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Table of Contents

November 09, 2022; Volume 41,Issue 2

Editor’s Introduction

  • Open Access
    Editor’s Introduction
    James LaGro Jr.
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) iv-v; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.iv
    James LaGro Jr.
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About This Issue

  • Open Access
    About This Issue
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) vi; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.vi

Peer-Reviewed Articles

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    The Olmsteds and the Land-Grant Universities
    Frederick Steiner
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 1-18; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.1
    Frederick Steiner
    Frederick Steiner is dean and Paley Professor, and co-executive director of The Ian L. McHarg Center for Urbanism and Ecology, at the University of Pennsylvania Stuart Weitzman School of Design. He has written, edited, or co-edited 21 books, including Design with Nature Now and Megaregions and America’s Future (both from Lincoln Institute for Land Policy, distributed by Columbia University Press). He is a fellow of the American Academy in Rome, the American Society of Landscape Architects, and the Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture.
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    The Vanishing Landscape of the Southern West Virginia Coalfields
    Stefania Staniscia
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 19-37; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.19
    Stefania Staniscia
    Stefania Staniscia is an associate professor of Landscape Architecture at West Virginia University. She is a licensed architect and landscape architect in Italy. She has degrees from Università di Pescara, Italy (M Arch), ETSAB, Spain (MLA), and Università IUAV di Venezia, Italy (PhD). Her research focuses on anthropogenic landscape changes. Studying the key drivers of these alterations and their main impacts on the landscape from a longitudinal perspective, she places cultural landscapes at the center of her investigations. Staniscia is currently examining the Appalachian coalfields and the aftermath of surface mining on the landscape and the communities that inhabit it.
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    Protecting the Identity of Sheep-Farming Landscapes in the Outer CarpathiansA Typology, Delimitation, and Interpretation
    View ORCID ProfileJanusz Lach and View ORCID ProfileIgor Bojko
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 39-58; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.39
    Janusz Lach
    Janusz Lach is a PhD lecturer at the University of Wrocław, Faculty of Earth Science and Environmental Management Department of Regional Geography and Tourism. Educated as a geomorphologist and geographer of physical geography, he specializes in regional geography, cultural geography, tourist geography, and landscape studies. His address is: University of Wrocław, street Z. Cybulskiego 32, room 156, 50-205 Wrocław. His e-mail is:
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    • ORCID record for Janusz Lach
    • For correspondence: [email protected]
    Igor Bojko
    Ihor Boyko is a PhD researcher at the Institute of Ethnology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, in the Department of Social Anthropology. He is educated as an ethnographer and specializes in the ethnography of the Eastern and Western Carpathians, with a focus on the following ethnic groups: the Hutsuls, Boykos, Lemkos, and Slovak and Polish highlanders originating from the Wallachian culture. His address is The National Academy, Svobody Avenue 15, 79000, Lviv, Ukraine. His e-mail is:
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    • For correspondence: [email protected]
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    Myth, Memory, and PlacemakingReclaiming Ramjanmabhoomi in Ayodhya, India
    Amita Sinha
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 59-72; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.59
    Amita Sinha
    Amita Sinha is a former professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign (1989-2018) and has taught in the Department of Architecture and Regional Planning, IIT Kharagpur, and in the Humanities and Social Sciences Department at IIT Gandhinagar in India. She is the author of Landscapes in India: Forms and Meanings (University Press of Colorado, 2006) and Cultural Landscapes of India: Imagined, Enacted, and Reclaimed (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2020). She is also coeditor of Cultural Landscapes of South Asia: Studies in Heritage Conservation and Management (Routledge, 2017).
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    Aesthetic Intent in Landscape ArchitectureThe Particularity of Beauty, Meaning, and Experience
    Katherine Melcher
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 73-92; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.73
    Katherine Melcher
    Katherine Melcher is an associate professor at the University of Georgia’s College of Environment and Design.
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    A Qualitative Study of Practitioner Perspectives on Landscape Architecture and Equity
    Kristine F. Miller, Rachel McNamara and Amanda Smoot
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 93-107; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.93
    Kristine F. Miller
    Kristine F. Miller is a professor of Landscape Architecture at UMN. She has published three books on design, public space, politics, and identity: Designs on the Public: The Private Lives of New York’s Public Spaces (University of Minnesota Press, 2007); Almost Home: The Public Landscapes of Gertrude Jekyll (University of Virginia Press, 2013); and Introduction to Design Equity (University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing, 2018). In 2005, Miller cofounded ReMix, a long-term community/university partnership with Juxtaposition Arts. She holds a BA from the University of Toronto, an MLA from Cornell University, and a PhD from the Edinburgh College of Art.
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    Rachel McNamara
    Rachel McNamara is a resource development associate with the AmeriCorps VISTA at the Minneapolis Promise Zone, where she provides support to community organizations to identify, apply for, and manage external grants. As a research assistant at the University of Minnesota from 2018 to 2020, McNamara cocreated and conducted research on the relationships between landscape architecture and equity. She copresented this work at the 2019 Council for Educators in Landscape Architecture conference. From 2018 to 2019, she worked as an assistant designer at APL Landscape Solutions. She holds a Bachelor of Environmental Design from the University of Minnesota.
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    Amanda Smoot
    Amanda Smoot is an administrator in the Department of Landscape Architecture at the College of Design, University of Minnesota. Amanda received her PhD from the Department of Design, Housing & Apparel, College of Design, University of Minnesota. Her dissertation research explored the relationships between aging, health, housing, and community among African American older adults. Prior to working for the university, Amanda was a community development manager responsible for the delivery of pre-purchase counseling and education; foreclosure prevention counseling; and local, state and federal housing rehabilitation loans and grants. She also served as a nonprofit program director responsible for state-wide homeownership education and counseling programs.
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Book Reviews

