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| European Landscape Convention |
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Florence, 20.X.2000 - European Treaty
Series - No. 176
Preamble
The member States of the Council of Europe signatory hereto,
Considering that the aim of the Council of Europe is to achieve a greater
unity between its members for the purpose of safeguarding and realising
the ideals and principles which are their common heritage, and that
this aim is pursued in particular through agreements in the economic
and social fields;
Concerned to achieve sustainable development based on a balanced and
harmonious relationship between social needs, economic activity and
the environment;
Noting that the landscape has an important public interest role in the
cultural, ecological, environmental and social fields, and constitutes
a resource favourable to economic activity and whose protection, management
and planning can contribute to job creation;
Aware that the landscape contributes to the formation of local cultures
and that it is a basic component of the European natural and cultural
heritage, contributing to human well-being and consolidation of the
European identity;
Acknowledging that the landscape is an important part of the quality
of life for people everywhere: in urban areas and in the countryside,
in degraded areas as well as in areas of high quality, in areas recognised
as being of outstanding beauty as well as everyday areas;
Noting that developments in agriculture, forestry, industrial and mineral
production techniques and in regional planning, town planning, transport,
infrastructure, tourism and recreation and, at a more general level,
changes in the world economy are in many cases accelerating the transformation
of landscapes;
Wishing to respond to the public’s wish to enjoy high quality landscapes
and to play an Aktif part in the development of landscapes;
Believing that the landscape is a key element of individual and social
well-being and that its protection, management and planning entail rights
and responsibilities for everyone;
Having regard to the legal texts existing at international level in
the field of protection and management of the natural and cultural heritage,
regional and spatial planning, local self government and transfrontier
co-operation, in particular the Convention on the Conservation of European
Wildlife and Natural Habitats (Bern, 19 September 1979), the Convention
for the Protection of the Architectural Heritage of Europe (Granada,
3 October 1985), the European Convention on the Protection of the Archaeological
Heritage (revised) (Valletta, 16 January 1992), the European Outline
Convention on Transfrontier Co-operation between Territorial Communities
or Authorities (Madrid, 21 May 1980) and its additional protocols, the
European Charter of Local Self-government (Strasbourg, 15 October 1985),
the Convention on Biological Diversity (Rio, 5 June 1992), the Convention
concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage
(Paris, 16 November 1972), and the Convention on Access to Information,
Public Participation in Decision-making and Access to Justice on Environmental
Matters (Aarhus, 25 June 1998);
Acknowledging that the quality and diversity of European landscapes
constitute a common resource, and that it is important to co-operate
towards its protection, management and planning;
Wishing to provide a new instrument devoted exclusively to the protection,
management and planning of all landscapes in Europe,
Have agreed as follows:
CHAPTER I – GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 1 – Definitions
For the purposes of the Convention:
a- “Landscape” means an area, as perceived by
people, whose character is the result of the action and interaction
of natural and/or human factors;
b- “Landscape policy” means an expression by
the competent public authorities of general principles, strategies and
guidelines that permit the taking of specific measures aimed at the
protection, management and planning of landscapes;
c- “Landscape quality objective” means, for a
specific landscape, the formulation by the competent public authorities
of the aspirations of the public with regard to the landscape features
of their surroundings;
d- “Landscape protection” means actions to conserve
and maintain the significant or characteristic features of a landscape,
justified by its heritage value derived from its natural configuration
and/or from human activity;
e- “Landscape management” means action, from
a perspective of sustainable development, to ensure the regular upkeep
of a landscape, so as to guide and harmonise changes which are brought
about by social, economic and environmental processes;
f- “Landscape planning” means strong forward-looking
action to enhance, restore or create landscapes.
Article 2 – Scope
Subject to the provisions contained in Article 15, this Convention applies
to the entire territory of the Parties and covers natural, rural, urban
and peri-urban areas. It includes land, inland water and marine areas.
It concerns landscapes that might be considered outstanding as well
as everyday or degraded landscapes.
Article 3 – Aims
The aims of this Convention are to promote landscape protection, management
and planning, and to organise European co-operation on landscape issues.
CHAPTER II – NATIONAL MEASURES
Article 4 – Division of responsibilities
Each Party shall implement this Convention, in particular Articles 5
and 6, according to its own division of powers, in conformity with its
constitutional principles and administrative arrangements, and respecting
the principle of subsidiarity, taking into account the European Charter
of Local Self-government. Without derogating from the provisions of
this Convention, each Party shall harmonise the implementation of this
Convention with its own policies.
