Landscape Journal Spring 2022: Whose landscape is it?

Page 60

LI life: Code of Conduct

Ethics in Practice: Creating a new Code of Practice for LI members by Ben Gosling Three years in the making, the new Landscape Institute Code of Practice embeds internationally recognised ethics principles into UK landscape practice – a huge milestone in the realisation of a global landscape community. In October 2014, the United Nations headquarters on New York’s East 42nd Street hosted the inaugural meeting of the International Ethics Standards (IES) Coalition. Its mission: to temper the global real estate profession – integral as it is to societies and communities, and responsible as it is for two thirds of the planet’s wealth – with a shared set of ethics principles. The Coalition published its ethical framework for the global property market in December 2016. The following month, the Landscape Institute became the first organisation in the landscape sector to join the IES Coalition. Thus began the journey towards our new Code of Practice. Joining the Coalition represented a shift in perspective for the LI. In an increasingly connected, global society, the profile of a profession hinges on how it can answer global challenges: climate change, biodiversity loss, resource security, population growth, and more. An ethics framework is one of many tools that helps us ‘think 60

globally’ when delivering services locally, implementing infrastructure that meets global needs consistently, ethically, and with integrity. In 2019, the LI brought to the International Federation of Landscape Architects (IFLA) World Council a proposal for a shared a set of global ethical principles for landscape. The draft principles found overwhelming support among members, and in

President of the Landscape Institute, Jane Findlay comments: I’m thrilled that our new Code of Practice is now here, supporting our members to deliver the very highest standards of practice at such a crucial time for our profession. In aligning us with IFLA’s global ethics principles, this new Code cements us as part of a global community of landscape professionals – one that stands ready to tackle today’s foremost challenges of climate change, biodiversity loss, and public health and wellbeing. The language in the Code has also undergone some much-needed modernisation. It’s not about monitoring behaviour, but about

October 2021, achieved formal ratification. The LI’s new Code of Practice updates our 2012 Code of Conduct in line with these global principles. Emphasising encouragement over enforcement, it provides a supportive, modern framework for practitioners to deliver the best possible service.

helping our members deliver quality work. It’s not about enforcing compliance, but about supporting it. With regular reviews planned, this Code of Practice will continue to underpin and champion global ethical practice, ensure public confidence in landscape, and promote environmental wellbeing for years to come.


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Articles inside

Introducing newly elected Fellows of the LI

3min
page 67

Creating safer spaces in the public realm

2min
page 66

Spring Update

3min
page 64

The Environment Act

7min
pages 62-63

Ethics in Practice: Creating a new Code of Practice for LI members

3min
pages 60-61

Beauty, diversity and design highlighted at LI AGM

3min
page 59

Building research links

5min
pages 56-57

Conference: ‘Future History: teaching history in landscape schools’

4min
page 55

Reading Green Unpleasant Land

6min
pages 51-52

Statues Redressed

5min
pages 48-50

Black Landscapes Matter

9min
pages 45-47

Auditing Accessibility

7min
pages 42-44

Ramp Rage

5min
pages 40-41

Intersectionality in the design of landscape

7min
pages 38-39

Not all cyclists are Lycra-clad ironmen: A brief introduction to human-centred infrastructure design

8min
pages 35-37

Queer Spaces

7min
pages 32-34

Aberfeldy – a case study of innovative engagement with young people

4min
pages 28-29

Making Space for Girls

8min
pages 25-27

Looking at inclusion in London

3min
page 24

Slow steps in the move to gender parity

7min
pages 22-23

Building an inclusive generation of designers

10min
pages 19-21

Inclusive Environments Conference

6min
pages 16, 18

COP26 - next steps

6min
pages 10-12

Locked up and locked out

4min
page 9

Making COP26 Count all year round

7min
pages 6-8

Designing for Diversity and democracy

2min
page 3
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