Burgerkracht in krimpend Limburg: master thesis student(en) gezocht

DorpsraadEen Masterthesis in een real life setting, dat is de mogelijkheid die je hier wordt geboden. In het wetenschapswinkelonderzoek ‘Inzicht in burgerkracht in Limburg’ wordt in opdracht van de Vereniging Kleine Kernen Limburg (VKKL) onderzoek gedaan naar de veranderende burgerwensen in Limburg in het licht van de participatieve samenleving. Door haar activiteiten in de haarvaten van de maatschappij signaleert de VKKL een trend naar een samenleving die voorzieningen zelf organiseert en soms ook zelf bekostigt. Burgers wachten niet langer af, maar nemen zelf initiatieven om hun leefomgeving te verbeteren. Binnen alle veranderingen in de Limburgse samenleving heeft vooral ook de demografische ontwikkeling (ontgroening, vergrijzing en krimp) ingrijpende gevolgen voor de leefbaarheid.

De veranderende verhouding tussen burgers en de overheid lijkt steeds meer te draaien om co-creatie. Dit vraagt om een nieuwe attitude bij de overheid én de burger. De vraag die hier centraal staat is hoe die burger hier nu op voorsorteert. Welke ontwikkelingen zien burgers op zich af komen, hoe anticiperen ze hierop en wat hebben ze nodig om die nieuwe rolontwikkeling in te vullen?
De VKKL, nu 10 jaar actief op Dorpsniveau in Limburg, ziet dat er in de praktijk heel verschillend op maatschappelijke transities wordt ingespeeld. Sommige bewoners en gemeenschappen treden daarin heel pro-actief op. Initiatieven als dorpsoverleggen kenmerken zich vaak door een sterke interne drive, samenhang en gemeenschappelijke focus. Andere, meer traditioneel georganiseerde samenwerkingsverbanden als dorpsraden zijn soms nog meer reactief en gericht op ondersteuning van buiten. Soms wordt daardoor vertraagd of onvoldoende ingespeeld op de maatschappelijke ontwikkelingen.
Als jij het leuk vindt om je te verdiepen in de aard van verschillende typen ‘burgerkracht’ in Limburg (stad en/of platteland), in de wijze waarop dergelijke lokale initiatieven in staat- en bereid zijn in te spelen op de maatschappelijke transities en uitdagingen in Limburg als het je interessant lijkt om de ondersteuningsbehoefte die daarbij bestaan vanuit deze initiatieven inzichtelijk te maken neem dan contact met ons op.
Contactpersonen: Bas Braman (bas.breman@wur.nl ) en Jeroen Kruit (jeroen.kruit@wur.nl).

Tijdelijk werk beschikbaar in Zwitserland in het zomerseizoen

Een klein, gezellig pension in het Zwitserse Engadin is op zoek naar medewerksters in het komende zomerseizoen (juni-september). Werk en betaling volgens C.A.O. Detailinformatie op aanvraag bij larandulina@bluewin.ch
Website: http://www.larandulina.com;
Reakties graag nog deze week.

Hotel-Pension La Randulina,
7556 Ramosch, Schweiz.
Tel.: (00)41 (0)81 860 1200
https://www.facebook.com/LaRandulina

Master thesis and internship possibilities: INNOVATIVE AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY IN THE PYRENEES

The project takes place in a little mountain village in the Spanish Pyrenees. The question is formulated by a Dutch woman who lives and works in this village. 

The central question is: How can agriculture, in a little mountain village in the Spanish Pyrenees, be developed in a way that meets the circumstances and needs of today?

This particular mountain village has been abandoned for fifty years. The association ‘Muro de Solana’ (http://murodesolana.org/) is dedicated to bring it back to life.

Pyreneeen

The means of living here used to be cattle breeding and farming, mainly producing potatoes and wheat. Since many people have left, the once cultivated fields have been replanted with pine trees. The terrain  has small fields and difficult access and also a lack of water supply. The village used to have only a few  hectares of farming fields, however, for this project they consider an area between 1-10 hectares. A true challenge!

Rather than going back to the old means of agriculture the association looks for innovative ways of farming which meet the circumstances and needs of today. This means the development of farming practices which improve the soil quality, are less intense in labour, produce products based on demands, and reconstruct the current forest fields.

