Past experience with the EU Common Agricultural Policy and future challenges for landscape development: institutional obstacles, with focus on Denmark in European perspective

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Standard

Past experience with the EU Common Agricultural Policy and future challenges for landscape development : institutional obstacles, with focus on Denmark in European perspective. / Vesterager, Jens Peter; Jepsen, Martin Rudbeck; Busck, Anne Gravsholt; Kristensen, Søren Bech Pilgaard.

2014. Abstract from The Permanent European Conference for the Study of Rural Landscapes, Gothenburg and Mariestad, Sweden.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Vesterager, JP, Jepsen, MR, Busck, AG & Kristensen, SBP 2014, 'Past experience with the EU Common Agricultural Policy and future challenges for landscape development: institutional obstacles, with focus on Denmark in European perspective', The Permanent European Conference for the Study of Rural Landscapes, Gothenburg and Mariestad, Sweden, 08/09/2014 - 12/09/2014.

APA

Vesterager, J. P., Jepsen, M. R., Busck, A. G., & Kristensen, S. B. P. (2014). Past experience with the EU Common Agricultural Policy and future challenges for landscape development: institutional obstacles, with focus on Denmark in European perspective. Abstract from The Permanent European Conference for the Study of Rural Landscapes, Gothenburg and Mariestad, Sweden.

Vancouver

Vesterager JP, Jepsen MR, Busck AG, Kristensen SBP. Past experience with the EU Common Agricultural Policy and future challenges for landscape development: institutional obstacles, with focus on Denmark in European perspective. 2014. Abstract from The Permanent European Conference for the Study of Rural Landscapes, Gothenburg and Mariestad, Sweden.

Author

Vesterager, Jens Peter ; Jepsen, Martin Rudbeck ; Busck, Anne Gravsholt ; Kristensen, Søren Bech Pilgaard. / Past experience with the EU Common Agricultural Policy and future challenges for landscape development : institutional obstacles, with focus on Denmark in European perspective. Abstract from The Permanent European Conference for the Study of Rural Landscapes, Gothenburg and Mariestad, Sweden.1 p.

Bibtex

@conference{0caa0b249cf74c3993e6545eea787d9e,
title = "Past experience with the EU Common Agricultural Policy and future challenges for landscape development: institutional obstacles, with focus on Denmark in European perspective",
abstract = "Countries located in north western Europe, have all been influenced by many similar drivers over the past 50 years, and their landscape development trajectory has largely been coordinated with some differences depending on the history, and natural potentials. The EU has influenced land management and land use through the Common Agricultural Policies (CAP) and several other policies, however it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between effects of EU policies and the general trends on the European continent. In a Danish perspective, the formal effects of EU membership have been effectuated since the accession to the EU by 1973, however the trend towards intensification and industrialisation have emerged since the 2nd world war. Since 1973, landscape challenge have changed from intensification to debates on marginalisation in the early 1980s, introduction of the environmental policies in the mid 1980s with focus on the aquatic environment and lately towards a focus on biodiversity in respect to implementation of the habitats directive. A conglomerate of policy causes and effects on landscape changes is described in details from Denmark in the period from 1973-2014, and with specific analysis of data in a case study area in the period from 2000-2010.The politically ifluenced development in landscapes has been driven by EU policies and institutionalized national traditions, agendas, and discourse. The choices have largely been based on the dichotomy between Agriculturalists and Environmentalists; It is examined if this dichotomy is still determining the choice of implementation of the agri-environmental policy measures in a Danish context. National motives and interest organisations are examined, through text analysis and interviews. Last a perspective on future development is provided. The results are discussed based on perspectives from case studies in other EU countries as part of the Volante project.",
author = "Vesterager, {Jens Peter} and Jepsen, {Martin Rudbeck} and Busck, {Anne Gravsholt} and Kristensen, {S{\o}ren Bech Pilgaard}",
year = "2014",
month = sep,
day = "9",
language = "English",
note = "The Permanent European Conference for the Study of Rural Landscapes, PECSRL ; Conference date: 08-09-2014 Through 12-09-2014",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Past experience with the EU Common Agricultural Policy and future challenges for landscape development

T2 - The Permanent European Conference for the Study of Rural Landscapes

AU - Vesterager, Jens Peter

AU - Jepsen, Martin Rudbeck

AU - Busck, Anne Gravsholt

AU - Kristensen, Søren Bech Pilgaard

N1 - Conference code: 26

PY - 2014/9/9

Y1 - 2014/9/9

N2 - Countries located in north western Europe, have all been influenced by many similar drivers over the past 50 years, and their landscape development trajectory has largely been coordinated with some differences depending on the history, and natural potentials. The EU has influenced land management and land use through the Common Agricultural Policies (CAP) and several other policies, however it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between effects of EU policies and the general trends on the European continent. In a Danish perspective, the formal effects of EU membership have been effectuated since the accession to the EU by 1973, however the trend towards intensification and industrialisation have emerged since the 2nd world war. Since 1973, landscape challenge have changed from intensification to debates on marginalisation in the early 1980s, introduction of the environmental policies in the mid 1980s with focus on the aquatic environment and lately towards a focus on biodiversity in respect to implementation of the habitats directive. A conglomerate of policy causes and effects on landscape changes is described in details from Denmark in the period from 1973-2014, and with specific analysis of data in a case study area in the period from 2000-2010.The politically ifluenced development in landscapes has been driven by EU policies and institutionalized national traditions, agendas, and discourse. The choices have largely been based on the dichotomy between Agriculturalists and Environmentalists; It is examined if this dichotomy is still determining the choice of implementation of the agri-environmental policy measures in a Danish context. National motives and interest organisations are examined, through text analysis and interviews. Last a perspective on future development is provided. The results are discussed based on perspectives from case studies in other EU countries as part of the Volante project.

AB - Countries located in north western Europe, have all been influenced by many similar drivers over the past 50 years, and their landscape development trajectory has largely been coordinated with some differences depending on the history, and natural potentials. The EU has influenced land management and land use through the Common Agricultural Policies (CAP) and several other policies, however it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between effects of EU policies and the general trends on the European continent. In a Danish perspective, the formal effects of EU membership have been effectuated since the accession to the EU by 1973, however the trend towards intensification and industrialisation have emerged since the 2nd world war. Since 1973, landscape challenge have changed from intensification to debates on marginalisation in the early 1980s, introduction of the environmental policies in the mid 1980s with focus on the aquatic environment and lately towards a focus on biodiversity in respect to implementation of the habitats directive. A conglomerate of policy causes and effects on landscape changes is described in details from Denmark in the period from 1973-2014, and with specific analysis of data in a case study area in the period from 2000-2010.The politically ifluenced development in landscapes has been driven by EU policies and institutionalized national traditions, agendas, and discourse. The choices have largely been based on the dichotomy between Agriculturalists and Environmentalists; It is examined if this dichotomy is still determining the choice of implementation of the agri-environmental policy measures in a Danish context. National motives and interest organisations are examined, through text analysis and interviews. Last a perspective on future development is provided. The results are discussed based on perspectives from case studies in other EU countries as part of the Volante project.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 8 September 2014 through 12 September 2014

ER -

ID: 130147350