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817 lines
41 KiB
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817 lines
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pdftitle={Mapping Environmental Action in Scotland},
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pdfauthor={Jeremy H. Kidwell},
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\title{Mapping Environmental Action in Scotland}
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\pretitle{\vspace{\droptitle}\centering\huge}
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\posttitle{\par}
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\author{\href{http://jeremykidwell.info}{Jeremy H. Kidwell}}
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\date{2019-02-01}
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\begin{document}
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\maketitle
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\hypertarget{introduction15541312}{%
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\section[Introduction]{\texorpdfstring{Introduction\footnote{This
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research was jointly funded by the AHRC/ESRC under project numnbers
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AH/K005456/1 and AH/P005063/1.}}{Introduction}}\label{introduction15541312}}
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Until recently, environmentalism has been treated by governments and
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environmental charities as a largely secular concern. In spite of the
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well-developed tradition of ``eco-theology'' which began in earnest in
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the UK in the mid-twentieth century (and which has many precursors in
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previous centuries), third-sector groups and governments, particularly
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in Britain and Europe, have largely ignored religious groups as they
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have gone about their business crafting agendas for behaviour change,
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developing funding programmes, and developing platforms to mitigate
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ecological harm, motivate consumers and create regulation regimes. That
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this has changed is evidenced by the fact that several prominent
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non-religious environmental groups have commissioned studies and crafted
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outreach programmes to persons with a particular faith tradition or to
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``spiritual communities'' including RSPB (2013) and the Sierra Club USA
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(2008).\footnote{This is not to say that there have been no
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collaborations before 2000, noteworthy in this respect is the WWF who
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helped to found the Alliance of Religion and Conservation (ARC) in
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1985.} Further, since 2008, the Scottish Government has provided a
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significant portion of funding for the ecumenical charity,
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Eco-Congregation Scotland, which works to promote literacy on
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environmental issues in religious communities in Scotland and helps to
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certify congregations under their award programme. What is not well
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known, however, even by these religious environmental groups themselves,
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is whether or how their membership might be different from other
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environmental groups. This study represents an attempt to illuminate
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this new interest with some more concrete data about religious groups in
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Scotland and how they may differ from non-religious counterparts.
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\hypertarget{eco-congregation-scotland-the-basics}{%
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\section{Eco-Congregation Scotland: The
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Basics}\label{eco-congregation-scotland-the-basics}}
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There are 344 eco-congregations in Scotland. By some measurements,
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particularly in terms of individual sites and possibly also with regards
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to volunteers, this makes Eco-Congregation Scotland one of the largest
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environmental third-sector groups in Scotland.\footnote{This suggestion
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should be qualified - RSPB would greatly exceed ECS both in terms of
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the number of individual subscribers and budget. The RSPB trustee's
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report for 2013-2014 suggests that their member base was 1,114,938
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people across Britain with a net income of £127m - the latter of which
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exceeds the Church of Scotland. If we adjust this based on the
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Scottish share of the population of the United Kingdom as of the 2011
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census (8.3\%) this leaves us with an income of £9.93m. The British
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charity commission requires charities to self-report the number of
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volunteers and staff, and from their most recent statistics we learn
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that RSPB engaged with 17,600 volunteers and employed 2,110 members of
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staff. Again, adjusted for population, this leaves 1,460 volunteers in
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Scotland and 176 staff. However, if we measure environmental groups
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based on the number of sites they maintain, RSPB has only 40 reserves
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with varying levels of local community engagement. For comparison, as
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of Sep 14 2015, Friends of the Earth Scotland had only 10 local groups
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(concentrated mostly in large urban areas). Depending on how one
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measures ``volunteerism,'' it may be possible that ECS has more
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engaged volunteers in Scotland as well - if each ECS group had only 4
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``volunteers'' then this would exceed RSPB.}
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In seeking to conduct GIS and statistical analysis of ECS, it is
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important to note that there some ways in which these sites are
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statistically opaque. Our research conducted through interviews at a
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sampling of sites and analysis of a variety of documents suggests that
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there is a high level of diversity both in terms of the number of those
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participating in environmental action and the types of action underway
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at specific sites. Work at a particular site can also ebb and flow over
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the course of time. Of course, as research into other forms of activism
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and secular environmental NGOs has shown, this is no different from any
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other third sector volunteer group. Variability is a regular feature of
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groups involved in activism and/or environmental concern.
