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Rotherham - Cultural Severance and the Environment The Ending of Traditional and Customary Practice on Commons and Landscapes Managed in Common

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Rotherham Cultural Severance and the Environment The Ending of Traditional and Customary Practice on Commons and Landscapes Managed in Common
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A standpoint of many of the contributions is that it is important or even vital to understand the past, our history, if we are to address effectively future environmental challenges. Often, this is not the case, since the environment and nature, are treated as natural rather than eco-cultural. Issues of common ownership and rights to natural resources present major challenges in the contemporary global world and the market forces of capital driven economics. Yet the long-term consequences, of the separation or severance of people from nature, are tangible and potentially disastrous at many levels. However, most contemporary actions towards conservation and sustainability fail to address this fundamental relationship between communities and local environments. This reflects perhaps, the ethos of Hardins 1960s Tragedy of the commons and from this perspective the chapters in this volume challenge such precepts and assumptions and through this, raise new and critical paradigms. In recent years, researchers have turned their attention to issues of landscape change and the eco-cultural nature of the environment. Combined with the impacts and effects of cultural severance, the break between local people and their environmental resources, the cultural nature of landscape is now better understood. However, the implicit importance and significance for conservation of biodiversity, of heritage and consequently for activities such as tourism, are only just receiving wider recognition. The implications of widespread landscape abandonment, rural depopulation, urbanisation, and severance, are dramatic and sometimes stark, with wildfires raging, ecology often in free-fall, and local communities and their traditions displaced. A first step with all these landscapes is to recognise both the important sites and the critical issues. Then, appropriate protection and conservation must be determined and applied. Finally, there is the potential to develop new and extended commons as part of a landscape approach to future conservation. However, the cultural past, together now with issues of cultural severance, present enormous challenges for the integration of this knowledge into visions of future sustainable landscapes. Not least of these challenges is the loss of indigenous cultural and traditional knowledge, without which, much future conservation action is jeopardised. This book is intended to raise awareness, to stimulate further discuss, debate and research, and to then turn dialogue into action.

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Part 1
Setting the Scene on Cultural Severance and its Implications
Ian D. Rotherham (ed.) Environmental History Cultural Severance and the Environment 2013 The Ending of Traditional and Customary Practice on Commons and Landscapes Managed in Common 10.1007/978-94-007-6159-9 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013
Ian D. Rotherham (ed.) Environmental History Cultural Severance and the Environment 2013 The Ending of Traditional and Customary Practice on Commons and Landscapes Managed in Common 10.1007/978-94-007-6159-9_1 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013
1. Cultural Landscapes and Problems Associated with the Loss of Tradition and Custom: An Introduction and Overview
Ian D. Rotherham 1
(1)
Faculty of Development and Society, Sheffield Hallam University, City Campus Pond Street, Sheffield, S1 1WB, UK
Ian D. Rotherham
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Abstract
The end of tradition and of customary practices is a massive threat to heritage, history and biodiversity. Indeed, it can be argued that the end of traditional land management and the impacts then of cultural severance are as big a threat as climate change to biodiversity and ecology. This book considers the threats to biodiversity from cultural change and the abandonment of traditional management. In recent decades, we have heard much about climate change and the threats that this may pose in the future but in terms of biodiversity The End of Tradition is potentially bigger and more current
1.1 Introduction
The end of tradition and of customary practices is a massive threat to heritage, history and biodiversity (Rotherham ).
Fig 11 Abandoned coppice The threats from global cultural change and - photo 1
Fig. 1.1
Abandoned coppice
The threats from global cultural change and abandonment of traditional, landscape management increased in the last half of the twentieth century and ten years into the twenty-first century show no signs of slowing down (Agnoletti ) and even the community-based knowledge of traditions is being lost. The scene is set in Part 1 with contributions from Olwig, Rotherham and Green. In Part 2 follows a series of major case studies from around the world. Part 3 presents major contributions on the history and uses of commons and common resources. Then, looking forwards, Part 4 addresses issues and approaches for future commons and cultural landscapes. Finally, Part 5 provides a summary and overview.
