TRABALHOS ACADÉMICOS

VÍDEOS, TEXTOS, ARTIGOS E PUBLICAÇÕES

Contributo para a história da Arquitectura Paisagista em Portugal – Arquitecto Paisagista António Facco Vianna Barreto

Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Arquitectura Paisagista de Francisco Maria Marques de Aguiar Salvação Barreto. Instituto Superior de Agronomia. 2011

Método das preferências visuais

Resumo da investigação sobre a aplicação do método de preferências visuais de Carl Steinitz relativamente à paisagem do Barreiro, Seixal e Moita.

The governance of the coastal region: evolutionary changes in the conceptualisation and integration of landscape in Portuguese coastal planning institutions

Carla Gonçalves e Paulo Pinho

Context Coastal landscapes are unique and fragile socio-ecological systems, yet despite political and scientific efforts toward integrated coastal governance, challenges such as fragmented approaches, multiple boundaries, and inadequate policy integration persist.
While landscape governance offers significant potential for rethinking coastal governance by emphasising the integrative power of landscapes, many scientific discussions still employ a binary perspective, limiting its full potential. Additionally, research on how the conceptualisation and integration of landscape has evolved in European coastal planning institutions remains scarce.

A manifesto for coastal landscape governance: Reframing the relationship between coastal and landscape governance

Carla Gonçalvese Paulo Pinho

There is an urgent demand for substantial reforms in the governance of coastal regions. Recent research advocates for a transformative shift in European coastal governance system towards a landscape governance approach. This perspective, informed by a narrative literature review on coastal and landscape governance, explores the potential value of coastal landscape governance, drawing on the Council of Europe Landscape Convention. Our results, presented in the form of a manifesto, underscore the need to move beyond political administrative boundaries and address all coastal landscapes as socio-ecological systems. It emphasises the necessity for the State to recognise them as a public and common good, establishing a specific governance arena with dedicated actors and institutions. The manifesto also advocates for landscape justice through knowledge co production, urging transformative change and landscape based regional design to envision alternative futures. Additionally, it calls for regionalising coastal landscape governance and invites scholars from other transdisciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives to contribute to this research agenda.