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For the sake of this analysis, we took each Eco-Congregation Scotland
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site to represent a point of analysis as if each specific site
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represented a community group which had ``opted-in'' on environmental
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concern. On this basis, in this section, in the tradition of human
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geography, we ``map'' environmental action among religious communities
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in Scotland a variety of ways. This is the first major geographical
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analysis of this kind conducted to date in Europe. We measure the
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frequency and location of ECS sites against a variety of standard
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geo-referenced statistical data sets, seeking to provide a statistical
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and geographically based assessment of the participation of religious
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groups in relation to the following:
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\begin{itemize}
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\tightlist
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\item
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Location within Scotland
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\item
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Religious affiliation
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\item
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Relation to the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD)
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\item
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Relation to the 8-Fold Scottish Government Urban-Rural Scale
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\item
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Proximity to ``wilderness'' (based on several different designations)
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\end{itemize}
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For the sake of comparison, we also measured the geographical footprint
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of two other forms of community group in Scotland, (1) Transition Towns
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(taking into account their recent merge with Scotland Communities
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Climate Action Network) and (2) member groups of the Development Trust
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Association Scotland (``DTAS''). These two groups provide a helpful
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basis for comparison as they are not centralised and thus have a
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significant geographical dispersion across Scotland. They also provide a
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useful comparison as transition is a (mostly) non-religious
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environmental movement, and community development trusts are not
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explicitly linked to environmental conservation (though this is often
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part of their remit), so we have a non-religious point of comparison in
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Transition and a non-environmental point of comparison with DTAS
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\hypertarget{technical-background}{%
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\section{Technical Background}\label{technical-background}}
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Analysis was conducted using QGIS 2.8 and R 3.5.2, and data-sets were
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generated in CSV format.\footnote{Kidwell, Jeremy. (2016).
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Eco-Congregation Scotland, 2014-2016. University of Edinburgh.
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\url{http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/ds/1357}.} To begin with, I assembled a
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data set consisting of x and y coordinates for each congregation in
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Scotland and collated this against a variety of other specific data.
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Coordinates were checked by matching UK postcodes of individual
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congregations against geo-referencing data in the Office for National
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Statistics postcode database. In certain instances a single
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``congregation'' is actually a series of sites which have joined
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together under one administrative unit. In these cases, each site was
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treated as a separate data point if worship was held at that site at
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least once a month, but all joined sites shared a single unique
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identifier. As noted above, two other datasets were generated for the
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sake of comparative analysis.\footnote{For further detail on Dataset
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generation, see Kidwell, Forthcoming, 2018.} These included one
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similar Environmental Non-Governmental Organisation (ENGO) in Scotland
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(1) Transition Scotland (which includes Scotland Communities Climate
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Action Network);\footnote{My dataset on transition towns will be made
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available later in 2016. Initial data was aquired from the Transition
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Scotland website
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\url{http://www.transitionscotland.org/transition-in-scotland} on
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December 10, 2014. We are currently in the process of collaboratively
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generating a more up-to-date dataset which will reflect their
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collaboration with SCCAN.} and another community-based NGO, Scottish
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Community Development Trusts.\footnote{Data was acquired from the
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Development Trusts Association website,
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\url{http://www.dtascot.org.uk}, accessed on 20 July 2015. As above,
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we are currently in the process of active collaboration with
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volunteers from the DTAS to co-generate a new dataset.} As this report
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will detail, these three overlap in certain instances both literally and
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in terms of their aims, but each also has a separate identity and
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footprint in Scotland. Finally, in order to normalise data, we utilised
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the PointX POI dataset which maintains a complete database of Places of
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Worship in Scotland.\footnote{PointX data for ``Landscape Data'' items
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is sourced from Ordnance Survey Land-Line and MasterMap(R) and the
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data points are augmented with additional information provided through
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research by PointX staff, and data aquired from unidentified ``local
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data companie(s)'' and the ``118 Information'' database (see:
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\url{http://www.118information.co.uk}). This data is under license and
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cannot be made available for use. It is important to note that I
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became aware of inaccuracies in this dataset over the course of use
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and subsequently generated my own dataset in collaboration with
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churches in Scotland. This will be made available later in 2016. I am
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in active conversation with OS about improving the quality of the data
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in PointX regarding places of worship.}
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\hypertarget{background-and-history-of-eco-congregation-scotland}{%
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\section{Background and History of Eco-Congregation
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Scotland}\label{background-and-history-of-eco-congregation-scotland}}
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Eco-Congregation Scotland began a year before the official launch of
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Eco-Congregation England and Wales, in 1999, as part of an effort by
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Kippen Environment Centre (later renamed to Forth Environment Link, or
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``FEL'') a charity devoted to environmental education in central
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Scotland\footnote{From \url{http://www.forthenvironmentlink.org},
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accessed 12 July 2015.} to broaden the scope of its environmental
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outreach to churches in central Scotland.\footnote{Interview with
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Margaret Warnock, 29 Aug 2014.} Initial funding was provided, through
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Kippen Environment Centre by way of a ``sustainable action grant'' (with
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funds drawn from a government landfill tax) through a government
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programme called Keep Scotland Beautiful (the Scottish cousin of Keep
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Britain Tidy). After this initial pilot project concluded, the Church of
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Scotland provided additional funding for the project in the form of
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staff time and office space. Additional funding a few years later from
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the Scottish Government helped subsidise the position of a business
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manager, and in 2011 the United Reformed Church contributed additional
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funding which subsidised the position of a full-time environmental
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chaplain for a 5-year term, bringing the total staff to five.