The research results can be an inspiring example for other (semi-)abandoned villages in the North of Spain, giving villages an source of income, as well as providing reduced risks of forest fires.

Main goal is to regenerate forest farming fields, now poor in biodiversity and with the risk of forest fires (due to the planted pine trees), into useful, productive and fertile terrain.

There is no deadline for this project.

Contact person: lummina.horlings@wur.nl

Master thesis and internship possibilities: DEVELOPING AN ECOLOGICAL AND SELF-SUSTAINING WATERSYSTEM

The project takes place in a little mountain village in the Spanish Pyrenees. The question is formulated by a Dutch woman who lives and works in this village.

The central question is: how can an ecological and self-sustaining water system be created?

The main goal is to design such a water system, which is reliable as well as usable in practice.

This particular mountain village has been abandoned for fifty years. The association ‘Muro de Solana’ (http://murodesolana.org/) is dedicated to bring it back to life. In former days rain water was captured and water was also transported with the help of donkeys from a well, at a distance of one km at a lower altitude then the village. There never was any kind of drainage, piping or water from the tap.

This investigation includes a variety of issues. These issues can also be addressed in separate studies.

– Capturing water, from the well and of rain water

– Storage, safe and maintaining the quality of water

– Distribution

– Discharge

– Purification of the water

– Re-use of purified water

The terrain of the Pyrenees has difficult access and no electricity. Electricity provision depends on sun- and water-energy. It used to be a village for four big families with cattle breeding and farming. Now the association is looking for establishing a water system for 3-4 households and a 200 m2 vegetable garden which is ecological, self-sustaining and meets the production standards of today.

This research results could be an example for other (semi) abandoned villages in the North of Spain. There are many villages in similar situations and the lack any kind of water system is a big problem.

There is a strict deadline for the realization, but this can be negotiated with the government and local council. For the authorities the water system is of great importance for the development of the village.

Contact person: lummina.horlings@wur.nl

LEADERSHIP MATTERS! Seminar on ‘Leadership in Urban and Regional Development: Debates and New Directions’, 5-6 February 2014, University of Birmingham

This seminar was organised by the ‘Research network on Leadership in Urban and Regional Development, of the Regional Studies Organisation. I have included a summary of the most interesting presentations here, written by Alistair Bowden, Teesside University Business School. For more information, the full report and power-point presentations, please send a mail to lummina.horlings@wur.nl. If you are interested in doing a master thesis on leadership, please contact me as well.

Thirty five enthusiastic academics converged on Park House on the wooded outskirts of the Birmingham University campus on a rainy British morning, but the weather could not dampen spirits. The speakers and discussants were from diverse academic backgrounds (from politics to palaeontology, and from planning to psychology), had varied careers (from a physicist to a field geologist, and from a curator to councillor) and had travelled from disparate locations round the globe (from Auckland to Bishop Auckland, and from Babeş-Bolyai to Birmingham). But we all shared a passion for leadership of place: cities, conurbations, rural areas and regions. Discussing the seminar with a more experienced conference goer on the way back to the station, this mix of disciplines, careers and nationalities, held together by a shared interest in this emerging subfield, was highlighted as the reason for its success: diverse actors and a strange attractor!

John Gibney kicked us off with a brief, considered introduction. This wasn’t going to be an easy conference. We weren’t given the answer at the start. We were going to have to work out ‘what it was all about’ for ourselves.

Our first speaker was Lummina Horlings, who gave a paper on an entrepreneurial rural area just west of Groningen, Netherlands. She was interested in how to enhance collaboration, institutional reform and joint learning to help make a place more resilient. From informal foundations with a small group of visionaries engaging in a pilot project, collective agency emerged through ‘spiral development’ of bottom up initiatives, supporting policy schemes and joint learning by doing. The conclusion was that collaborative leadership played a critical role in enabling success. The discussion explored the motivation(s) to collaborate, the catalytic role of a key actor, the supporting role played by local politicians, the role of the research team and their relationship to the local people.

This was followed Andrew Beer, President of the RSA. Andrew has taken upon himself to try to make sense of leadership of place; to answer the question ‘how do we get beyond case studies?’ But he wasn’t being driven my some esoteric desire for theoretical purity, rather he came across as having a great streak of pragmatism, wanting to do something practical with the growing research on leadership of place.

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