2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2010.09.005
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Conceptualising ‘shadow landscape’ in political ecology and rural studies

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Cited by 23 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…The sustainability of inhabitants consists primarily in the prevention of irreversible de-population tendencies (namely emigration and ageing), and secondarily in maintaining the relatively favourable demographic, social and educational structure to guarantee population reproduction also in the future. This may not necessarily concern depopulation only, but also cultural marginalisation (Bryant et al, 2011). Although de-population is not currently typical of the Czech countryside as a whole, it is becoming a serious issue in a number of countries (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sustainability of inhabitants consists primarily in the prevention of irreversible de-population tendencies (namely emigration and ageing), and secondarily in maintaining the relatively favourable demographic, social and educational structure to guarantee population reproduction also in the future. This may not necessarily concern depopulation only, but also cultural marginalisation (Bryant et al, 2011). Although de-population is not currently typical of the Czech countryside as a whole, it is becoming a serious issue in a number of countries (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Además de la categorización semántica del problema, se puede indagar en qué significados afectivos y emocionales supone labrarse una identidad enraizada o conectada a un territorio despoblado, en qué medida funciona como un instrumento de reconocimiento e identificación propia y externa, una identidad sociocultural y política con efectos performativos que opera con cierto grado de independencia con respecto a las condiciones demográficas específicas. En esta línea, el concepto "paisaje de sombra" (Bryant, Paniagua y Kizos, 2011) alude a las culturas de la despoblación, atendiendo a los aspectos materiales y discursivos que puede suponer para las personas el habitar en zonas históricamente despobladas y que han experimentado una situación de marginación cultural. Sin embargo, es fundamental no aplicar recetas teóricas simplificadas ya que, al mismo tiempo, los espacios rurales muestran una gran complejidad y transgresión interna.…”
Section: Conclusionesunclassified
“…Sin embargo, es fundamental no aplicar recetas teóricas simplificadas ya que, al mismo tiempo, los espacios rurales muestran una gran complejidad y transgresión interna. La producción de la ruralidad despoblada es fruto de un proceso fluido, complejo y relacional, no sólo con respecto a lo urbano, sino a múltiples escalas (Andersson, 2019), experiencias y culturas que definen la ruralidad -y, por tanto, la despoblación-como cultura o campo de experiencias (Bryant, Paniagua, y Kizos, 2011).…”
Section: Conclusionesunclassified
“…From this perspective, depopulation is not merely a demographic and geographical process; it is also a sociocultural and political one, in which cultures and self-identities are shaped (Bryant;Kyzos, 2011) and specific affective configurations intervene (Álvarez-Muguruza, 2021;Paniagua, 2019), and which is connected to metaphors and myths inscribed in the collective memory (Del-Molino, 2016) and in cultural productions (Martínez-Puche et al, 2022;Paniagua, 2018). In research about this phenomenon, the incorporation of the mediatization dimension is therefore unavoidable, given that the media are intrinsic to the shaping and functioning of institutions and social practices and that the experience of depopulation cannot be isolated from the expectations that people set on places and that are shaped by the common imaginaries that they propagate, as explained by the communication geography perspective (Adams et al, 2017 Academic interest in depopulation has mainly come from sociology, geography, and economic science, with limited attention from communication studies (Galletero-Campos; Saiz-Echezarreta, 2022).…”
Section: State Of Affairsmentioning
confidence: 99%