Article 5 – General measures
Each Party undertakes:
a- to recognise landscapes in law as an essential
component of people’s surroundings, an expression of the diversity of
their shared cultural and natural heritage, and a foundation of their
identity;
b- to establish and implement landscape policies
aimed at landscape protection, management and planning through the adoption
of the specific measures set out in Article 6;
c- to establish procedures for the participation
of the general public, local and regional authorities, and other parties
with an interest in the definition and implementation of the landscape
policies mentioned in paragraph b above;
d- to integrate landscape into its regional and
town planning policies and in its cultural, environmental, agricultural,
social and economic policies, as well as in any other policies with
possible direct or indirect impact on landscape.
Article 6 – Specific measures
A- Awareness-raising
Each Party undertakes to increase awareness among the civil society,
private organisations, and public authorities of the value of landscapes,
their role and changes to them.
B- Training and education
Each Party undertakes to promote:
a- training for specialists in landscape appraisal
and operations;
b- multidisciplinary training programmes in landscape
policy, protection, management and planning, for professionals in the
private and public sectors and for associations concerned;
c school and university courses which, in the relevant subject areas,
address the values attaching to landscapes and the issues raised by
their protection, management and planning.
C- Identification and assessment
1- With the Aktif participation of the interested
parties, as stipulated in Article 5.c, and with a view to improving
knowledge of its landscapes, each Party undertakes:
a- i to identify its own landscapes throughout
its territory;
ii- to analyse their characteristics and the
forces and pressures transforming them;
iii- to take note of changes;
b- to assess the landscapes thus identified,
taking into account the particular values assigned to them by the interested
parties and the population concerned.
2- These identification and assessment procedures
shall be guided by the exchanges of experience and methodology, organised
between the Parties at European level pursuant to Article 8.
D- Landscape quality objectives
Each Party undertakes to define landscape quality objectives for the
landscapes identified and assessed, after public consultation in accordance
with Article 5.c.
E- Implementation
To put landscape policies into effect, each Party undertakes to introduce
instruments aimed at protecting, managing and/or planning the landscape.
CHAPTER III – EUROPEAN CO-OPERATION
Article 7 – International policies and programmes
Parties undertake to co-operate in the consideration of the landscape
dimension of international policies and programmes, and to recommend,
where relevant, the inclusion in them of landscape considerations.
Article 8 – Mutual assistance and exchange of information
The Parties undertake to co-operate in order to enhance the effectiveness
of measures taken under other articles of this Convention, and in particular:
a- to render each other technical and scientific
assistance in landscape matters through the pooling and exchange of
experience, and the results of research projects;
b- to promote the exchange of landscape specialists
in particular for training and information purposes;
c- to exchange information on all matters covered
by the provisions of the Convention.
Article 9 – Transfrontier landscapes
The Parties shall encourage transfrontier co-operation on local and
regional level and, wherever necessary, prepare and implement joint
landscape programmes.
Article 10 – Monitoring of the implementation of the Convention
1- Existing competent Committees of Experts set
up under Article 17 of the Statute of the Council of Europe shall be
designated by the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe to
be responsible for monitoring the implementation of the Convention.
2- Following each meeting of the Committees of
Experts, the Secretary General of the Council of Europe shall transmit
a report on the work carried out and on the operation of the Convention
to the Committee of Ministers.
3- The Committees of Experts shall propose to
the Committee of Ministers the criteria for conferring and the rules
governing the Landscape award of the Council of Europe.
Article 11 – Landscape award of the Council of Europe
1- The Landscape award of the Council of Europe
is a distinction which may be conferred on local and regional authorities
and their groupings that have instituted, as part of the landscape policy
of a Party to this Convention, a policy or measures to protect, manage
and/or plan their landscape, which have proved lastingly effective and
can thus serve as an example to other territorial authorities in Europe.
The distinction may be also conferred on non-governmental organisations
having made particularly remarkable contributions to landscape protection,
management or planning.
2- Applications for the Landscape award of the
Council of Europe shall be submitted to the Committees of Experts mentioned
in Article 10 by the Parties. Transfrontier local and regional authorities
and groupings of local and regional authorities concerned, may apply
provided that they jointly manage the landscape in question.
3- On proposals from the Committees of Experts
mentioned in Article 10 the Committee of Ministers shall define and
publish the criteria for conferring the Landscape award of the Council
of Europe, adopt the relevant rules and confer the Award.
4- The granting of the Landscape award of the
Council of Europe is to encourage those receiving the award to ensure
the sustainable protection, management and/or planning of the landscape
areas concerned.
CHAPTER IV – FINAL CLAUSES
Article 12 – Relationship with other instruments
The provisions of this Convention shall not prejudice stricter provisions
concerning landscape protection, management and planning contained in
other existing or future binding national or international instruments.
