色色啦

News

Finland aims to establish a Finnish landscape observatory

A wide range of Finnish governmental, academic and civil society institutions have created a Consortium to study the constitution of the Landscape Observatory of Finland.
landscape_observatory_en_en.jpg

The Consortium integrates the Ministry of the Environment, The National Board of Antiquities, The Finnish Environment Centre (SYKE), The Natural Resource Centre of Finland (LUKE), The University of Helsinki, The University of Jyv盲skyl盲, The University of Turku, The Aalto University, the Professional Association of Landscape Architects (MARK) and the Finnish Society for Cultural Environment Studies.

The Consortium is the first cross-party co-operation in the field of landscape management and research in Finland and was born after a series of national and international seminars organized by Aalto University in Otaniemi. During those seminars, the representatives of the above-mentioned institutions analyzed the current level of implementation of the European Landscape Convention in Finland and agreed in the high potential that a Landscape Observatory could have in that process.

The concept of Landscape Observatory is based on the European Landscape Convention and follows the recommendations of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe. According to those recommendations, Landscape Observatories are strategic tools for describing the condition and evolution of landscapes over time, for exchanging experiences and knowledge concerning landscape protection, management, planning and participation, for measuring the effectiveness of landscape policies and for forecasting the effects that transformative factors can have on the landscape.

Following these principles, the Landscape Observatory of Finland, would contribute to have a better knowledge of the Finnish Landscapes, both the exceptional and the ordinary, and would support the implementation of other related strategies like the Cultural Environment Strategy and national strategy on Sustainable Development.

鈥淭he Consortium will start soon its work and is expected to define the goals, structure and institutional framework for the possible Landscape Observatory of Finland. We want to make an effective, inclusive and useful platform that can contribute to the general interests of the Finnish society and that can take advantage of the internal diversity that we already have in the Consortium,鈥 says Professor Juanjo Galan from Aalto University.

More information:

  • Juanjo Galan, Professor in Landscape Architecture, Aalto University: juanjo.galan@aalto.fi
  • Tapio Heikkil盲, Senior Environmental Adviser, Ministry of the Environment: tapio.heikkila@ym.fi
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Microscope image of wavy skin tissue layer, pink and purple cells forming dense clusters
Cooperation, Studies, University Published:

Apply now: Bioengineering human tissue: Design, fabrication, analysis

Unite!鈥檚 Blended Intensive Programme (BIP) on bioengineering human tissue combines online learning with hands-on training in Germany.
Filmbot robot
Research & Art Published:

Researchers make micromanipulation more accessible

FilMBot aims to lower the barrier to high-precision work in education, research, and micro-assembly
Research often involves choosing a single analytic path, but there are other options available, Picture: Matti Ahlgren, Aalto University.
Press releases Published:

Scientific conclusions depend on who performs the analysis

More than 450 independent researchers from around the world conducted over 500 re-analyses of datasets from one hundred previously published studies in the social and behavioural sciences. All analysts received the same data and the same central research question, but they were free to carry out the analysis based on their own expert judgment.
Group of students at round tables talking and working on laptops in a bright office space
Research & Art, Studies Published:

Positive communication and improvisation help build students鈥 communication skills to meet employer needs

The School of Business redesigned its mandatory first-year communication course