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The programme launched officially in 2001 at Dunblane Cathedral in
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Stirling and by 2005 the project had 89 congregations registered to be a
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part of the programme and 25 which had completed the curriculum
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successfully and received an Eco-Congregation award. By 2011, the number
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of registrations had tripled to 269 and the number of awarded
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congregations had quadrupled to
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\texttt{sum(ecs\$award1\ \textless{}\ "01/01/2012",\ na.rm=TRUE)}. This
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process of taking registrations and using a tiered award or recognition
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scheme is common to many voluntary organisations. The ECS curriculum was
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developed in part by consulting the Eco-Congregation England and Wales
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materials which had been released just a year earlier in 1999, though it
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has been subsequently revised, particularly with a major redesign in
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2010. In the USA, a number of similar groups take a similar approach
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including Earth Ministry (earthministry.org) and Green Faith
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(greenfaith.org).
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In the case of Eco-Congregation Scotland, congregations are invited to
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begin by ``registering'' their interest in the programme by completing a
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basic one-sided form. The next step requires the completion of an award
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application, which includes a facilitated curriculum called a ``church
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check-up'' and after an application is submitted, the site is visited
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and assessed by third-party volunteer assessors. Sites are invited to
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complete additional applications for further awards which are
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incremental (as is the application process). Transition communities, at
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least in the period reflected on their map, go through a similar process
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(though this does not involve the use of a supplied curriculum) by which
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they are marked first as ``interested,'' become ``active'' and then gain
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``official'' status.\footnote{From the Transition map key, ``Green pins
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are `official' groups Blue pins are active communities who are
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connected to the Scottish Transition network Yellow pins show interest
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in this area''}
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\hypertarget{representation-by-regional-authorities-council-areas}{%
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\section{Representation by Regional Authorities (Council
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Areas)}\label{representation-by-regional-authorities-council-areas}}
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Perhaps the first important question to ask of these groups is, where
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are they? I calculated the spread of eco-congregations and transition
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groups across each of the 32 council areas in Scotland. Every council
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area in Scotland has at least one eco-congregation or transition group).
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The most are located in , with 48, whereas the mean among all the 32
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council areas is 10.75, with a median of 8, standard deviation of
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9.4698162, and interquartile range of 11.5. The following choropleth
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maps show the relative concentration of eco-congregations (indicated by
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yellow to red).
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(\emph{TODO: need to implement}) Though there are too few
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eco-congregations and transition groups for a numerically significant
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representation in any of the intermediate geographies, mapping the
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concentration of sites by agricultural parishes allows for a more
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granular visual and I include this for comparison sake. Note, for the
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sake of a more accurate visual communication, we have also marked out
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areas of Scotland that are uninhabited with hash marks on the map of
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agricultural parishes. (\emph{TODO: this will be done in the final
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draft, once I get my image masking fixed!}).\footnote{This was
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calculated by calculating a 10m wide footprint for every postcode in
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Scotland, areas which are not within 10m of a postcode (as of May
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2014) are counted as uninhabited.}
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\begin{figure}
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\centering
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\includegraphics{figures/plot_admin_ecs_choropleth-1.pdf}
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\caption{Figure 1}
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\end{figure}
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\includegraphics{figures/plot_admin_ecs_normed_choropleth-1.pdf}
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\includegraphics{figures/plot_admin_ecs_normed_choropleth-2.pdf}
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Given the way population and places of worship are unevenly distributed
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across Scotland it is important to represent data in terms of relative
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distribution. For this study, we attempted to ``normalise'' our data in
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two different ways, (1) as shown by Figure 2 above, by taking population
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figures from the 2011 census (see data sheet in Appendix A) and (2) by
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adjusting relative to the number of places of worship in each council
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region.\footnote{See note above regarding the data used from the PointX
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POI database. Note, for our research,we filtered out religious groups
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not represented within the Eco-Congregation footprint. We discuss
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representation by tradition and religion further below.adition and
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religion further below.} The latter of these two can yield
|
||
|
particularly unexpected results. Thus, of the 4048 ``places of worship''
|
||
|
in Scotland, the highest concentration is actually the region, with 435,
|
||
|
second is 329 (). Rank of Council Areas by population and number of
|
||
|
places of worship is also included in Appendix A.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We can use this data to normalise our figures regarding Eco-Congregation
|
||
|
Scotland communities and this draws the presence in Edinburgh of ECS
|
||
|
communities into even sharper relief, as Edinburgh, though ranked second
|
||
|
in terms of population and fifth in terms of places of worship, ranks
|
||
|
first for the presence of all ECS congregations and awarded ECS
|
||
|
congregations. However, taking population as the basis for normalisation
|
||
|
first, we find that Edinburgh is far from the most prominent outlier. In
|
||
|
trying to communicate this difference for a lay-audience, we have chosen
|
||
|
to list this difference as a multiplier (i.e.~there are 2.x times as
|
||
|
many congregations as their share of population and an average figure of
|
||
|
congregations might allow for) as this conveys the difference in a
|
||
|
straight-forward way. Outliers where the disparity between their
|
||
|
relative share of the total ECS footprint and their relative share of
|
||
|
population is different by a positive ratio of more than double include
|
||
|
the Orkney Islands (3.7 times more eco-congregations than their expected
|
||
|
average share based on population), Argyll and Bute
|
||
|
(\texttt{admin\_lev1{[}CODE=S12000023{]}\$ecs\_pop\_factor} 4.2x),
|
||
|
Stirling (2.76x), and Perthshire and Kinross (2.18x). Interestingly,
|
||
|
there are no outliers whose relative share of the total footprint of ECS
|
||
|
is double or more in the negative direction (see Appendix A chart for
|
||
|
full numbers).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Turning to the total of 4048 ``places of worship'' in Scotland, we find
|
||
|
a slightly different picture of the relative concentration of
|
||
|
Eco-Congregations in Scotland. In this case, the outliers are
|
||
|
|
||
|
Whereas our initial measurements indicated a prominent lead for
|
||
|
Edinburgh, by normalising our data in this way we can highlight the
|
||
|
stronger-than-expected presence of several others that might otherwise
|
||
|
escape notice because they lie in a region with significantly lower
|
||
|
population or numerically less places of worship. Taking the PointX data
|
||
|
on ``places of worship'' in Scotland, we find a less dramatic picture,
|
||
|
but also a slightly different one. The positive outliers include East
|
||
|
Renfrewshire (3.4x) Edinburgh (2.9x), Stirling (2.2), West Lothian
|
||
|
(1.9x) and Aberdeen (1.5x). Again, negative outliers are far less
|
||
|
dramatic, with only Midlothian possessing a ratio of more than 100\%
|
||
|
negative difference from the number of ``places of worship'' at 1.5x
|
||
|
\emph{fewer}.
