| Home > | Quick links > | Library > | Help > |
| About us > | Contact us > | News > | |||||||||||
|
| Social forestry
The programme uses social science approaches to address organisational, institutional and societal questions across the whole forestry sector. The research includes work with individuals, social groups and communities and also organisations, institutions and processes such as land-use planning and EC funding programmes. The programme is closely linked to the Forestry Commission's economic and statistical research. The principal areas of investigation within Forest Research are:
Externally commissioned research draws on the skills of some of the UK's leading social research institutions and includes a number of PhD studentships co-funded with the Economic and Social Research Council. The research is intended to identify ways in which the Forestry Commission's work can tie in to major Government policy themes:
The underlying aims of the research are 1) to understand how forestry policy can align with wider social policy, and the activities and supporting conditions that this requires and 2) to understand the human factors that influence forestry. The programme therefore combines theoretical and practical approaches. Commissioned reports Date: May 1998 Summary: The brief from the Forestry Commission asked for a review of research in the following areas: a) landscape perceptions, especially those of forests and woodlands; The review was to avoid the areas of landscape preference unless these were linked specifically to perception. In addition, the consultants were asked to "recommend potentially fruitful areas of research for the Forestry Commission to pursue and areas to be avoided because there is little further to be gained". | ||||||