Adapting to Environmental Change: What is the research telling us?
Debate and Analysis
Conference and Meetings
- Adapting Rural Living and Land Use to Environmental Change: project launch event 1 July 2010 Manchester Conference Centre Report
Communications Manager’s blog about the event
- First Conference Announcement: RELU 'Catchment Management for Protection of Water Resources', SOAS University of London, 29th November 2010 Report
- Strategic Land Use: Crossing the Urban Rural Divide: A Relu/SUE Workshop 27 October 2010 London Programme and presentations
Workshop report Communications Manager's blog about the event
- New forms of participatory environmental governance: experiences and challenges from Loweswater, Cumbria, 3 December 2010 Penrith
- "Working across the rural urban divide: towards new forms of environmental governmance for the rural urban fringe" organised by the Managing Environmental change at the Urban Fringe project 25 January 2011 Report
- Catchment Management and Public Engagement organised jointly by Relu and the Northern Rural Network Tuesday 1 February 2011.
- Collaborative Conservation workshop organised by the Collaborative Conservation in Agri Environment Schemes project 14th July 2011.
- ACES conference conservation conflicts, strategies for coping with a changing world 21-24 August 2011, Aberdeen Further information
- UK/Ireland Planning Research Conference Relu special session on rural urban fringe 12-14 September 2011 , Birmingham University 2011 UK Report
- Going with the flow: Participatory approaches to river catchment management organised by the Building Adaptive Strategies for Environmental Change in River Catchments project 15th December 2011 Presentation
- Managing Environmental Change at the Rural-Urban Fringe, Millennium Point, Birmingham, 29 February 2012. A conference organised by the Managing Environmental Change at the Rural-Urban Fringe project. The programme featured a series of video policy briefs, keynote presentations and plenaries. There was also the revised version of the project’s Rufopoly game available so that delegates could address planning challenges within the hypothetical rural urban fringe of Rufshire.