The book stems from invited contributions by participants in the major conference held in Sheffield in 2010 The End of Tradition? Aspects of Commons and Cultural Severance in the Landscape held at Sheffield Hallam University from 15th to the 17th September 2010. The event included nearly fifty lectures plus displays, poster presentations, and extended discussions throughout 3 days. There was a strong community dimension with members of local groups, students, and volunteers, and the organisers involved both academics and practitioners from around the world. There were opportunities to share and compare local, national and international experiences of the important challenges facing biodiversity in the twenty-first century. This was a landmark discussion and debate with key organisations. Participating and supporting institutions included Natural England, English Heritage, the National Trust, the Biodiversity and Landscape History Research Institute, the Woodland Trust, The Wildlife Trusts, the RSPB, BANC, OPAL, the International Association for the Study of Commons, the Ancient Tree Forum, the European Society for Environmental History, and the International Union of Forest Research Organisations, and many others.
1.2 Conference Topics Included:
  • Conservation at the crossroads
  • The impacts of changes from subsistence, often rural, communities and landscapes to technology driven agri-industry and urbanisation, and the consequences for local people
  • Commons in the urban landscape and community involvement
  • The historical and current uses and management of traditional commons
  • The common uses of landscapes and environmental resources now and historically, from medieval coppice woods to deer parks, from alpine pastures to grazing meadows, from coastal flats to peat bogs and fens
  • The debates around perceived re-wilding of natural areas or abandonment and
  • Dereliction of cultural landscapes
  • The decline of biodiversity and ecology
  • Future visions and actions
1.3 Conservation at the Crossroads: Cultural Severance and the End of Tradition
We suggest that the global ecosystem is now at a tipping point for historic landscapes and that changes are occurring which are very damaging for the sustainability of the ecological resource (Agnoletti ).
Fig 12 Ancient open-grown oak now shrouded This is a growing crisis of - photo 2
Fig. 1.2
Ancient open-grown oak now shrouded
This is a growing crisis of global proportions and it feels as if nobody has noticed. The lack of recognitionby decision-makers, by agencies, by politicians, by the media, and even by many researchers, means there is a lack of a viable future vision.
1.4 Cultural Severance and Climate Change
The impacts of cultural severance (Rotherham ).
These transformed landscapes and their fragmented habitats have only limited ability to respond to climate changeto moderate impacts and to mollify adverse trendsso species cannot move or adapt and biodiversity is threatened. The landscapes no longer respond to climatic pressures or for example, to extreme weather events and both floods and droughts have become commonplace. Basic ecosystem services and functions are under stress and increasingly under threat.
1.5 As yet Unrecognised and Unspoken
There needs to be recognition of the issues, their causes, the historic context, and the scale of the consequent challenges. The historic problem and its causes are indeed rooted in the past but at the same time, over time change is inevitable. The severity of the problem faced today relates to the scale of change, the time-periods of the changes, and the global nature of the effects. The associated declines in ecology and biodiversity are massive and so no sign of abating. It is worth considering particular national case study examples.
So in Britain alone, during the twentieth century we have seen:
  • Catastrophic loss of lowland heaths and commons
  • Almost the entire destruction of lowland wet fens, raised bogs, marshes and wet woods
  • The collapse of populations of most butterflies, many farmland birds, bats, reptiles and amphibians and more
  • The extinctions of huge numbers of flowering plants and ferns in many regions
  • The removal of most medieval parks and their veteran trees
  • The drainage of most upland moors and bogs
  • The loss of most ancient unimproved pastures and meadows
  • The cessation of traditional coppice management of woods and the loss of about half the ancient woods in the last 50 years
  • And creeping urbanisation or gentrification of much of the countrysidethe greying of the green
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