Publication

Special issue on being outdoors part 2: Being in the urban outdoors

Date
2022-06-19
Type
Other
Keywords
Abstract
Traditionally, outdoor recreation has been characterised as taking place in remote, rural and sometimes distant and exotic settings, that are somehow separate, and separated from normal places of work and residence (Pigram and Jenkins 2006). Recreation in such settings has been premised on an assumed desire to ‘escape’ from the urban and the mundane aspects of everyday life to nature-based settings defined by beauty and tranquillity (Williams 1995). This characterization has set up a duality between the rural and urban, a position we believe is unhelpful as scholars try to understand the contemporary experience of outdoor recreation in a changing world. A defining aspect of our changing world is rapid urbanization. Kundu and Pandey (2020) indicate that the global urban population has ballooned from 0.75 billion in 1950–4.22 billion in 2018. By the mid-twenty-first century, it is estimated that 68% of the world’s population will live in urban settings. These figures point to the increasing importance of urban, suburban and peri-urban settings (the fringe in-between the urban and the rural) for recreation in the outdoors – expanding and challenging the accepted norm that outdoor recreation is only meaningful in rural, remote and faraway lands. Furthermore, the wider call for increased ‘locavism’, a call to partake in activities closer to home in a carbon conscious (Hollenhorst et al., 2014) and COVID-19 afflicted era, underscores the need for scholars to explore how urbanites experience recreation in their own backyards.
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© 2022 Australia and New Zealand Association of Leisure Studies
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