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Featured researches published by Clive Davies.


Landscape Research | 2017

Urban green infrastructure and urban forests: a case study of the Metropolitan Area of Milan

Giovanni Sanesi; Giuseppe Colangelo; Raffaele Lafortezza; Enrico Calvo; Clive Davies

Abstract Rapid expansion of urban built-up areas since the 1950s has led to the Milan region becoming one of the major metropolitan areas of Europe. This has been accompanied by significant structural changes to urban and peri-urban landscapes and fragmentation of formerly contiguous green corridors by the distribution of new urban forms such as housing and transport infrastructure. The need to address the loss of green space was first recognised by policy-makers at the end of the 1970s and in due course, this has led to new policies and laws. These policies included the introduction of the Milan metropolitan parks approach that, nowadays, is represented by numerous urban forests that have become the backbone of green infrastructure (GI) creation and management. In the last decades, a total of 10 000 hectares of new forests and green systems have been created. Boscoincittà and Parco Nord Milano are the best known examples of this approach aimed to redevelop the neighbourhoods of some suburbs of Milan to create multifunctional green spaces (forests, grasslands, wetlands, river corridor, and allotment gardens) in lands previously industrial or uncultivated. The creation and management of urban forests has become the backbone of GI creation and management in the Metropolitan Area of Milan. In recent decades, trends of land use change have been characterised by a rapid decrease in natural and agricultural areas and an increase in artificial and urban structures. Although the phenomenon is growing rapidly in this area, there is evidence of an opposite social and environmental trend highlighting the importance of GI positively affecting urban quality of life. Recent policies and management plans are dealing with this evidence by turning their attention to expanding green areas and infrastructure. The purpose of our investigation is to revisit effective measures designed to increase the quality and quantity of UGI in the metropolitan region under study. To this end, we assessed land use changes and described the potentialities and impacts of policies on such phenomena. The study analyses the main elements of UGI in the Italian context within the framework of the European Union Life + project called Emonfur, a research programme involving, inter alia, the establishment of an Urban Forest inventory and impact analysis of ecosystem services in the Metropolitan Area of Milan. Our research has allowed us to determine the current status of key sites by monitoring the policy and planning decisions that resulted in their development. We believe that such an analysis can pave the way to understand future land-use dynamics not only in northern Italy but in other metropolitan territories as well.


Ri-Vista | 2006

L’esperienza delle Community Forests in Inghilterra

Giuseppe Colangelo; Clive Davies; Raffaele Lafortezza; Giovanni Sanesi

Community Forests can be described as multi-purpose forests that are close to people and that deliver environmental, social and economic benefits. Community Forests involve local communities in the planning, design, management and use of trees, woodland and associated green-spaces. In England, Community Forests are a national programme of environmental regeneration reaching half of the England’s population, enhancing the countryside around major towns and cities, creating beautiful landscapes, rich in wildlife with associated opportunities for recreation and education. Overall, Community Forests cover an area of over four hundred and fifty thousand hectares in England: one of the largest environmental initiatives in Europe. After twenty years, the great involvement of people shows the importance of this new strategy for environmental planning and management.


Urban Forestry & Urban Greening | 2009

Benefits and well-being perceived by people visiting green spaces in periods of heat stress.

Raffaele Lafortezza; Giuseppe Carrus; Giovanni Sanesi; Clive Davies


Iforest - Biogeosciences and Forestry | 2013

Green Infrastructure as a tool to support spatial planning in European urban regions

Raffaele Lafortezza; Clive Davies; Giovanni Sanesi; Cecil C. Konijnendijk


Urban Forestry & Urban Greening | 2013

Structural diversity and height growth models in urban forest plantations: A case-study in northern Italy

Pasquale A. Marziliano; Raffaele Lafortezza; Giuseppe Colangelo; Clive Davies; Giovanni Sanesi


Land Use Policy | 2017

The DPSIR framework in support of green infrastructure planning: A case study in Southern Italy

Marinella Spanò; Francesco Gentile; Clive Davies; Raffaele Lafortezza


Italian Journal of Agronomy | 2013

Root system investigation in sclerophyllous vegetation: an overview

Giovanni Sanesi; Raffaele Lafortezza; Giuseppe Colangelo; Pasquale A. Marziliano; Clive Davies


Archive | 2015

Green Infrastructure Planning and Implementation: The status of European green space planning and implementation based on an analysis of selected European city-regions.

Clive Davies; Raffaele Lafortezza; Rieke Hansen; Yole DeBellis; Emily Lorance Rall; Stephan Pauleit


Land Use Policy | 2017

Urban green infrastructure in Europe: Is greenspace planning and policy compliant?

Clive Davies; Raffaele Lafortezza


Land Use Policy | 2018

Transitional path to the adoption of nature-based solutions

Clive Davies; Raffaele Lafortezza

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