University of Nottingham
  

Print media

 

In addition to authoring books and publishing in academic journals, a number of Landscape and Environment projects have received coverage in newspapers and specialist interest magazines. Theses are listed below by year of publication.

2010

Cohen, S. and Lashua, B. (2010). Dig the beat. British Archaeology. January 2010:22-27. Project: Popular musicscapes and the characterisation of the urban environment.

Fisher, M. (2010). ‘A requiem for neoliberal England'. Sight and Sound. November 2010. Project: The future of landscape and the moving image.

Dillon, B. (2010). 'Before Keiller's (or Robinson's) prophetic gaze, the English countryside is a monument to itself, and ripe for revolutionary appropriation'. The Guardian, Saturday 20th November 2010Project: The future of landscape and the moving image.

2009

AHRC. (2009). Pirates and lawlessness on the high seas. Narratives of the Indian Ocean. Podium (AHRC magazine). 13:12-13. Project: The Indian Ocean: narratives in literature and in law.

Schofield, J. (2009). Choose your own heritage. New Scientist. 21st February, p.23. Project: Popular musicscapes and the characterisation of the urban environment.

2008

AHRC. (2008). ‘The Cultured Rainforest’: Long-term human ecological histories in the highlands of Borneo. Podium (AHRC magazine). 8:6. Project: The Cultured Rainforest: Long-term human ecological histories in the highlands of Borneo.

AHRC. (2008). Getting under the skin of rural England. Podium (AHRC magazine). 9:10-11. Project: Carrlands.

Coates, P., Cole, T., Dudley, M., and Pearson, C. (2008). Militarized landscapes in twentieth-century Britain, France and the United States. Sanctuary (Ministry of Defence conservation flagship magazine). 37:26-29. Project: Militarized landscapes in the twentieth-century: Britain, France and the United States.

Coates, P., Cole, T., Dudley, M., and Pearson, C. (2008). Militarized landscapes in twentieth-century Britain, France and the United States.

Shipsides, D. (2008). Art of climbing. Summit Magazine. 49: 18-20. Project: Touchstone test-piece.

2007

Richardson, C. (2007). Incidental person. Map Magazine. August 2007. Project: Landscape as conceptual art: retrieving values in John Latham's conceptualisation of 'Five Sisters' (1976) as monumental process sculptures.

2006

Richardson, C. (2006). Breathing space. Free Association. Summer 2006Project: Landscape as conceptual art: retrieving values in John Latham's conceptualisation of 'Five Sisters' (1976) as monumental process sculptures.

Landscape and Environment Programme

School of Geography
University Park
University of Nottingham
Nottingham, NG7 2RD

telephone: +44 (0) 115 84 66071
email: landscape@nottingham.ac.uk