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    A Philosophy of Landscape ConstructionThe Vision of Built Landscapes
    Rob Kuper
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 109-110; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.109
    Rob Kuper
    Rob Kuper is a licensed landscape architect in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and an associate professor of landscape architecture at Temple University.
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    Toward an Urban EcologySCAPE/Landscape Architecture / Urban Ecology for Citizens and Planners
    Richard C. Smardon
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 111-113; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.111
    Richard C. Smardon
    Richard C. Smardon is a SUNY Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at SUNY-College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
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    From Rails to TrailsThe Making of America’s Active Transportation Network
    Richard C. Smardon
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 113-114; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.113
    Richard C. Smardon
    Richard C. Smardon is a SUNY Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at SUNY-College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
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    Design by DeficitNeglect and the Accidental City
    Richard C. Smardon
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 114-116; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.114
    Richard C. Smardon
    Richard C. Smardon is a SUNY Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at SUNY-College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
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    Military Landscapes
    Marc Blackburn
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 116-118; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.116
    Marc Blackburn
    Marc Blackburn is currently the manager for visitor services at Lava Beds and Tule Lake National Monuments in California. He is a 28-year veteran of the National Park Service and has worked at six parks in the western United States. He earned his PhD from Temple University in 1992 in American military and diplomatic history under the tutelage of Russell F. Weigley. He is the author of Interpreting American Military History for Small Museums and Heritage Sites and numerous articles and book reviews. His is also host of the podcast America at War: A military history of the United States. The views expressed here are those of the author and do not reflect those of the Department of Interior and the National Park Service.
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    Active Landscape PhotographyTheoretical Groundwork For Landscape Architecture
    David Spooner
    Landscape Journal, November 2022, 41 (2) 118-119; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.2.118
    David Spooner
    David Spooner, ASLA, PLA, is an associate professor in the College of Environment and Design at the University of Georgia. He is a licensed landscape architect with over 20 years of teaching and professional practice experience.
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In this issue

Landscape Journal: 41 (2)
Landscape Journal
Vol. 41, Issue 2
9 Nov 2022
  • Table of Contents
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The Olmsteds and the Land-Grant Universities
The Vanishing Landscape of the Southern West Virginia Coalfields
Protecting the Identity of Sheep-Farming Landscapes in the Outer Carpathians
Myth, Memory, and Placemaking
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