Abstract

ContextComplex interactions between societies and their environment have shaped landscapes across Europe over centuries. Therefore, taking a historical perspective can be important when designing new forestry policy and management activities.ObjectivesThis perspective aims to improve our appreciation of how a better historical understanding of landscapes can increase our understanding of current conditions and inform current and future policy and practice. I provide a perspective on land-use legacies and forest change, with a particular emphasis on landscapes, and using the example of forestry in the United Kingdom.MethodsFor this purpose, I undertook a comprehensive review of scholarly forestry literature and of relevant policy and legal documents in the UK, covering the last 100 years.ResultsThis brief review of the dynamics of forest landscapes in the UK over the last 100 years, shows that certain decisions, policies and management activities had major effects on the landscape, especially in terms of landscape patterns and species distribution, constraining it until today. Historic research investigated some of these legacies, leading to real change in policy and management, including a Broadleaved Policy, an Ancient Woodland Inventory, habitat restoration, habitat network and rewilding schemes. Research on past experiences of Dutch Elm disease in the UK and of similar outbreaks in other countries have guided responses to today’s tree pest/disease outbreaks and plant trade decisions.ConclusionA better appreciation of past decisions and activities, especially in forestry, helps to anticipate landscape legacy effects and potential cross-scale interactions of new policies and practices. It may also help to better justify and negotiate new decisions and long-term planning among multiple actors.

Highlights

  • Complex interactions between societies and their environment have shaped landscapes across Europe over centuries

  • Over the past two decades, an increasing number of scholars have come to recognise that historical understanding of our landscapes is important to inform current and future policy and practice (e.g. Marcucci 2000; Tieskens et al 2017)

  • The ability to discern the history of a landscape can much enhance the policymaking and planning process (Antrop 2005; Palang et al 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Complex interactions between societies and their environment have shaped landscapes across Europe over centuries. Landscapes can change due to changes in the social system and/or the natural system (Bic ́ık et al 2001), and these changes, in turn, have effects on both systems alike (Burgi et al 2015). Over the past two decades, an increasing number of scholars have come to recognise that historical understanding of our landscapes is important to inform current and future policy and practice Past land-use decisions, policies and management activities continue to influence landscapes and ecosystems for decades or even centuries (Foster et al 2003). The ability to discern the history of a landscape can much enhance the policymaking and planning process (Antrop 2005; Palang et al 2011). Historical studies help to increase our understanding of current environmental problems (Christensen 1989)

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