|
||
|
|
||
|
\includegraphics{figures/create_admin_barplot-1.pdf}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\includegraphics{figures/create_choropleth_others-1.pdf}
|
||
|
\includegraphics{figures/create_choropleth_others-2.pdf}
|
||
|
\includegraphics{figures/create_choropleth_others-3.pdf}
|
||
|
|
||
|
We can compare the representation in these various regions against our
|
||
|
comparison groups to see how other community-based organisations cluster
|
||
|
in Scottish administrative districts. Here there are some significant
|
||
|
contrasts. Scottish Community Development trusts are most intensely
|
||
|
concentrated in the Highlands and Argyll \& Bute. But, this is
|
||
|
consistent with all the other categories, Eco-Congregations, Places of
|
||
|
Worship, and dtas are all over-represented in this area, varying only by
|
||
|
the degree. Edinburgh is different, here we find that Eco-Congregations
|
||
|
and Transition projects are over-represented, while dtass are
|
||
|
under-represented. Finally, the highlands are another strong contrast,
|
||
|
here we find a very strong over-representation by transition towns and
|
||
|
dtass while the representation of Eco-Congregations is relatively close
|
||
|
to the population share for that area. The two areas of greatest
|
||
|
contrast for Eco-Congregations from the other groups are unsurprising,
|
||
|
Edinburgh is the location of the ECS offices, while Stirling is the area
|
||
|
in which ECS first began (see Appendix B for full data).
|
||
|
|
||
|
\hypertarget{christian-denominations}{%
|
||
|
\section{Christian Denominations}\label{christian-denominations}}
|
||
|
|
||
|
Eco-Congregation Scotland describes itself as an ``ecumenical movement
|
||
|
helping local groups of Christians link environmental issues to their
|
||
|
faith, reduce their environmental impact and engage with their local
|
||
|
community.'' There are several ties to the Church of Scotland, as the
|
||
|
denomination provides office space to Eco-Congregation Scotland in the
|
||
|
Church of Scotland complex at 121 George Street in Edinburgh and
|
||
|
provides funding for one full-time member of staff. In spite of this,
|
||
|
ECS has, from the start, attempted to emphasise its ecumenical
|
||
|
aspirations and this is reflected in a wide variety of ways. The name
|
||
|
``eco-congregation'' is meant to be tradition neutral (in interviews,
|
||
|
staff noted how they have sought to avoid names such as ``eco-kirk''
|
||
|
which would be the more obvious Presbyterian title, or ``eco-community''
|
||
|
or ``eco-church'' which might indicate allegiance towards another).
|
||
|
Further, the group has a environmental chaplain on their staff whose
|
||
|
position is funded by the United Reformed Church, and other members of
|
||
|
staff are funded by the Scottish government, and as such, carry no
|
||
|
formal affiliation with a religious institution. This diversity and
|
||
|
ecumenicism is reflected in a membership which is, though dominated by
|
||
|
the Church of Scotland, nevertheless, made up of a range of Christian
|
||
|
traditions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though these are not numerically significant, it is important to note
|
||
|
that some member congregations describe themselves as ecumenical
|
||
|
communities, and others are hybrids reflecting the merging of two
|
||
|
traditions. As this ecumenical/hybrid designation involves a small
|
||
|
number of the overall total, for the sake of this research, these have
|
||
|
been combined into a category called ``ecumenical.'' Further, as
|
||
|
research conducted by Church of Scotland statistician Fiona Tweedie has
|
||
|
shown, in many Scottish communities with only one church, members of
|
||
|
this church will specify their denominational affiliation in a variety
|
||
|
of ways (Roman Catholic, Quaker, Methodist, etc.) even though the church
|
||
|
and its minister are formally affiliated with the Church of
|
||
|
Scotland.\footnote{Fiona Tweedia, \emph{Ecumenical Audit: Questionnaire
|
||
|
Findings} (2014).} So, we should be careful not to assume that the
|
||
|
various denominational affiliations of eco-congregations are indicative
|
||
|
in an absolute way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A wide variety of historians and sociologists of religion have noted the
|
||
|
regional significance of different Christian denominations in Scotland
|
||
|
so we sought to assess the relative distribution and concentration of
|
||
|
eco-congregations by denomination. Finding comparative statistics is a
|
||
|
complex task, made more complicated by several factors. First, most
|
||
|
demographic data on religious belonging in Scotland comes in the form of
|
||
|
the 2011 census and as such is far more atomised than this data-set
|
||
|
which identifies groups at the level of ``congregations'' rather than
|
||
|
individuals. Equating these two is also complex, as participation by
|
||
|
members of congregations can be measured in a variety of ways, there are
|
||
|
often a small number of active participants in each eco-congregation
|
||
|
group, but may also be a large scale, but passive, support by the wider
|
||
|
community.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So why provide this kind of data (i.e.~at the level of individual
|
||
|
churches) when more granular data (i.e.~at the level of individuals
|
||
|
persons) is available in the form of the census and related parallel
|
||
|
publications such as the 2008 Scottish Environmental Attitudes survey?
