2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2011.04.003
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Is research keeping up with changes in landscape policy? A review of the literature

Abstract: a b s t r a c tSeveral innovative directions for landscape policy development and implementation have emerged over recent years. These include: (i) an expansion of scope to include all landscape aspects and landscape types, (ii) an increased emphasis on public participation, (iii) a focus on designing measures appropriate for different contexts and scales, and (iv) encouraging support for capacity-building. In this paper, we evaluate the extent to which these policy directions are reflected in the practice of … Show more

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Cited by 52 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…Geopolitical bias was towards Europe and the Americas with far less focus on Africa and Asia, a pattern previously demonstrated for other subdisciplines of conservation and ecology (Pyšek et al 2008, Felton et al 2009, Conrad et al 2011. Disconcertingly, area-corrected research output per geopolitical region was not correlated with CRI.…”
Section: Patterns Of Geographical Bias In Research Outputmentioning
confidence: 67%
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“…Geopolitical bias was towards Europe and the Americas with far less focus on Africa and Asia, a pattern previously demonstrated for other subdisciplines of conservation and ecology (Pyšek et al 2008, Felton et al 2009, Conrad et al 2011. Disconcertingly, area-corrected research output per geopolitical region was not correlated with CRI.…”
Section: Patterns Of Geographical Bias In Research Outputmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Similarly, government policies and funding opportunities that encourage international scientific collaboration could help spread resources to under-studied regions, promote valuable knowledge exchange, and build local capacity (Fazey et al 2005b). However, given that similar research biases have emerged repeatedly in the conservation and ecology literature (e.g., Fazey et al 2005b, Lawler et al 2006, Pyšek et al 2008, Felton et al 2009, Conrad et al 2011, and little progress has been made (Griffiths and Dos Santos 2012), future work should specifically assess how to encourage research on topics in need of more attention. …”
Section: Origins Of Bias and New Directions For Researchmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…As with many ecological meta-analyses, studies were heavily biased towards North America (Lawler et al, 2006;Felton et al, 2009;Conrad, Christie & Fazey, 2011). It is important, however, to focus ecological monitoring in areas most susceptible to environmental degradation.…”
Section: (1) Summary Informationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The protection and management of cultural landscapes have attracted broad attention from scientists, policy makers, and the general public (Conrad et al 2011) because of the visibility, for instance, caused by the acknowledgement of cultural landscapes in the UNESCO World Heritage Convention (Rössler 2006). Over the past years, several initiatives have called for integrated landscape approaches to the management of natural resources.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%