Marion Shoard | |
---|---|
Born | Redruth, Cornwall | 6 April 1949
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | St Hilda's College, Oxford |
Occupation(s) | Writer, campaigner |
Website | marionshoard |
Marion Shoard (born 6 April 1949) is a British writer and campaigner. She is best known for her work concerning access to the countryside and land use conflicts. [1] In 2002 she became the first person to give a name to the "edgelands" between town and country. [2] Since 2004 she has also written and campaigned about older people's issues.
Shord was born in Redruth, Cornwall but spent most of her childhood in Ramsgate, Kent. [3] She was educated at Clarendon House Grammar School in Ramsgate, Kent and St Hilda's College, Oxford, where she read zoology, before studying town and country planning at Kingston-upon-Thames Polytechnic (now Kingston University).
She worked for four years at the Council for the Protection of Rural England (CPRE) before writing her first book, The Theft of the Countryside (1980). The book triggered debate over the conflict between modern industrial agriculture and the conservation of the UK's countryside. [4] In 1987 Shoard published This Land is Our Land, which examined the history of the relationship between landowners and the landless and proposed it be altered. The same year Shoard presented a documentary on the same subject, Power in the Land.
Shoard continued campaigning, teaching planning at the University of Reading, University College London and Anglia Ruskin University and writing articles for newspapers and magazines. An updated edition of This Land is Our Land was published in 1997.
In 1999 Shoard published A Right to Roam, which explored how a general right of access to the UK's countryside might work. In 2002, her essay on edgelands was the first to name and set forward the characteristics of an emerging landscape on the urban fringe. [5]
After Shoard's mother fell ill in the 1990s, she wrote a guidebook, A Survival Guide to Later Life, offering advice to older people and their carers. A new book, How to Handle Later Life, was published on 1 September 2017.
Shoard's first book was an attempt to explain how farming was transforming the countryside by chronicling the loss of landscape features and wildlife diversity. It explores the impact of subsidies on such change and food over-production. Shoard proposes a variety of planning control extensions, the designation of new national parks and measures to repair damaged landscapes.
The Theft of the Countryside led to renewed focus on whether steps should be taken to protect the countryside against industrial agriculture. [6]
First published in 1987, followed by an updated edition in 1997 with a foreword by George Monbiot, Shoard's second book focuses on land ownership and the legacy of much of the UK's land having been in the possession of a relatively small number of people for a long period of time. It attempts to analyse the scope of landowners' power over the social structure of the countryside and beyond, contrasting the situation with that abroad. Shoard proposes a general right of access and a form of green land taxation in Britain.
The book, which was made into a Channel 4 documentary, is regarded a key text on the subject. [7] [8]
Published in 1999, Shoard's third book explores the history of access to the countryside in the UK and abroad. It discusses the possible impact and drawbacks of the partial right later enacted in the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 passed by the Labour government under Tony Blair. A Right to Roam was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize and won the Outdoor Writers and Photographers Guild's book of the year award. Nine years later Shoard also won that body's lifetime achievement award. [9]
In 2004, Shoard wrote a guidebook for older people and their relatives. It was prompted by Shoard's experience struggling to find independent and indepth advice after her own mother fell ill. [10] [11]
In 2017, Shoard published a much-expanded, 1,160-page second book about older people's issues. A review in the Evening Standard described it as "unique, essential and considerate", while another in the Psychology of Older People called it "the best collection of sound advice that I have come across". The Nursing Times said it was "extremely well written, informative, well thought through" and that "everyone should read this book" while Third Age Matters, the U3A's newsletter, said, "There should be a copy in every library, council office, doctor’s practice, MP’s surgery, Citizens Advice Bureau, Age UK office, if not in every household". Meanwhile The Methodist Recorder said, “This book will be of great value to middle-aged and elderly individuals as well as to family carers of older relatives. Reliable and comprehensive ... It should be found in every public library.”
In the 1980s, Shoard wrote regular columns in Environment Now magazine and the Today newspaper as well as frequently for The Times, The Guardian and History Today.
