Tuscany:
Sustainability
in City and Country
GEOG 410/510 or USP 410/510
4 credits
Short-term Study Abroad Program
September 8-22, 2008
Apply Now - Deadline is April 11, 2008 for first
consideration
Enrollment limited to 14 students
Click here for
application form
The focus of the program is urban and rural sustainability in Tuscany. After spending
the two days in Siena, we will be based at
Spannocchia, a rural estate located southwest of Siena. On day trips we will examine urban
design and social life in Italian hill towns, noted as models of urban
sustainability. We will visit Volterra and
Massa Marittima (a designated CittąSlow
– part of the Slow City movement); the small village of Chiusdino; the 13th century
Abbey of San Galgano; and Larderello
(the location of the world’s first geothermal power plant).
City-country relationships have long been important in Tuscany. In the Middle Ages, agricultural
land was often owned by city-based landlords and farmed through a mezzadria
(sharecropping) system that lasted until the mid-twentieth century. In
today's tourist economy, connections between city and country remain
important. The Tenuta di
Spannocchia dates back to the 12th century, when a group of monks settled at
Santa Lucia, a hermitage located on the banks of the Torrente Rosia
at the base of what is now the Spannocchia property. The Spannocchi
family were residents on the property by the early 1200s and later settled in
Siena. In the mid-1400s, Ambrogio Spannocchi was personal banker to
Pope Pius II. The Palazzo Spannocchi, one of the great palaces in
Siena, is now part of the Banca Monte Dei Paschi di Siena, the world's oldest
bank.
Today the Tenuta is an organic farm and forest
and is part of the Alto Merse nature reserve. At Spannocchia students will
explore sustainable agriculture and agritourism in self-defined, individual
projects. As a group, we will participate in ongoing mapping projects
and help develop an interpretive plan for the cultural landscapes of the
estate and its surroundings.
PROGRAM LEADERS
David Banis (2008)
manages the Center for Spatial Analysis and Research in the geography
department at Portland
State University.
His teaching focuses on map use, cartography, and geographic information
systems. His interests include cultural geography and resource management. He
has traveled in more than 30 countries including several trips to Tuscany and assisted
with the 2007 course.
Tom Harvey (2005-2007) is a professor of geography at Portland State University.
He has worked in historic preservation and as a city planner. His teaching
and research emphases are urban geography, sustainability, and sense of
place. He taught for a term in Siena in 1999, has traveled extensively to
Tuscany's hill towns, and has a strong interest in landscape photography.
Gil Latz (2004) is Vice Provost
for International Affairs and Professor of Geography and International
Studies at Portland
State University.
Dr. Latz was awarded a Fulbright Research Scholarship, University of
Florence, Italy, 2001-02, to study landscape conservation at Spannocchia. The
most recent publication of his research, “Comparative international
research on agricultural land-use history and forest management practices:
the Tuscan estate of Castello di Spannocchia and Vermont's
Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park”, was published in:
Mauro Agnoletti, ed. The Conservation of Cultural Landscapes.
Oxfordshire: CABI Publishing (2007).
PROGRAM COST
Approximately $2200-2400. Includes registration for 4 credits, lodging and
meals while at Spannocchia, lodging in Siena,
local transportation, and museum admissions. Not included are air fare,
incidentals, etc. The final cost is dependent on variables that include the
currency exchange rate and the number of students enrolled.
RESOURCES
The Spannocchia Foundation
The Etruscan
Foundation and the History of Spannocchia
Citta Slow
Slow Food
Reading list
for 2008
Photos from
2006/2007 (pdf format)
Application
form
One-page course info
sheet.
For additional program and study abroad information, please contact Alyse
Collins in the Education Abroad Office (ayc@pdx.edu,
503-725-8256).
For information on course content, contact David Banis,
Geography Department, dbanis@pdx.edu.

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