The purpose of this project is to scope the potential of phytostabilisation – planting designed to keep materials in place - as an environmentally sensitive, inclusive and low-cost strategy that will allow for an enhanced social resilience in the face of food insecurity and economic precariousness (keeping roads working) while at the same time enhancing the ecological resilience of much needed arable lands (designing roadsides that mediate erosion and can potentially even become productive in their own right) and the long-term social resilience of communities that are precariously connected via these roads.
This foundation-building project brings together a range of expertise to produce a cohesive inter-disciplinary strategy for enhancing a ‘slow’, socio-ecological resilience by engaging social arts and public pedagogies with environmental sciences to help bridge the gap between immediate needs and sustainable futures. This dynamic involves an engagement with: 1. Public and community based pedagogies to understand and educate those involved in the possibilities, requirements, and implications; 2. The arts to engage social imaginations of alternative futures, civic belonging, and community cohesion; 3. Geochemistry, engineering, and agronomy to ensure the appropriate and effective design of techniques and selection of organisms; 4. Geopolitics and environmental governance as a means of envisioning the broad social, political and cross-border contexts within which these can be proffered; and 5. Community, cross-cultural, and multimodal facilitation.
PI and Co-Pis: Mia Perry and Deborah Dixon (School of Geographical and Earth Sciences)
Start and End Date: Oct 2016 – Jan 2017
Funder and funding amount: ESRC (Impact Acceleration Account); £13,000
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