Stockholm university

Research project Legal perspectives on landscape planning for a sustainable climate change transition

Research project in environmental law that was granted funding within FORMAS 'call "Community planning for change", which aims to support projects that will provide knowledge and solutions to develop Swedish community planning so that it creates conditions for transition to sustainable societies.

solar panels with the sunny sky
Photo: Oleg Marchak / Mostphotos

Sweden has set ambitious energy and climate goals to achieve international commitments and mitigate and adapt to climate change. Achieving these goals requires a societal transformation. This can be expected to take over large areas of land and lead to conflicts of interest. Without a holistic view of balancing interests, there is a risk that the change will take place at the expense of other sustainability goals, such as preservation of biological diversity and cultural heritages values. Loss of such values can be costly or, in the worst case, impossible to recover. It can also lead to failing international commitments.

A potentially effective instrument for achieving such a holistic view in this societal transformation is landscape planning. There is extensive research, and a great deal of political agreement, on the need for a holistic view of land and water management. Nevertheless, there is a great lack of knowledge about how landscape planning can be implemented legally to contribute to a sustainable climate change transition. This project aims to fill this knowledge gap.

Project members

Project managers

Anna Christiernsson

Associate senior lecturer

Department of Law
Profilbild

Members

Per Angelstam

Senior Advisor

Swedish University of Agricultural Science

Melina Malafry

Postdoctoral fellow

Departement of Law, Uppsala University

Petra Eriksson

junior lecturer

Department of Art History, Uppsala University

Mia Geijer

Senior lecturer

Departement of Art History, Uppsala University