1. Public access, private land, and spatial politics: The geographical importance of the right of way in Coventry, England.
- Author
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Thorogood, Joe, Hastie, Alex, and Hill‐Butler, Charley
- Subjects
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RIGHT of way , *PUBLIC spaces , *EQUALITY , *CULTURAL values , *TRAILS , *RURAL roads - Abstract
The rights that guarantee public passage across private land are known as rights of way. In this paper, we argue that rights of way are a literal manifestation of a politics of space. The paper's purpose is to suggest rights of way are central to issues surrounding social and spatial inequality, specifically with regards to public access to urban and rural space. They are a neglected topic in geographical research, despite their relevance to many sub‐branches, including landscape studies, urban natures, GIS, and open‐source geospatial research. Rights of way in England and Wales are currently facing their biggest legal threat to date. On 1 January 2026, unregistered rights of way are set to be extinguished. Path extinguishment threatens thousands of kilometres of footpaths, bridleways, restricted byways, and byways open to all traffic. The paper concludes by examining how geographical approaches help reveal the cultural and historical value of two at‐risk footpaths in Coventry, England. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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