What the battle for Freeman’s Wood says about the future of our common land
What the battle for Freeman’s Wood says about the future of our common land
For years, Lancaster locals treated Freeman’s Wood as common space – until its Bermuda-registered owner submitted a development plan, and erected fencing to keep them out. Now the commoners are fighting back
Garrett, Bradley
e51aa011-881c-4284-8889-124b1b52efc7
10 February 2016
Garrett, Bradley
e51aa011-881c-4284-8889-124b1b52efc7
Garrett, Bradley
(2016)
What the battle for Freeman’s Wood says about the future of our common land.
The Guardian: Cities.
Abstract
For years, Lancaster locals treated Freeman’s Wood as common space – until its Bermuda-registered owner submitted a development plan, and erected fencing to keep them out. Now the commoners are fighting back
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Published date: 10 February 2016
Organisations:
Geography & Environment
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Local EPrints ID: 392853
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/392853
PURE UUID: c2b8b84e-3a4a-4fb7-a294-cb2fb78a2f39
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Date deposited: 18 Apr 2016 11:44
Last modified: 11 Dec 2021 10:02
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Author:
Bradley Garrett
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