Abstract
The places of rural life have changed dramatically in the past generation. The ongoing transformation of built environments and landscapes is putting a strain on everyday life in many places. At the same time, place-based spatial development, especially through participatory processes of placemaking, is increasingly being viewed as a means not only to achieve attractive and functional built environments but to promote a sense of community, place attachment, social cohesion, and to help stimulate local economies – in short to enhance rural dwellers’ quality of life and well-being. The essay frames the critical examination of interventions in rural built environments in European countries, China and South Africa, with an eye to their role in constructing quality of life. Importantly, this includes the (potential) role of planning and spatial design to enable rural places to flourish and to enhance individual and collective well-being. The framing takes its point of departure in a situated and relational understanding of well-being. People, things and places are assembled in everyday encounters and well-being is conceived of as an effect arising from such complex socio-material assemblages. We have thus tasked authors to critically question the ways in which built interventions and transformation processes instigate new relationships between people, things and places, and how this may contribute to quality of life, while remaining open to the possibility that such interventions might not always be beneficial for quality of life.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Rural quality of life |
Editors | Pia Heike Johansen, Anne Tietjen, Evald Bundgård Iversen, Henrik Lauridsen Lolle, Jens Kaae Fisker |
Number of pages | 5 |
Place of Publication | Manchester |
Publisher | Manchester University Press |
Publication date | 2022 |
Pages | 113-117 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781526161635 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9781526161642 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2022 |
Keywords
- Faculty of Science
- Rural
- Quality of life
- Spatial planning
- Built environment
- Everyday life
- Civil society
- Well-being
- Countryside