|
||
|
We believe that mapping places of worship provides a useful intermediate
|
||
|
level of analysis and may complement our more atomised understanding of
|
||
|
EA which has been assessed at the level of individual persons to date.
|
||
|
Because representation within some administrative areas of Scotland, can
|
||
|
lead to a small number of data points, we have kept analysis to a
|
||
|
National level and have not provided more specific administrative-area
|
||
|
level calculations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
\begin{longtable}[]{@{}lr@{}}
|
||
|
\caption{ECS by denomination}\tabularnewline
|
||
|
\toprule
|
||
|
& x\tabularnewline
|
||
|
\midrule
|
||
|
\endfirsthead
|
||
|
\toprule
|
||
|
& x\tabularnewline
|
||
|
\midrule
|
||
|
\endhead
|
||
|
Baptist & 4\tabularnewline
|
||
|
C of S & 254\tabularnewline
|
||
|
C of S / URC & 3\tabularnewline
|
||
|
Cong & 1\tabularnewline
|
||
|
Ecu & 5\tabularnewline
|
||
|
FCS & 1\tabularnewline
|
||
|
Independent & 2\tabularnewline
|
||
|
Meth & 4\tabularnewline
|
||
|
Non. & 1\tabularnewline
|
||
|
Quaker & 1\tabularnewline
|
||
|
RC & 15\tabularnewline
|
||
|
SEC & 41\tabularnewline
|
||
|
Unitarian & 1\tabularnewline
|
||
|
URC & 11\tabularnewline
|
||
|
\bottomrule
|
||
|
\end{longtable}
|
||
|
|
||
|
As one might expect, there is a strong representation of the Church of
|
||
|
Scotland, almost 74\% of eco-congregations, with this number remaining
|
||
|
the same when we only count awarded sites. We can confirm, on the basis
|
||
|
of this analysis that ECS has a disproportional representation by Church
|
||
|
of Scotland churches. At the 2002 church census count, it only
|
||
|
represented 40.20\% of Scottish churches (1666 of 4144 total churches).
|
||
|
Similarly, on the 2011 Scottish census, only 32.44\% of persons claimed
|
||
|
to be members of the Church of Scotland. We can adjust this
|
||
|
representation to 60\%, if one excludes the 2,445,204 persons (46\% of
|
||
|
the total on the census) who reported either ``no religion'' or
|
||
|
adherence to a religious tradition not currently represented among the
|
||
|
eco-congregation sites. There is a slight over-representation by the
|
||
|
United Reformed church, though this seems considerably more dramatic
|
||
|
when one takes into account the fact that this is a trebling or more of
|
||
|
their overall share of Scottish churches. The URC makes up only sightly
|
||
|
more than 1\% of church buildings in Scotland and a tiny 0.04\% of
|
||
|
respondents to the 2011 census. The Scottish Episcopal church hovers
|
||
|
right around a proportional representation within ECS. More concerning
|
||
|
are the significant underrepresentation by Roman Catholic churches,
|
||
|
Baptists, the Free Church of Scotland, and other independent churches.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While Roman Catholic churches make up just over 10\% of the church
|
||
|
buildings in Scotland, less than 5\% of churches registered as
|
||
|
eco-congregations are RC. Even more dramatic is the quartering of
|
||
|
baptist churches, and the non-existent representation among the
|
||
|
significant group of independent churches and small denominations. These
|
||
|
make up nearly 25\% of all Scottish churches (over a thousand) and yet
|
||
|
only 4 have registered as eco-congregations. We provide several
|
||
|
tentative advisories in response to these under-representations in the
|
||
|
final section of this paper.
