Abstract

Rural areas supply the planet's natural resources while simultaneously harbor refuges for most of the world's remaining biodiversity and intact, resilient ecosystems. Since traditional extractive activities must increasingly co-exist with non-exploitative activities such as tourism and conservation, sustainable land use planning is essential for managing trade-offs between incompatible interests in rural areas. With "communicative planning" being promoted since decades, participation is considered crucial for reconciling different planning interests. However, the implementation of participation remains patchy and uneven, not least in sparsely populated regions with low capacity where participation could be a game-changer. Here, we consider municipal comprehensive planning as an existing arena to explore participatory planning approaches potentially capable of simultaneously managing competing land uses and promoting sustainable development in sparsely populated rural contexts. Collaborative work between researchers and public managers resulted in the co-development of an approach based on qualitative village- and interest-based focus groups that facilitated the formulation, negotiation, and legitimization of concrete and detailed local guidelines that prioritize between different land uses. Consequently, the resulting comprehensive plan draft was more readily adopted than the output of a traditional planning process. We found that citizens in sparsely populated municipalities seem willing to actively contribute to rural development processes if they have significant influence.

Highlights

  • Most of the planet’s natural resources are situated, produced, and processed in rural areas that harbor the vast majority of the world’s remaining biodiversity and intact, resilient ecosystems (Watson et al, 2018)

  • Natural resource use forms the backbone of the economy, but there are many different industries that compete for space: forestry, hydropower, indigenous reindeer husbandry, fishing, hunting, recreation and increasingly tourism and wind power

  • This study finds that a first important constraint to "rural planning" in sparsely populated areas is the strong presence of conflicting land uses, in contradiction to the generally positive expectations regarding multi­ functionality in "rural" areas

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Summary

Introduction

Most of the planet’s natural resources are situated, produced, and processed in rural areas that harbor the vast majority of the world’s remaining biodiversity and intact, resilient ecosystems (Watson et al, 2018). Rural areas are today subject to great transformative pressures caused by climate change, biodiversity loss, and the sheer scale of humanity’s general environmental impact, increasing and diversifying natural resource demands, urbanization, and loss of capacity among rural societies These challenges ought to be handled through physical planning (Scott et al, 2019a). In Sweden, municipalities have the main responsibility for physical planning of land and water areas through MCPs. An MCP is an instrument for integrating many different policy sectors with the overall aim of assigning physical spaces for specific development purposes. This provides a legal foundation for promoting integrated comprehensive planning in multi-functional landscapes.

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