Gunning for rural England: the politics of the promotion of military land use in the Northumberland National Park

Authors
Citation
R. Woodward, Gunning for rural England: the politics of the promotion of military land use in the Northumberland National Park, J RURAL ST, 15(1), 1999, pp. 17-33
Citations number
92
Categorie Soggetti
EnvirnmentalStudies Geografy & Development
Journal title
JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES
ISSN journal
07430167 → ACNP
Volume
15
Issue
1
Year of publication
1999
Pages
17 - 33
Database
ISI
SICI code
0743-0167(199901)15:1<17:GFRETP>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
The UK's Ministry of Defence (MoD) on behalf of the armed forces owns subst antial areas of land in the UK. Interest in the use and management of this land - the defence estate - has grown in the 1990s following changes in lan d use as a consequence of the restructuring of the armed forces. This paper examines the portrayal of military land use by the MoD, using a conceptual framework informed by theories of discourse and the social construction of rurality. Empirical evidence is drawn from a 1997 public inquiry into deve lopments proposed by the MoD to the Otterburn Training Area in the Northumb erland National Park. The paper examines how military training in a nationa l park is constructed as a legitimate use of this space, with reference to discourses of conservation and environmental protection. The paper goes on to examine the ways in which the landscape of the training area is portraye d with reference to discourses about the appearance and consumption of the countryside. The paper concludes by looking at the effect of discourses of defence and national security in shaping the Otterburn debate, and in shapi ng the claims of the armed forces as defenders of the natural environment. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.