Gateways (Jun 2024)

Greenspace & Us: Exploring co-design approaches to increase engagement with nature by girls and young women

  • Stuart Cole,
  • Jessica Goodenough,
  • Melissa Haniff,
  • Nafeesa Hussain,
  • Sahar Ibrahim,
  • Anant Jani,
  • Emily Jiggens,
  • Ansa Khan,
  • Pippa Langford,
  • Louise Montgomery,
  • Elizabeth Moore,
  • Rosie Rowe,
  • Sam Skinner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5130/ijcre.v17i1.8881
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Nature connection through engagement with greenspaces plays an important role in promoting well-being. In England, certain groups, such as girls and young women from disadvantaged backgrounds, have limited access to high-quality greenspaces and face other barriers to engaging with nature. In Oxfordshire, the County Council has committed to improving access to greenspace and nature for all. In 2022, a group consisting of twenty girls and young women (aged 10–16) from East Oxford not-for- profit organisations, academic institutions and public bodies came together to start an initiative called ‘Greenspace & Us’. The girls and young women participated in six three- hour workshops in February to March 2022. Using the COM-B (Capability, Opportunity, Motivation, Behaviour) approach, we explored the enablers and barriers to girls and young women in Oxford engaging more with nature, which included: increasing equity of access; introducing meaningful co-production; taking safety concerns seriously; making nature normal; promoting the right to play; and increasing the ability to connect with greenspaces. The outputs of this process were synthesised into the ‘Greenspace & Us Manifesto’, which was crafted collectively. Furthermore, these insights were used to design inclusive park furniture, which was later installed in a local park in East Oxford. In this practice-based article, we outline the methods, outcomes as well as the strengths and weaknesses of the engagement, co-design and co-production approaches we used in Greenspace & Us. We hope the insights from our project will support more inclusive and equitable design of greenspaces for all.

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