Article 13 – Signature, ratification and entry into force
1- This Convention shall be open for signature
by the member States of the Council of Europe. It shall be subject to
ratification, acceptance or approval. Instruments of ratification, acceptance
or approval shall be deposited with the Secretary General of the Council
of Europe.
2- The Convention shall enter into force on the
first day of the month following the expiry of a period of three months
after the date on which ten member States of the Council of Europe have
expressed their consent to be bound by the Convention in accordance
with the provisions of the preceding paragraph.
3- In respect of any signatory State which subsequently
expresses its consent to be bound by it, the Convention shall enter
into force on the first day of the month following the expiry of a period
of three months after the date of the deposit of the instrument of ratification,
acceptance or approval.
Article 14 – Accession
1- After the entry into force of this Convention,
the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe may invite the European
Community and any European State which is not a member of the Council
of Europe, to accede to the Convention by a majority decision as provided
in Article 20.d of the Council of Europe Statute, and by the unanimous
vote of the States parties entitled to hold seats in the Committee of
Ministers.
2- In respect of any acceding State, or the European
Community in the event of its accession, this Convention shall enter
into force on the first day of the month following the expiry of a period
of three months after the date of deposit of the instrument of accession
with the Secretary General of the Council of Europe.
Article 15 –Territorial application
1- Any State or the European Community may, at
the time of signature or when depositing its instrument of ratification,
acceptance, approval or accession, specify the territory or territories
to which the Convention shall apply.
2- Any Party may, at any later date, by declaration
addressed to the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, extend
the application of this Convention to any other territory specified
in the declaration. The Convention shall take effect in respect of such
territory on the first day of the month following the expiry of a period
of three months after the date of receipt of the declaration by the
Secretary General.
3- Any declaration made under the two paragraphs
above may, in respect of any territory mentioned in such declaration,
be withdrawn by notification addressed to the Secretary General of the
Council of Europe. Such withdrawal shall become effective on the first
day of the month following the expiry of a period of three months after
the date of receipt of the notification by the Secretary General.
Article 16 – Denunciation
1- Any Party may, at any time, denounce this
Convention by means of a notification addressed to the Secretary General
of the Council of Europe.
2- Such denunciation shall become effective on
the first day of the month following the expiry of a period of three
months after the date of receipt of the notification by the Secretary
General.
Article 17 – Amendments
1- Any Party or the Committees of Experts mentioned
in Article 10 may propose amendments to this Convention.
2- Any proposal for amendment shall be notified
to the Secretary General of the Council of Europe who shall communicate
it to the member States of the Council of Europe, to the others Parties,
and to any European non-member State which has been invited to accede
to this Convention in accordance with the provisions of Article 14.
3- The Committees of Experts mentioned in Article
10 shall examine any amendment proposed and submit the text adopted
by a majority of three-quarters of the Parties’ representatives to the
Committee of Ministers for adoption. Following its adoption by the Committee
of Ministers by the majority provided for in Article 20.d of the Statute
of the Council of Europe and by the unanimous vote of the States parties
entitled to hold seats in the Committee of Ministers, the text shall
be forwarded to the Parties for acceptance.
4- Any amendment shall enter into force in respect
of the Parties which have accepted it on the first day of the month
following the expiry of a period of three months after the date on which
three Council of Europe member States have informed the Secretary General
of their acceptance. In respect of any Party which subsequently accepts
it, such amendment shall enter into force on the first day of the month
following the expiry of a period of three months after the date on which
the said Party has informed the Secretary General of its acceptance.
Article 18 – Notifications
The Secretary General of the Council of Europe shall notify the member
States of the Council of Europe, any State or the European Community
having acceded to this Convention, of:
a- any signature;;
b- the deposit of any instrument of ratification,
acceptance, approval or accession;
c- any date of entry into force of this Convention
in accordance with Articles 13, 14 and 15;
d- any declaration made under Article 15;
e- any denunciation made under Article 16;
f- any proposal for amendment, any amendment
adopted pursuant to Article 17 and the date on which it comes into force;
g- any other act, notification, information or
communication relating to this Convention.
In witness whereof the undersigned, being duly authorised thereto, have
signed this Convention.
Done at Florence, this 20th day of October 2000, in English and in French,
both texts being equally authentic, in a single copy which shall be
deposited in the archives of the Council of Europe. The Secretary General
of the Council of Europe shall transmit certified copies to each member
State of the Council of Europe and to any State or to the European Community
invited to accede to this Convention.
Editor : Bengi Demirkan - L.A.- University of Greenwich/LONDON
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