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The White Horse Press

Heritage Trails: Pathways to Sustainable Development Goals

  • John Martin (author)
  • Joane V. Serrano (author)
  • Jacqueline Nowakowski (author)
  • Dominica Williamson (author)

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Metadata
TitleHeritage Trails
SubtitlePathways to Sustainable Development Goals
ContributorJohn Martin (author)
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3197/63787710662654.ch12
Landing pagehttps://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv2p5zn1t.19
Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
CopyrightThe White Horse Press
PublisherThe White Horse Press
Published on2022-07-31
Page rangepp. 240–263
Print length24 pages
LanguageEnglish (Original)
Media10 illustrations
Contributors

John Martin

(author)

John Martin, Sustainable Earth Institute, University of Plymouth. John’s research focuses specifically on interdisciplinary and co-production approaches to landscape (urban and rural) assessment and monitoring. This includes the mapping and valuation of culture ecosystem services. John uses various mapping techniques ranging from ubiquitous technology tools (Apps, PQGIS) to participatory workshops and remote sensing methods. He has published widely in this area and holds numerous research grants. John is a visiting Professor at the University of the Philippines Open University and a visiting researcher at the University of Gothenburg. In addition to his teaching and research duties, he is also the Head of Research Strategy and Governance.

Joane V. Serrano

(author)

Joane V. Serrano is a professor of the University of the Philippines Open University (UPOU). She teaches Environmental Advocacy, Communication of Scientific and Technical Information and Socio-Cultural Perspectives on the Environment. She has a wide array of research interests, including sustainability, socio-cultural perspectives on the environment, development and environmental communication, health promotion, gender and indigenous knowledge, and open and distance eLearning (ODeL). She is currently the editor in chief of the UPOU-managed Journal of Management and Development Studies. She has published more than thirty publications and presented at ninety conferences and more than sixty public service engagements. She is part of the Won by Walking Network, Digital Literacy and Intuition Network with Ostfalia University, and Satoyama Initiatives with International Partnership for Satoyama Initiatives and Satoyama Development Mechanism.

Jacqueline Nowakowski

(author)

Jacqueline Nowakowski, FSA, is a professional freelance archaeologist and educator who has been working in Cornwall for over 40 years and during that time has directed many excavations and landscape projects, working as Principal Archaeologist for Cornwall Archaeological Unit. A keen advocate and practitioner of community archaeology engagements and events, Jacky has been the lead archaeologist on the community projects Carywennen Quoit restoration project, Troon, The Hurlers on Bodmin Moor and Godrevy Warren at Gwthian in West Cornwall. Currently working on Tintagel Castle Research Project for English Heritage, Jacky leads walks, publishes and lectures in the UK and abroad.

Dominica Williamson

(author)

Dominica Williamson is an interdisciplinary artist called Ecogeographer, (www.ecogeographer.com) working in the field of sustainable design. New materialism is a strong aspect of her eco-phenomenological approach. She largely works with co-production methods to empower people and uses abstract mapping methods to communicate ideas. During a Leverhulme Artist-in-Residence Grant at the University of Plymouth she worked with John Martin. They co-developed a transdisciplinary methodology in order to elicit landscape data. This work is simultaneously building on heritage projects. Based in Cornwall, UK, she works with various partners including NGOs, utilising walking, model making and ethnographic fieldwork as primary foci.