Common Sense in Environmental Management

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A01=Jonathan Woolley
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Anser Fabalis
Author_Jonathan Woolley
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Bison Bonasus
Botaurus Stellaris
Broads Authority
Broads National Park
Buon Senso
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=JHM
Children's Environmental Attitudes
Children’s Environmental Attitudes
Common Language
commons
consensus decision making
COP=United Kingdom
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environmental anthropology
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Erithacus Rubecula
ethnographic land management
Fen Orchid
Flood Mitigation Schemes
Gillian Tett
Hickling Broad
land management
Language_English
Long Term Participant Observation
Mousehold Heath
Norfolk Broads
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political ecology UK
political economy
pragmatism
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Public Engagement
Quiet Enjoyment
resource governance England
rural environmental policy
rural landscape management practices
rural life
Salix Fragilis
Senso Comune
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UK's National Parks
UK’s National Parks
Viburnum Opulus
wetland management
Wild Boar

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367002374
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Sep 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Common Sense in Environmental Management examines common sense not in theory, but in practice. Jonathan Woolley argues that common sense as a concept is rooted in English experiences of landscape and land management and examines it ethnographically - unveiling common sense as key to understanding how British nature and public life are transforming in the present day.

Common sense encourages English people to tacitly assume that the management of land and other resources should organically converge on a consensus that yields self-evident, practical results. Furthermore, the English then tend to assume that their own position reflects that consensus. Other stakeholders are not seen as having legitimate but distinct expertise and interests – but are rather viewed as being stupid and/or immoral, for ignoring self-evident, pragmatic truths. Compromise is therefore less likely, and land management practices become entrenched and resistant to innovation and improvement. Through a detailed ethnographic study of the Norfolk Broads, this book explores how environmental policy and land management in rural areas could be more effective if a truly common sense was restored in the way we manage our shared environment.

Using academic and lay deployments of common sense as a route into the political economy of rural environments, this book will be of great interest to scholars and students of socio-cultural anthropology, sociology, human geography, cultural studies, social history, and the environmental humanities.

Jonathan Woolley is an Affiliated Researcher at the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, UK. He was awarded his PhD in March 2018, following over a year of ethnographic fieldwork in the Broads National Park, upon which this book is based. Jonathan’s research there was part of an AHRC-funded research project at the University, Pathways to Understanding the Changing Climate, which explored the styles of learning about the environment that exist in different cultures around the world. Jonathan has also written on East Anglian folklore, nature spirituality, and public engagement with environmental and cultural heritage.

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