ABSTRACT

Cultivated Therapeutic Landscapes provides an in-depth and critical exploration of the impact of gardens and gardening on health and wellbeing. In this book we explore the ways in which gardens and gardening prevent illness and restore wellbeing, and how they improve social and health equity via tradi-tional and innovative mechanisms and across a range of sites.

Therapeutic landscapes are relational, reciprocal, and evolving. In this book, leading scholars from across the globe demonstrate how therapeutic landscapes research and practice is expanded through and around the processes of cultivation. Deliberately interdisciplinary, the book explores how tending and caring for green spaces, collectively and individually, works to prevent and restore health and wellbeing, as well as impact upstream factors determining social justice and equity. A unique combination of academics, clinicians, and practitioners deliver theoretical and practical insights into wide-ranging health-enabling factors, based on new evidence and autoethnographic experiences in home gardens, school, and community gardens, clinical settings, public green spaces, and sites of conservation and wildness. This book pushes concepts of cultivation and horticulture into underexplored spatial, ontological, and wellbeing territories. Despite long-term practical interest, thera-peutic horticulture is only now establishing a strong theoretical and research foundation.

This book provides much-needed critical insights into the impact on the key drivers of health, wellbeing, and social equity, with a focus on practical skills for utilising horticulture or designing for particular health needs. It will be of interest to students, scholars, and practitioners in the areas of health geography; cultural geography; cultural studies; therapeutic horticulture; environmental studies; community development and planning; landscape architecture; social work; health studies; and health policy.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part I|122 pages

Boots on

chapter 1|22 pages

Tending more than gardens

Engaging residents in public landscapes to cultivate urban nature

chapter 2|19 pages

Gardening for good in Ontario, Canada

A case study of Hamilton's Victory Gardens

chapter 3|31 pages

Growing health in local food gardens

Case studies of community, school, and home gardens

chapter 4|21 pages

The cultivated ‘healing garden’

Respite and support, or lifestyle change?

part III|86 pages

Dig deep

chapter 10|20 pages

Environmental place-making by the ‘out of place’

Migrants building connections to new landscapes through structured conservation activities

chapter 12|22 pages

Nurturing soil-adarities

Growing multispecies justice in therapeutic landscapes

chapter 13|13 pages

Tending the wilds inside

Cultivating healing at the unruly edges of the garden

chapter 14|14 pages

Horti-cultural geographies

Situating the garden as an assemblage of health and wellbeing