What stories should a ‘National Nature Monument’ tell? Lessons from the German Green Belt (Record no. 10560)

MARC details
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control field 20200908102129.0
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100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Pieck, Sonja K
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Title What stories should a ‘National Nature Monument’ tell? Lessons from the German Green Belt
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Name of publisher, distributor, etc Sage,
Date of publication, distribution, etc 2019.
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Pages Vol 26, Issue 2, 2019. (195-210 p.)
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Summary, etc For four decades, Germany was ground zero of the Cold War, cut in two by an 870-mile-long wall and sophisticated military infrastructure that separated the capitalist west and the communist east. This border region, shaped by demographic and economic decline, became an ecological refuge for over a thousand of Germany’s endangered plant and animal species. In 1989, when the wall fell, West and East German conservationists launched an effort to convert the borderlands into a protected ecological corridor called the ‘Green Belt’. This essay takes a closer look at the on-the-ground implications of such a project by examining what, and whose, stories it tells. As a case study, it looks at the German federal state of Thuringia’s recent decision to create the country’s first ‘National Nature Monument’, a new protected area category, out of the section of the Green Belt that runs through that state. The article argues that there are three deftly interwoven narratives: the story of German Democratic Republic oppression, of ecological resurgence, and of the rural idyll. All are powerfully evocative of some of the historical meanings of this border space and together they manage to craft an intriguing, hopeful, and pragmatic story of nature–culture hybridity. In the process, however this storyline silences others, including that of local farmers, some of whom reject what they see as an overreach of conservation. Rethinking the audience and in turn developing narratives about protected areas that more accurately represent local histories could be one component of creating ownership and increasing the acceptance of these spaces among local communities. Conservation and restoration, both in Germany and beyond, may well require plurivocal narratives.
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Subject biodiversity conservation
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Subject borderlands
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Subject environmental history
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Subject restoration ecology
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Subject narratives
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Host Biblionumber 10528
Host Itemnumber 15377
Place, publisher, and date of publication Sage publisher 2019
Title Cultural geographies
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Uniform Resource Identifier https://doi.org/10.1177/1474474018815911
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Koha item type Articles
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