2022
DOI: 10.1177/17416590221088792
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Guerrilla gardening as normalised law-breaking: Challenges to land ownership and aesthetic order

Abstract: This article considers guerrilla gardening that involves taking on other people’s land for gardening, usually without their permission. It is a practice that is overlooked largely by criminology, yet it can tell us something about attitudes to law and land ownership and challenges the approved aesthetic order of where we live. It can soften the look and feel of the city, leading to a different emotional and affective interaction with urbanity. Evidence is presented from a qualitative study of guerrilla gardene… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Local politicians were happy to pose for photographs with the gardeners and landowners were -in most casesperceived to be uninterested. (Millie, 2023) Of course, a much more responsible approach is to transform guerrilla gardening into "a less guerrilla form" that is perhaps less adventurous but more respectful of property rights and the law; i.e. seek out the landowners and ask for permission to garden on their land.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Local politicians were happy to pose for photographs with the gardeners and landowners were -in most casesperceived to be uninterested. (Millie, 2023) Of course, a much more responsible approach is to transform guerrilla gardening into "a less guerrilla form" that is perhaps less adventurous but more respectful of property rights and the law; i.e. seek out the landowners and ask for permission to garden on their land.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Local politicians were happy to pose for photographs with the gardeners and landowners were -in most casesperceived to be uninterested. (Millie, 2023) Of course, a much more responsible approach is to transform guerrilla gardening into "a less guerrilla form" that is perhaps less adventurous but more respectful of property rights and the law; i.e. seek out the landowners and ask for permission to garden on their land.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%