Thematic principles

The following principles have been developed to guide this section and are supplementary to the core principles listed at the beginning of the Management Plan.

Access is physical and psychological. Well-designed and well-maintained infrastructure for access (miles without stiles, toilets, all access paths, good signposting) is essential. Many people also need to be given the confidence that they have as much right as anyone else to be here.

Rules and norms of behaviour in the countryside need to be clear to all parties. Rights to access come with responsibilities, and there are rules for responsible behaviour (such as the countryside code) which need to be clearly communicated to allow local communities to welcome people with confidence and for visitors to arrive and explore with confidence. Some behavioural norms (unwritten rules) can also be a barrier to those who are not confident about visiting and who worry they may unwittingly do something ‘wrong’. These behavioural norms are subjective, culturally relative, change over time, and need to be negotiated and communicated.

The involvement of North Pennines residents is a foundation for all other engagement work. Helping people feel at home and giving people a good experience of the North Pennines starts with the welcome they receive. More than that, the story of this landscape is partly the story of those who have lived here in the past and those who live here now. Sharing these stories, and helping residents to tell them, is a foundational step in wider engagement.

The benefits of this work are maximised if we are all involved. The goal is a network of relationships with this plan’s aim at their core.

Everyone should be able to access and experience the North Pennines. Ensuring that people from all backgrounds and abilities can experience the North Pennines means working hard to include all those who currently find it difficult to access and enjoy this landscape.

A number of additional principles relating to work with marginalised communities were developed as part of the NLHF funded A Landscape for Everyone project [86] (see Box 14 below)