An early essay by Shoard suggested that moor and upland enthusiasts had a disproportionate amount of leverage over landscape policy. [12] In The Theft of the Countryside and articles in The Times, [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] Shoard argued lowland landscape required greater protection, in part through national parks. She also suggested they be created in Scotland and Northern Ireland, which then had no national parks. [18] [19]
Shoard has also argued landscapes are harder to protect than buildings, [20] discussed the way in which children use the countryside, [21] and the impact of place on the work of poets such as Robert Frost [22] and Dylan Thomas. [23]
In 2002, Shoard wrote an essay entitled "Edgelands", [24] which was the first work to identify a landscape Shoard calls "a netherworld neither urban or rural … the hotchpotch collection of superstores, sewage works, golf courses and surprisingly wildlife-rich roughlands which sit between town and country in the urban fringe". [25] The essay identifies the characteristics of the edgelands, discusses the threats that face them and argues they should be greater celebrated. The essay won the Outdoor Writers and Photographers Guild's Award of Excellence for the best one-off feature in 2003 and its principles have been adopted by nature writers such as Robert Macfarlane and in academia. [26] [27] In 2004, Shoard co-authored a report on the urban fringe for the Countryside Agency. [28]
In an essay in 1976 Shoard argued that recreation ought to play a greater role in promoting countryside conservation. [29] An essay by Shoard in 1998 questioned the assumptions underlying the debate about greater public access. [30] At the time of the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000, Shoard wrote extensively about the ideology of the proposed legislation [31] and its possible limitations. [32]
This Land is Our Land charts the struggles over land rights in Britain and abroad, explores the ways in which land owners currently wield power, and the effectiveness of measures which seek to protect the public interest in land such as common land, public footpaths and conservation designations. Shoard puts forward proposals for a new land tax modelled on that advocated by the American radical Henry George, as well as a general right of access to the countryside which would overturn the present law of trespass.
Shoard’s experience with her mother and with many other people whom she has helped over the years has convinced her that the lives of older people could be immeasurably enriched were they to acquaint themselves with information about their changing physiological and psychological needs and how to make the most of the services and legal rights available to older people. In 2004 Constable and Robinson published her 600-page A Survival Guide to Later Life, which was largely replaced in 2017 by her 1000-page How to Handle Later Life, published by Amaranth Books.
Shoard writes and speaks about older people’s issues, gives advice to individuals and their families and campaigns for change.
In 2005, Shoard claimed, "Government at both national and local levels is one of the worst perpetrators of age discrimination", with particular reference to the reduction by two-thirds in the number of NHS beds for elderly people with long-term disabling conditions over the last quarter of the 20th century. [33] This had left those who would have received NHS care having to pay the considerable cost in nursing homes, many of which provide a low standard of care. In 2005, Shoard also proposed [34] a new charter for carers of older and disabled people, pointing out that, "The decision to become a carer can transform a person's life just as dramatically if not more so than becoming a parent".
Shoard has argued against a change in legislation which would sanction assisted suicide, writing that:
Institutionalising the killing of elderly people would diminish the sanctity of life in our society as a whole. In particular, it would further undermine the position of elderly people who need care, whether or not their lives are threatened. What these citizens need is a thorough-going programme of help and support and a radical improvement in their status in society, not a licence to be killed. [35]
Shoard’s mother spent short periods in three care homes in the late 1990s and the treatment of older and disabled people in these establishments has been an enduring interest of hers ever since. Since the launch of How to Handle Later Life at Tunbridge Wells Waterstones in 2017, she has been calling for care home residents to be given a right of access to the outdoors. [36]
During the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, she urged that people living in care homes should enjoy much greater contact with people and places outside homes, where this can be done safely, than care home managers were permitting on the ground. [37] [38] Shoard served for several years as a trustee of the voluntary group the Relatives and Residents Association, which seeks to help older and disabled people living in care homes and their families.