|
||
|
|
||
|
\hypertarget{eco-congregations-urban-rural-and-remote}{%
|
||
|
\section{Eco-Congregations, Urban, Rural and
|
||
|
Remote}\label{eco-congregations-urban-rural-and-remote}}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
||
|
## OGR data source with driver: ESRI Shapefile
|
||
|
## Source: "/Users/jeremy/gits/mapping_environmental_action/data", layer: "SG_UrbanRural_2016"
|
||
|
## with 8 features
|
||
|
## It has 6 fields
|
||
|
\end{verbatim}
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rather than bifurcate congregations into an urban/rural dichotomy, for
|
||
|
this study we used the Scottish Government's six-point remoteness scale
|
||
|
to categorise eco-congregations along a spectrum of highly populated to
|
||
|
remote areas. This 8-fold scale (calculated biennially) offers a more
|
||
|
nuanced measurement that combines measurements of remoteness and
|
||
|
population along the following lines:
|
||
|
|
||
|
\begin{enumerate}
|
||
|
\def\labelenumi{\arabic{enumi}.}
|
||
|
\tightlist
|
||
|
\item
|
||
|
Large Urban Areas - Settlements of over 125,000 people.
|
||
|
\item
|
||
|
Other Urban Areas - Settlements of 10,000 to 125,000 people.
|
||
|
\item
|
||
|
Accessible Small Towns - Settlements of between 3,000 and 10,000
|
||
|
people, and within a 30 minute drive time of a Settlement of 10,000 or
|
||
|
more.
|
||
|
\item
|
||
|
Remote Small Towns - Settlements of between 3,000 and 10,000 people,
|
||
|
and with a drive time between 30 and 60 minutes to a Settlement of
|
||
|
10,000 or more.
|
||
|
\item
|
||
|
Very Remote Small Towns - Settlements of between 3,000 and 10,000
|
||
|
people, and with a drive time of over 60 minutes to a Settlement of
|
||
|
10,000 or more.
|
||
|
\item
|
||
|
Accessible Rural Areas - Areas with a population of less than 3,000
|
||
|
people, and within a drive time of 30 minutes to a Settlement of
|
||
|
10,000 or more.
|
||
|
\item
|
||
|
Remote Rural Areas - Areas with a population of less than 3,000
|
||
|
people, and with a drive time of between 30 and 60 minutes to a
|
||
|
Settlement of 10,000 or more.
|
||
|
\item
|
||
|
Very Remote Rural Areas - Areas with a population of less than 3,000
|
||
|
people, and with a drive time of over 60 minutes to a Settlement of
|
||
|
10,000 or more.
|
||
|
\end{enumerate}
|
||
|
|
||
|
The key question which this analysis seeks to answer is whether ECS, or
|
||
|
the other groups surveyed, are more concentrated in Urban or Rural
|
||
|
areas, so as is the case below with our analysis of deprivation, we are
|
||
|
concerned with the outer conditions, i.e.~the urban areas (items 1-2)
|
||
|
and remote areas (items 7-8).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of all the groups surveyed in this study, Eco-Congregation Scotland is
|
||
|
the most heavily concentrated in large urban areas (33.53\%), exceeding
|
||
|
by almost 50\% the rate for all places of worship (22.96\% in large
|
||
|
urban areas). Transition is a much more modest 20\% and development
|
||
|
trusts a bit lower at 15\%. It is interesting to note that the rate of
|
||
|
ECS concentration in these large urban areas matches the level of
|
||
|
overall population distribution (34.5\%). On the other end of the scale,
|
||
|
Eco-Congregation Scotland is the least concentrated in remote rural
|
||
|
areas (with 3.93\% on level 7 and 5.44\% on level 8 on the urban-rural
|
||
|
scale), though again, they correlate roughly to the general population
|
||
|
distribution (3.2\% and 2.9\% respectively). Places of worship outpace
|
||
|
both the population of Scotland and the footprint of Eco-Congregation
|
||
|
Scotland, with 14.98\% in very remote rural areas, but this is exceeded
|
||
|
by transition at 16.47\% and both by Scottish community development
|
||
|
trusts at 32.14\%. So while Eco-Congregation Scotland correlates roughly
|
||
|
with Scottish population distribution across the urban-rural scale, it
|
||
|
has a considerably more urban profile than either of the other two
|
||
|
groups surveyed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
\includegraphics{figures/create_ur_barplot-1.pdf}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\begin{figure}
|
||
|
\centering
|
||
|
\includegraphics{figures/create_urbanrural_ecs_chart_choropleth-1.pdf}
|
||
|
\caption{Figure 9}
|
||
|
\end{figure}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\hypertarget{wealth-employment-and-literacy}{%
|
||
|
\section{Wealth, Employment, and
|
||
|
Literacy}\label{wealth-employment-and-literacy}}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
||
|
## OGR data source with driver: ESRI Shapefile
|
||
|
## Source: "/Users/jeremy/gits/mapping_environmental_action/data", layer: "sc_dz_11"
|
||
|
## with 6976 features
|
||
|
## It has 9 fields
|
||
|
\end{verbatim}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\includegraphics{figures/create_simd_barplot-1.pdf}
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another crucial point of assessment relates to the relation of
|
||
|
Eco-Congregation communities to the Scottish Index of Multiple
|
||
|
Deprivation. This instrument aggregates a large variety of factors which
|
||
|
can lead to deprivation including crime rates, employment levels, access
|
||
|
to services (implicating remoteness), and literacy. By assessing ECS,
|
||
|
Transition, and dtas against the deprivation scale, we can assess
|
||
|
whether eco-congregations fall within particular demographics and also
|
||
|
whether the fully aggregated SIMD measurement provides a useful point of
|
||
|
comparison for our purposes. The SIMD essentially divides Scotland into
|
||
|
6407 geographic zones and then ranks them based on their relative
|
||
|
deprivation. This data set can be split into any number of groups, but
|
||
|
for our purposes we have settled on Quintiles, splitting the SIMD data
|
||
|
set at every 1302 entries. We then measured where each transition group,
|
||
|
ECS, and dtas fell within these zones and calculated how they fell into
|
||
|
these five quintiles, from more to least deprived.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The first, and most compelling finding is that, in general
|
||
|
Eco-Congregation Scotland and Transition Scotland are both roughly the
|
||
|
same and match the level of population distribution in the lowest
|
||
|
quintile of the general SIMD measurement. 8\% of transition groups and
|
||
|
eco-congregation groups which have received awards and 9\% of the
|
||
|
population are located within this quintile. However, taken in relation
|
||
|
to the distribution of places of worship in the lowest quintile, we find
|
||
|
that eco-congregations are located at half the rate that places of
|
||
|
worship are (15\%) and dtass match this much more closely at 14\%.
