Work package 2 will explore how urban residents from diverse backgrounds (especially differentiated by age, gender, ethnicity and mental health service use) narrate their own histories and values of contact and connectedness with nature and Health and wellbeing; and will develop significant understanding of cultural and social contexts for engagement with nature in urban settings, potentially challenging user / non-user binaries.
The dynamics and sensory qualities of ecosystem processes (seasonality, cycles of growth, typologies of habitat) will be examined in relation to daily life experiences and mental wellbeing. Work package 2 seeks to develop theory on the importance of memory, childhood experiences, and cultural heritage (art, media, stories) in shaping notions and values of nature; the role of experiential and phenomenological qualities of nature contact in supporting good mental health; and how individual access to Natural Environments is shaped by socio-cultural, political and historic processes.
Work package 2 will use the analysis of urban Natural Environments and socio-economic settings from work package to shape a sampling strategy for interviews. Researchers from work package 2 will work closely with researchers in work package 3 in sharing and analysing data from the noticing nature function of the smartphone App.
Work package 2 will also provide work package 4 with a framework of potential barriers and facilitators to Natural Environment engagement.
We will do this by:
Dr Jo Birch
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Dr Sarah Payne
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Prof Brendan Stone
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Dr Clare Rishbeth
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