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The Ramblers

2 Projects, page 1 of 1
  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: AH/V00509X/1
    Funder Contribution: 803,711 GBP

    In England and Wales there are around 140,000 miles of rights of way, essential infrastructure for those wishing to access the countryside for both commuting and recreational uses. However, there has been little attention paid to histories of the mapping, maintenance and usage of this extensive network in post-war Britain. 'In All Our Footsteps' will focus on the strategies pursued by local government, civil society, the third sector and citizen-activists in order to record and establish the public ways network in England and Wales after the Second World War - as well as the problems encountered by the post-war mapping exercise at the time. Our focus will exclude Scotland partly for reasons of geographical feasibility of the study, but mainly because there has never been an equivalent definitive effort in Scotland. This ambitious attempt to record all the rights of way in England and Wales has been brought into sharp focus by the deadline of January 2026 for the legal identification of all such paths under the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000. The Ramblers' current 'Don't Lose Your Way' campaign aims to identify and officially map as many rights of way as possible before they are permanently lost to the public. As well as being important historic artefacts, rights of way are central in facilitating activities for physical and mental health such as walking, and the ability to connect humans to nature for wellbeing - pressing requirements amidst concerns over mental health and worsening obesity. We will work with The Ramblers, as our Project Partner, as well as representatives from Historic England, Natural England, The National Trust, walking practitioners and academics from a range of disciplines to interrogate the importance of rights of way in their past and present context. In this way we will connect history to current policy and practice. In particular the project will aim to decode and popularise the way we see walking and wellbeing, emphasising how different groups have made and are making use of rights of way to support their own health and wellbeing priorities, and how more socially inclusive rights of way networks could be developed to encourage meaningful engagement with nature, as well as increased physical activity for all. By working with third sector organisations and experts both within and beyond academia we will provide historical insights into current and future issues relating to rights of way in England and Wales. Throughout our project activities will shaped by these groups and will feed directly into the work of The Ramblers in particular, as they map historic rights of way. We will organize a series of workshops to discuss key challenges faced by rights of way in relation to use, human diversity, economics and environmental change. By foregrounding rights of way infrastructure itself, we will encourage stakeholders and policy makers to focus attention on paths themselves and how they enable a range of diverse user groups, and to view rights of way as an important historical as well as contemporary asset in their own right. Outcomes will include better links between academics, practitioners, path users and policymakers, and support for deepening these connections further, all supported by an Open Access edited book, a series of policy documents and a digital hub.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: AH/V01515X/1
    Funder Contribution: 288,219 GBP

    There is a proven evidence base for the benefits of both walking and art on physical health and mental wellbeing. Our project addresses the lacuna between the arts and those working to promote walking well in the wider community. Walking organisations need rapidly to find new ways to support their members during social restrictions, and to diversify membership to support more people to walk well in and beyond a pandemic. COVID-19 poses an unprecedented challenge to cultural organisations with the need to rethink practices due to physical distancing. Responses to lockdown have created the opportunity to understand how creative walking activities have been and could be used to mitigate isolation and anxiety, maintain health and wellbeing, enhance social connectivity, and facilitate cultural empowerment. This project will deliver a significant contribution to the understanding of, and response to, the COVID-19 pandemic and its impacts, generate new data about a key activity, and innovate arts resources for rapid implementation to support health, wellbeing, resilience and cultural participation. Collaborating with partner organisations, artists, cultural workers, and residents, the project will capture: a) the walking experiences and creative interventions of people during COVID-19 restrictions. b) the 'lockdown' work of artists using walking activity within conditions of restriction. c) the potential of the arts to sustain, encourage and more equitably support walking during and recovering from a pandemic. Key deliverables include: i) a new data set and report on walking experiences and creative approaches to walking well and safely ii) a curated digital gallery of creative walking models, open-access Walking Toolkits and piloted prototypes iii) a Cultural Walking Summit iv) three peer-reviewed articles v) a new cross-sectoral partnership.

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