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Landscape Governance in the Age of Social Media
At the end of the 20th century, documents such as the World Heritage Guidelines or the European Landscape Convention proposed new and challenging ways of conceptualizing landscape assessment and governance. At the same time, social media has become a rich source of data that has had an impact on how we view spaces. Currently, many researchers are advocating the value of social media data to better understand ecosystem service provision, use, and intensity. This Special Issue explores the relationship between contemporary forms of landscape valuation and governance and present-day social media. The collected papers provide a wide range of answers to questions relevant to today's world: Is social media useful for governments to identify and adapt to changes in land use, mobility patterns, or landscape meaning? Does it lead to a more democratic understanding of landscape and its conservation? Does it help local communities express their feelings about government policies? Are any of these factors in line with the concepts of international organizations, such as IUCN, UNESCO, or the Council of Europe?
Landscape Governance in the Age of Social Media
At the end of the 20th century, documents such as the World Heritage Guidelines or the European Landscape Convention proposed new and challenging ways of conceptualizing landscape assessment and governance. At the same time, social media has become a rich source of data that has had an impact on how we view spaces. Currently, many researchers are advocating the value of social media data to better understand ecosystem service provision, use, and intensity. This Special Issue explores the relationship between contemporary forms of landscape valuation and governance and present-day social media. The collected papers provide a wide range of answers to questions relevant to today's world: Is social media useful for governments to identify and adapt to changes in land use, mobility patterns, or landscape meaning? Does it lead to a more democratic understanding of landscape and its conservation? Does it help local communities express their feelings about government policies? Are any of these factors in line with the concepts of international organizations, such as IUCN, UNESCO, or the Council of Europe?
Landscape Governance in the Age of Social Media
14.05.2024
Sonstige
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
Western Sichuan Plateau Mountain Areas , millennials , mountain tourism , social media data , landscape preference , social media , land governance , community resilience , online technology , community science , biodiversity conservation , user-generated content (UGC) , park and recreation , Google Maps , online views , park experience , cultural ecosystem services , geotagged photographs , maximum entropy models , MaxEnt , mountain landscape , perceived destination image , Beijing , China , text analysis , important-performance analysis (IPA) , tourism sustainability , riverside park , landscape design satisfaction , sensory perception satisfaction , importance–performance analysis , glacier tourism , destination image uniqueness , user-generated content , online reviews , TripAdvisor , latent Dirichlet allocation , salience–valence analysis , destination management , urban wetland park , habitat diversity , tourists’ visual preference , mapping of habitat units , citizen participation , cultural landscape , industrial heritage , postproduction , industrial landscape , post-industrial landscapes , assessment
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