|
||
|
Turning towards the top quintile, this pattern also holds, here both
|
||
|
transition groups (21\%) and eco-congregations (21\% and 29\% of awarded
|
||
|
congregations) depart from the population distribution in this upper
|
||
|
quintile (which is 10\%). Again, general places of worship (at 11\%) and
|
||
|
DTASs (at 5\%) take the opposite direction. We can say decisively that
|
||
|
in communities which have been identified as good candidates for
|
||
|
intervention to reduce deprivation, ECS and Transition are less likely,
|
||
|
and they are over-represented at the areas which fall into the least
|
||
|
deprived quintile.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We can find divergence between transition communities and
|
||
|
eco-congregation when we split out SIMD domains. In the lowest quartile,
|
||
|
measuring exclusively for the income domain, ECS is more represented
|
||
|
(11\%) - roughly the same as DTAS (12\%), and transition is less (6\%)
|
||
|
represented. In general (as shown on the chart in Appendix D), these
|
||
|
trends hold when representation of our groups are measured within other
|
||
|
non-remoteness domains of the SIMD. Our basic conclusion is that
|
||
|
transition towns are least likely to operate within the lowest quartile
|
||
|
of SIMD and DTASs are most likely, with ECS somewhere in the middle.
|
||
|
Given the general disparity against the presence of places of worship,
|
||
|
it seems fair to suggest that this might be an area for improvement,
|
||
|
perhaps even worth developing a special programme which might target
|
||
|
areas in SIMD quartile 1 for eco-congregation outreach. This might be
|
||
|
considered particularly in light of the starkest underrepresentation of
|
||
|
ECS and transition within the SIMD domain of education, skills, and
|
||
|
training.
|
||
|
|
||
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
||
|
## Reading layer `SSSI_SCOTLAND' from data source `/Users/jeremy/gits/mapping_environmental_action/data/SSSI_SCOTLAND.shp' using driver `ESRI Shapefile'
|
||
|
## Simple feature collection with 15872 features and 7 fields
|
||
|
## geometry type: POLYGON
|
||
|
## dimension: XY
|
||
|
## bbox: xmin: -296506.9 ymin: 530237.9 xmax: 467721.5 ymax: 1220310
|
||
|
## epsg (SRID): NA
|
||
|
## proj4string: +proj=tmerc +lat_0=49 +lon_0=-2 +k=0.9996012717 +x_0=400000 +y_0=-100000 +datum=OSGB36 +units=m +no_defs
|
||
|
\end{verbatim}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
||
|
## Reading layer `WILDLAND_SCOTLAND' from data source `/Users/jeremy/gits/mapping_environmental_action/data/WILDLAND_SCOTLAND.shp' using driver `ESRI Shapefile'
|
||
|
## Simple feature collection with 42 features and 3 fields
|
||
|
## geometry type: MULTIPOLYGON
|
||
|
## dimension: XY
|
||
|
## bbox: xmin: 76877.24 ymin: 578454.1 xmax: 435367.1 ymax: 1190510
|
||
|
## epsg (SRID): NA
|
||
|
## proj4string: +proj=tmerc +lat_0=49 +lon_0=-2 +k=0.9996012717 +x_0=400000 +y_0=-100000 +datum=OSGB36 +units=m +no_defs
|
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\end{verbatim}
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||
|
|
||
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
||
|
## Reading layer `National_Forest_Inventory_Woodland_Scotland_2017' from data source `/Users/jeremy/gits/mapping_environmental_action/data/National_Forest_Inventory_Woodland_Scotland_2017.shp' using driver `ESRI Shapefile'
|
||
|
## Simple feature collection with 199698 features and 7 fields
|
||
|
## geometry type: POLYGON
|
||
|
## dimension: XY
|
||
|
## bbox: xmin: 65210.1 ymin: 532547.9 xmax: 461253.7 ymax: 1209179
|
||
|
## epsg (SRID): NA
|
||
|
## proj4string: +proj=tmerc +lat_0=49 +lon_0=-2 +k=0.9996012717 +x_0=400000 +y_0=-100000 +datum=OSGB36 +units=m +no_defs
|
||
|
\end{verbatim}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\hypertarget{proximity-to-wilderness}{%
|
||
|
\section{Proximity to ``Wilderness''}\label{proximity-to-wilderness}}
|
||
|
|
||
|
Chasing down a curiosity, I decided to try and calculate whether
|
||
|
proximity to ``wilderness'' or ``scenic nature'' or just trees might
|
||
|
have some impact on generating more mobilised communities. I realised
|
||
|
that there would be several problems with this kind of calculation up
|
||
|
front, first being that ``nature'' is a deeply problematic construct,
|
||
|
reviled by geographers and philosophers alike. With this in mind, I
|
||
|
identified several different ways of reckoning wilderness, starting with
|
||
|
the highly anachronistic ``Scenic Land'' designation from the 1970s.