In 2019 Shoard joined the executive committee of the ecumenical organisation Christians on Ageing and has put forward suggestions for ways in which faith groups could provide better and more informed support to older people in articles in Reform, The Church of England Newspaper and the journal of Christians on Ageing, plus. [39] [40] [41]
Shoard was involved in the Sutton branch, London Area Forum and National Advisory Council of the Alzheimer's Society, and sits on the Society's Quality Research in Dementia Forum, which evaluates applications for research project funding. Shoard has argued that a major shift in perceptions of the disease is needed.
Shoard fought to prevent building on May Hill in Gloucestershire and the erection of a grid of polytunnels over an area of countryside frequented by the Dymock poets. [42] She led campaigns in Dorking, Surrey, to stop Mole Valley district council reducing a day centre [43] and Strood in Kent to stop Medway council moving Strood public library and selling off the site for housing. [44]
• Power in the Land: documentary based on Shoard's book This Land is Our Land and presented by Shoard, Channel 4, 1987
• Accessing All Areas: interview in Planning, 11 June 1999
• The Essential Marion Shoard: interview by Jim Perrin, The Great Outdoors, November 2000
• Explorers welcome: interview with Shoard about the impact of the Countryside and Rights of Way Act's right to roam legislation, Trail magazine, November 2010
• Lord Peter Melchett citing Shoard as one of the most inspiring people he's met, Ham & High, February 2014
• Growing Older Gracefully: interview by Shanelle Manderson, The Salvationist, 24 February 2018
• Interview by Alex Reece, The Simple Things, April 2018
The freedom to roam, or "everyman's right", is the general public's right to access certain public or privately owned land, lakes, and rivers for recreation and exercise. The right is sometimes called the right of public access to the wilderness or the "right to roam".
Fay Godwin was a British photographer known for her black-and-white landscapes of the British countryside and coast.
The mass trespass of Kinder Scout was a trespass protest at Kinder Scout in the Peak District, Derbyshire, England, on 24 April 1932. The protest sought to highlight that walkers were denied access to areas of open countryside which had been fenced off by wealthy landowners who forbade public access. It was organised by communist leader and Jewish anti-fascist Benny Rothman, the secretary of the British Workers' Sports Federation and a member of the Young Communist League.
The Countryside Code is a set of guidelines designed for use by both the public and land managers across England and Wales. It is titled as a guide for enjoying parks and waterways, coast and countryside. It was established in 2004 as a relaunch of The Country Code, which existed since the 1930s.
The Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000, known informally as the CRoW Act or "Right to Roam" Act, is a United Kingdom Act of Parliament affecting England and Wales which came into force on 30 November 2000.
Keep Ireland Open is a voluntary campaign organisation established to promote access to the Irish countryside and walkways. Founded in 1994, its chairman is former Green Party TD, Roger Garland. The group believes Irish legislation protecting rights-of-way and access to recreational use of land is inadequate and minimal. It consists of combination of individual members and various outdoors and environmental groups; including the Irish Ramblers, An Óige, all of the Scout and Guide Associations, the United Farmers Association, Irish Wildlife Trust, Association of Irish Riding Clubs, Federation of Local History Society and a number of walking groups. It claims that the Republic of Ireland has one of the poorest records of protecting walking routes in Europe and that it is heavily influenced by farmers' lobby groups that resist further legislation. The organisation states freedom to roam over rough grazing land, a network of well-maintained rights-of-way in lowland areas and minimisation of barbed-wire fencing in mountain areas and beaches, as its aspirations. Keep Ireland Open has also been involved in several individual access disputes around the country, including in counties Wicklow, Cork, Sligo, Donegal, Mayo. These include groups such as the Uggool Beach and Free the Old Head of Kinsale campaigns which campaign for restoration of public access where it was previously enjoyed.
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Ramblers is the trading name of the Ramblers Association Great Britain's walking charity. The Ramblers is also a membership organisation with around 100,000 members and a network of volunteers who maintain and protect the path network. The organisation was founded in 1935 and campaigns to keep the British countryside open to all.
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