A rural development strategy for the Apuseni Mountains, Romania |
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Authors: | Ioan Abrudan David Turnock |
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Affiliation: | (1) Facultatea de Silvicultura, Universitatea Transylvania, Siriul Beethoven 1, 2200 Brasov, Romania;(2) Geography Department, The University, Leicester, LE1 , 7RH, UK |
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Abstract: | The Apuseni Mountains, part of the Western Carpathians, are distinctive in cultural terms because of the highly dispersed settlement patterns that have developed on the high erosion surfaces where the Moti people cleared the forests to allow for an expansion of family farming in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. These small ‘crang’ settlements remain, but the population is declining in the face of limited employment opportunities and poor services. The question arises as to the most appropriate rural development strategy for the region, following the communist period which encouraged centralisation through the provision of housing and industry in key villages and new towns. The emphasis on private farming and the expansion of tourism could protect the inherited cultural landscape but money must be found to improve rural services. There is also a strong conservation movement which supports the establishment of a national park, but this could constrain development through controls on grazing and woodcutting. Hence the dialogue continues to find the best compromise and the concept of a ‘natural park’ is being discussed with such a reconciliation in mind. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. |
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Keywords: | culture forest key villages national park natural park Romania rural development settlement |
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