National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949
- National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949
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Der National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949 ist ein britisches Gesetz vom 18. März 1949, das unter anderem die Schaffung von Nationalparks vorsah und mit der National Parks Commission eine Organisation ins Leben rief, die im Vereinigten Königreich über den Naturschutz wachen konnte.
Aufgrund des Gesetzes schuf das Vereinigte Königreich in den 1950ern zehn Nationalparks, später folgten weitere der Nationalparks in Großbritannien. Die National Parks Commission kreierte in den folgenden Jahren auf Grund des Gesetzes ebenso Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, Landflächen mit ähnlicher Bedeutung wie Nationalpark aber weniger direkten Schutz- und Einflussmöglichkeiten des Naturschutzes.[1]
Anmerkungen
- ↑ Jane Grenville: Managing the historic rural landscape, S. 45–46.
Literatur
- Tom Stephenson, Ann Holt, Mike Harding: Forbidden land: the struggle for access to mountain and moorland. Manchester University Press ND, Manchester 1989, ISBN 071902966X, S. 206–217.
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