The commons and emergent land in Kvarken Archipelago, Finland: governing an expanding recreational resource

In this article, we explore governance structures of the recreational landscape of Kvarken Archipelago in Western Finland, an area where shore displacement occurs due to land rise and emergent (pristine) land is continuously created. Traditionally a production landscape, of fishing and small-scale...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kristina Svels, Ulrika Åkerlund
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 2018-11-01
Series:Fennia: International Journal of Geography
Online Access:https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/69022
id doaj-626ed9018cb04b0e9aad07d60633ed61
record_format Article
spelling doaj-626ed9018cb04b0e9aad07d60633ed612020-11-25T03:19:03ZengGeographical Society of FinlandFennia: International Journal of Geography1798-56172018-11-01196210.11143/fennia.69022The commons and emergent land in Kvarken Archipelago, Finland: governing an expanding recreational resourceKristina Svels0Ulrika Åkerlund1Nordland Research InstituteKarlstad University In this article, we explore governance structures of the recreational landscape of Kvarken Archipelago in Western Finland, an area where shore displacement occurs due to land rise and emergent (pristine) land is continuously created. Traditionally a production landscape, of fishing and small-scale agriculture, the recreational value of the archipelago has been acknowledged. The area is a popular second home destination and was designated UNESCO World Heritage in 2006. There are roughly 10,000 second homes within the study area, of which 14% are leaseholds located on emergent land. The emergent land thus makes up a common-pool resource system where private and collective use rights overlap. This article aims to understand the implications for recreational use (second home ownership) through interviews with different local stakeholders such as municipality planners, representatives of commons, local communities, and with environmental and land survey authorities. Especially, it sets out to ask, what kinds of value are created within the recreational resource system, what power relationships within the commons steer the management of the recreational resource system, and what are the implications for recreational use of the landscape. The results show different logics of recreational resource management locally in the studied commons. Access to second homes located within the collectively owned emergent land is limited to part-owners of the commons and tend to be less commercialized and also less modernized than privately owned second home plots. https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/69022
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kristina Svels
Ulrika Åkerlund
spellingShingle Kristina Svels
Ulrika Åkerlund
The commons and emergent land in Kvarken Archipelago, Finland: governing an expanding recreational resource
Fennia: International Journal of Geography
author_facet Kristina Svels
Ulrika Åkerlund
author_sort Kristina Svels
title The commons and emergent land in Kvarken Archipelago, Finland: governing an expanding recreational resource
title_short The commons and emergent land in Kvarken Archipelago, Finland: governing an expanding recreational resource
title_full The commons and emergent land in Kvarken Archipelago, Finland: governing an expanding recreational resource
title_fullStr The commons and emergent land in Kvarken Archipelago, Finland: governing an expanding recreational resource
title_full_unstemmed The commons and emergent land in Kvarken Archipelago, Finland: governing an expanding recreational resource
title_sort commons and emergent land in kvarken archipelago, finland: governing an expanding recreational resource
publisher Geographical Society of Finland
series Fennia: International Journal of Geography
issn 1798-5617
publishDate 2018-11-01
description In this article, we explore governance structures of the recreational landscape of Kvarken Archipelago in Western Finland, an area where shore displacement occurs due to land rise and emergent (pristine) land is continuously created. Traditionally a production landscape, of fishing and small-scale agriculture, the recreational value of the archipelago has been acknowledged. The area is a popular second home destination and was designated UNESCO World Heritage in 2006. There are roughly 10,000 second homes within the study area, of which 14% are leaseholds located on emergent land. The emergent land thus makes up a common-pool resource system where private and collective use rights overlap. This article aims to understand the implications for recreational use (second home ownership) through interviews with different local stakeholders such as municipality planners, representatives of commons, local communities, and with environmental and land survey authorities. Especially, it sets out to ask, what kinds of value are created within the recreational resource system, what power relationships within the commons steer the management of the recreational resource system, and what are the implications for recreational use of the landscape. The results show different logics of recreational resource management locally in the studied commons. Access to second homes located within the collectively owned emergent land is limited to part-owners of the commons and tend to be less commercialized and also less modernized than privately owned second home plots.
url https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/69022
work_keys_str_mv AT kristinasvels thecommonsandemergentlandinkvarkenarchipelagofinlandgoverninganexpandingrecreationalresource
AT ulrikaakerlund thecommonsandemergentlandinkvarkenarchipelagofinlandgoverninganexpandingrecreationalresource
AT kristinasvels commonsandemergentlandinkvarkenarchipelagofinlandgoverninganexpandingrecreationalresource
AT ulrikaakerlund commonsandemergentlandinkvarkenarchipelagofinlandgoverninganexpandingrecreationalresource
_version_ 1724624034946088960