurist Kenneth Boulding termed "integrative power" - the power of human solidarity, respect, and love - to direct political and economic change toward paths of sustainable landscape design. They speak to landscape architects, planners, urbanists, geographers, and social scientists about some of the most pressing issues of our times. 0aREGIONAL PLANNING. 0aARCHITECTURE. 0aENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT. 0aHUMAN GEOGRAPHY.14aSOCIAL SCIENCES, GENERAL.24aHUMAN GEOGRAPHY.24aLANDSCAPE/REGIONAL AND URBAN PLANNING.24aLANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE.24aURBANISM.24aENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT.1 aJohnston, Douglas M.eeditor.2 aSpringerLink (Online service)0 tSpringer eBooks08iPrinted edition:z9781402058486 0aThe GeoJournal Library,x0924-5499 ;v8940uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5849-3zVer el texto completo en las instalaciones del CICY