Get the Flash Player to see the slideshow.

Posts Tagged ‘green space’

Children and Outdoors Literature Review

Dr Sarah-Anne Munoz, a co-investigator in the Outdoors and Health Network recently published a literature review on the children and outdoors. The review was supported by the Forestry Commission, Countryside Recreation Network and the Outdoor Health Forum. Sarah-Anne is currently carrying out research at the Centre for Rural Health UHI.

Childhood has long been associated in our collective imagination with images of the ‘rural’ and the ‘countryside’ because adult conceptualisations of the child as ‘innocent’ are connected with nature. Many children’s books, programmes and films incorporate these notions - involving ‘natural’ spaces, animal characters or visions of rural childhood. Societal fears have impacted on this vision of childhood - with concern over crime and children’s safety in public spaces linked with a decreasing amount of time spent by children in the outdoors. Recent research has started to examine the links between use of the outdoors, access to greenspace and health, and policy-makers have also begun to look at promoting the use of outdoors as a means for increasing public health. Children have been identified as one of the key groups that could gain health benefits from use of the outdoors - but also one that requires evidence-based policy directed towards their needs. This review therefore takes an in-depth look at the current themes within health, outdoors and children’s research and highlights how these relate to understanding the links between children’s use of outdoor spaces and health outcomes. It also highlights where there are research gaps and how these might be addressed. More… http://www.countrysiderecreation.org.uk/Children%20Outdoors.pdf

MAKING THE LINKS: GREENSPACE FOR A MORE SUCCESSFUL AND SUSTAINABLE SCOTLAND’

I saw this in the SDRN mailing this week and thought it looked interesting:

NEW BOOK – ‘MAKING THE LINKS: GREENSPACE FOR A MORE SUCCESSFUL AND SUSTAINABLE SCOTLAND’.
‘Making the Links’ blends case studies from across urban Scotland with international research to demonstrate how greenspace contributes to the Scottish Government’s five strategic objectives and creates healthier, safer and stronger, wealthier and fairer, smarter and greener communities.  The book also sets out the actions that are needed by a range of partners to make greenspace deliver these benefits and signposts readers to a range of useful tools and resources, as well as highlighting examples of good practice from across the country. More… (www.greenspacescotland.org.uk/makingthelinks).

Exceprt from the SDRN Mailing: Monday 18th May 2009
Read the HTML version online: http://www.sd-research.org.uk/post.php?p=1005

Wellbeing and Place Conference - Durham 7th - 9th April 2009

I attended the Well-being and Place conference held at the University of Durham on 7th - 9th April. The conference explored the spatiality of well-being in many different contexts. The sessions that I attended over the 3 days included many presentations relevant to the work of the Outdoors and Health Network (including presentations from OHN members Catharine Ward Thompson and Liz O’Brien).

On day one, the session on ‘Well-being, Mobility and Youth Transitions’ included several interesting presentations on the connections between young people’s physical and mental well-being, the places they inhabit and how they move through space and place. Colin Pooley’s (Lancaster University) work on how children’s mobility has changed over time was particularly interesting, as was Margaret Grieco’s (Cornell University and Napier University) presentation on the “Walking Bus in International Perspective”. Both papers raised questions about current and potential opportunities for children to engage with nature on the way to and from school.

On day two, therapeutic spaces were the focus of two sessions. The “Therapeutic Greenspaces” session explored the role of urban green space in physical and mental well-being. Catharine Ward Thompson’s (Edinburgh College of Art/University of Edinburgh) presentation illustrated the long-standing association between urban parks and human health. John Leah’s (Lancaster University) paper on “Well-being and Greenspace” suggested that a sense of community may be linked to people’s feelings of safety within greenspace. Clive Davies (Newcastle University) presented some interesting findings relating to collaborative work with two Italian Universities that has examined the “perceived benefits of green areas during periods of heat stress”. Helen Beck’s (CABE) presentation illustrated that an examination of the well-being benefits of green space will need to consider the community cohesion and social networking benefits of green space.

In the “Therapeutic Spaces” session Liz O’Brien (Forest Research) gave a presentation on the “Social and Cultural Connections with Trees and Woodlands for Well-being”. This illustrated socio-cultural benefits that may also be related to other types of green space, such as health, education and learning, community development and recreation; as well as some of the psychological, socio-cultural and physical barriers to accessing such spaces. Stephen Hughes (Central Scotland Forest Trust) presented findings from the Trust’s perception surveys, which also showed that there are physical and social benefits to be gained from the use of forest spaces.

On day three, an interesting session discussed well-being and place in relation to “Children and Young People”. Gordon Jack’s (Durham University) presentation considered the “Significance of Place Attachments for Children’s Well-being” – this raises questions about the ‘place’ of the outdoors in childhood. 

Login

Search
This movie requires Flash Player 9
Events
This movie requires Flash Player 9
July 2010
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 
Blogs
This movie requires Flash Player 9
Tag Cloud
This movie requires Flash Player 9
Economic & Social Research Council
Medical Research Council
Outdoors Health Network is powered by wordpress
and was designed, built and is hosted by lanetech
Login