2017
DOI: 10.1080/00291951.2017.1340334
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The role of horse keeping in transforming peri-urban landscapes: A case study from metropolitan Stockholm, Sweden

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Cited by 16 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 42 publications
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“…A report for the British Horse Association (Henley 2004) argued that the increase in horse numbers in the UK reflected a transition towards the 'experience economy'-increased consumer incomes in combination with increased investment in leisure activities. Similar trends have been found in Sweden (Hammer et al 2017) and Germany (Zasada et al 2013), where horses are replacing livestock in peri-urban locales. In Scotland, this cohort also appears to represent the wealthiest type identified: land owners (97%) who did not inherit their land (90%); this cohort also have the highest rating of current and future economic prospects.…”
Section: Comparison To Typessupporting
confidence: 79%
“…A report for the British Horse Association (Henley 2004) argued that the increase in horse numbers in the UK reflected a transition towards the 'experience economy'-increased consumer incomes in combination with increased investment in leisure activities. Similar trends have been found in Sweden (Hammer et al 2017) and Germany (Zasada et al 2013), where horses are replacing livestock in peri-urban locales. In Scotland, this cohort also appears to represent the wealthiest type identified: land owners (97%) who did not inherit their land (90%); this cohort also have the highest rating of current and future economic prospects.…”
Section: Comparison To Typessupporting
confidence: 79%
“…Many other conflicts were also found related to socioeconomic changes, such as integration problems between residents, increasing social conflicts associated with recreation and land-owners, and the changing spatial and social character of an area. For example, Wójcik (2016) found integration issues outside Lodz where new arrivals were seen as consumers of the peri-urban space rather than participants in it, and Hammer, Bonow, and Petersson (2017) reported that landowners were unhappy with the increasing intensity of recreation activities on their lands brought by an influx of new residents. Mattiucci observed that the densification of a peri-urban mountain town irreplaceably changed the character of the area, resulting in the dissolution of the qualities of what had attracted people to it in the first place (Mattiucci, 2015).…”
Section: Processes Of Peri-urbanizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, coordination between involved actors is required to create coherent action and strengthen the role of ES in spatial planning. However, changing land-use patterns, diverse interests, and values of actors on different scales poses challenges for the governance and planning of ES when negotiating the trade-offs in the provision of such ES [36,37].…”
Section: Urban Governance and Spatial Planningmentioning
confidence: 99%