2006
DOI: 10.1002/esp.1428
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Restoring landscapes: the authenticity problem

Abstract: Philosophical concerns about restoring landscapes often revolve around two, connected, issues. First is the idea that a restored landscape, even if it is a perfect replica, has lost some of its value. The claim might appeal to a break in the continuity of the landscape and that continuity is part of what is valuable. Alternatively, often in the case of natural landscapes, the appeal is that any human manipulation is inauthentic; here the analogy is sometimes made with the art world and the restoration is deeme… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…We should not forget Brook's (2006) view that humans are part of nature and nature is a social construct. However, climate and culture must be taken together in design.…”
Section: Prospect: From River Engineers To Ecosystem Engineers?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We should not forget Brook's (2006) view that humans are part of nature and nature is a social construct. However, climate and culture must be taken together in design.…”
Section: Prospect: From River Engineers To Ecosystem Engineers?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ways in which the value of nature can be expressed and measured has produced a substantial body of scholarship, which falls outside the scope of the present discussion. One key point made by Brook (2006) warrants examination however and that is that the value of the natural world is relational – that is, the same entity will mean different things to different people. This is reiterated by Street (2003), who suggests an inability to account for this is one of the principal failings of international environmental law, and particularly the Convention on Biological Diversity.…”
Section: The Limits Of the Traditional Legal Approaches To Plantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Brook (2006) suggests that all concerned should begin from considering the relative status of humans and nature and whether we are part of the ecosystem. Her view is that 'there is not a valid distinction between a natural and a human-created landscape outside of our cultural concerns.…”
Section: Tooling Up Robust Metrics: Uncertain Science and Adaptive Mamentioning
confidence: 99%