|
||
|
Then I pursued the more carefully calculated ``core wild areas''
|
||
|
generated by SNH just a few years ago. However, even the core wile areas
|
||
|
concept has been criticised heavily, so I also expanded out my search to
|
||
|
include all sites of special scientific interest and then went even
|
||
|
wider to include the Scottish Forestry Service's ``Native Woodland'' and
|
||
|
finally, the most generic possible measurement, any land identified as
|
||
|
forested at the last Forest Inventory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Proximity to these areas was the next concern, because many of these
|
||
|
designations deliberately exclude human habitat, so it was necessary to
|
||
|
measure the number of sites within proximity. There is a question which
|
||
|
lies here regarding aesthetics, namely, what sort of proximity might
|
||
|
generate an affective connection? From my own experience, I decided upon
|
||
|
the distance represented by a short walk, i.e.~a half-kilometre.
|
||
|
However, with the more generic measurements, such as SSSI and
|
||
|
forestation, this wouldn't do, as there are so many of these sites that
|
||
|
a buffer of 500 meters encapsulates almost all of inhabited Scotland. So
|
||
|
for these sites I also calculated a count within 50 metres.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So what did I discover? The results were inconclusive. First, it is
|
||
|
important to note that on the whole, Eco-Congregations tend to be more
|
||
|
urban than place of worship taken generally at a rate of nearly 3:1
|
||
|
(5.4\% of Eco-Congregations lie in areas currently designated as ``Very
|
||
|
Remote Rural Areas'' whereas nearly 15\% of places of worship lie in
|
||
|
these areas), so what I was testing for was whether this gap was smaller
|
||
|
when specifying these various forms of ``wild'' remoteness. For our
|
||
|
narrowest measurements, there were so few sites captured as to render
|
||
|
measurement unreliable. There are, for obvious reasons, 0 sites located
|
||
|
within any of SNG's core wild areas. Similarly, there are very few of
|
||
|
our activist communities located within SSSI's (only
|
||
|
\texttt{st\_within(pow\_pointX\_sf,\ sssi)} places of worship out of
|
||
|
over 4k, 2 transition towns, (or 2\%) and 7 community development trusts
|
||
|
(3\%)). However, expanding this out makes things a bit more interesting,
|
||
|
within 50 metres of SSSI's in Scotland lie
|
||
|
\texttt{st\_within(ecs\_sf,\ st\_buffer(sssi,\ dist\ =\ 50))}
|
||
|
Eco-Congregations (or just under 1\%), which compares favourably with
|
||
|
the
|
||
|
\texttt{st\_within(pow\_pointX\_sf,\ st\_buffer(sssi,\ dist\ =\ 50))}
|
||
|
places of worship (or just 1.5\%) far exceeding our ratio (1:1.5
|
||
|
vs.~1:3). This is the same with our more anachronistic measure of
|
||
|
``scenic areas,'' there are 7 eco-congregations within these areas, and
|
||
|
175 places of worship, making for a ratio of nearly 1:2 (2.1\%
|
||
|
vs.~4.3\%). Taking our final measure, of forested areas, this is hard to
|
||
|
calculate, as only one Eco-Congregation lies within either native or
|
||
|
generally forested land.
|
||
|
|
||
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
||
|
## [1] 0 3 59
|
||
|
\end{verbatim}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
||
|
## [1] 7 62 610
|
||
|
\end{verbatim}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\includegraphics{figures/wilderness_plots-1.pdf}
|
||
|
\includegraphics{figures/wilderness_plots-2.pdf}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\hypertarget{appendix-a}{%
|
||
|
\section{Appendix A}\label{appendix-a}}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\hypertarget{appendix-b}{%
|
||
|
\section{Appendix B}\label{appendix-b}}
|
||
|
|
||
|
(JK note to self: same as above, but augmented with multipliers by which
|
||
|
categories are different from one another)
|
||
|
|
||
|
\hypertarget{appendix-c---data-by-urban-rural-classification}{%
|
||
|
\section{Appendix C - Data by Urban / Rural
|
||
|
Classification}\label{appendix-c---data-by-urban-rural-classification}}
|
||
|
|
||
|
\renewcommand\refname{Citations}
|
||
|
\bibliography{biblio.bib}
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
\end{document}
|