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Disintegrated development at the rural–urban fringe: Re-connecting spatial planning theory and practice

Scott, AJ; Carter, C; Reed, MR; Larkham, P; Adams, D; Morton, N; Waters, R; Collier, D; Crean, C; Curzon, R; Forster, R; Gibbs, P; Grayson, N; Hardman, M; Hearle, A; Jarvis, D; Kennet, M; Leach, K; Middleton, M; Schiessel, N; Stonyer, B; Coles, R

Authors

AJ Scott

C Carter

MR Reed

P Larkham

D Adams

N Morton

R Waters

D Collier

C Crean

R Curzon

R Forster

P Gibbs

N Grayson

A Hearle

D Jarvis

M Kennet

K Leach

M Middleton

N Schiessel

B Stonyer

R Coles



Abstract

The spaces where countryside meets town are often amongst society's most valued and pressured places which together form the rural–urban fringe (RUF). A ‘messy’ yet opportunistic space in policy and decision making processes, the RUF remains confused and ‘disintegrated’ lacking sufficient understanding and explicit attention for sustainable management as places in their own right. This paper exposes the scope, nature and reasons leading towards policy disintegration within the RUF with critical attention on the separate lenses of the Ecosystem Approach and Spatial Planning frameworks reflecting a marked natural and built environment divide. Using research funded by the Rural Economy and Land Use programme, three ‘bridging’ concepts were identified within which improved integration is explored: Time, Connections and Values. Using team member thoughtpieces and workshops, together with visioning exercises in two rural–urban fringes, a series of narratives are presented within which the RUF opportunity is re-discovered set within a hybridised theory of spatial and environmental planning. In so doing the paper challenges established economic and planning models of urban development and expansion with more holistic ideas and approaches. One size-fits-all solutions such as greenbelts, regionalism or localism are rejected within an approach that champions multi-scalar and sectoral perspectives set within a governance framework that achieves social and economic well-being through maintaining and enhancing ecosystem functions and services. We conclude by arguing that policy strands within environment and planning must be better connected allowing the RUF to be developed as an opportunity space for testing and experimentation.

Citation

Scott, A., Carter, C., Reed, M., Larkham, P., Adams, D., Morton, N., …Coles, R. (2013). Disintegrated development at the rural–urban fringe: Re-connecting spatial planning theory and practice. Progress in Planning, 83, 1-52. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.progress.2012.09.001

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2013
Deposit Date Mar 9, 2015
Journal Progress in Planning
Print ISSN 0305-9006
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 83
Pages 1-52
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.progress.2012.09.001
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.progress.2012.09.001
Related Public URLs http://www.elsevier.com/wps/product/cws_home/409/description