AAC – Reconciling Challenges in Landscapes – Permanent European Conference for the Study of the Rural Landscapes
Important dates
- 5 December 2025
- Call for sessions
- 6 February 2026
- Deadline for submission of sessions
- 1 March 2026
- Call for abstracts
- 22 April 2026
- Deadlines for submission of abstract
- 24 April 2026
- Notification of acceptance of abstracts. Opening conference registrations
- 15 June 2026
- Closing early bird registrations
- 31 July 2026
- Closing late registrations
Conference theme
Landscapes embody the continuous dialogue between people and land through time. They can be read as palimpsests of the interaction between biophysical and environmental processes and societies adapting and reshaping their surroundings. Once primarily shaped by agrarian livelihoods and relatively stable demographic patterns, rural landscapes are now navigating complex challenges, including climate change impacts, environmental degradation, biodiversity loss, land-use conflicts, social inequality, shifting cultural identities… Main driving forces, such as demography, economy, politics, technology, and natural calamities, initiate a series of interacting landscape change processes.
The landscapes we live in today – our living landscapes – are shaped by complex feedback loops, often leading to a polarisation of geographical space. Densely populated areas are characterised by processes of urbanisation, intensification, industrialisation, and competition between land uses, while depopulation has led to ruralisation, land and settlement abandonment, the loss of the agricultural mosaic, and the decline of services. As more people live in urban places than in rural areas and the rural population is declining, the relationship between urban and rural areas has changed over time.
In this context, there is an urgent need to seek balance and foster harmony among the often conflicting, competing, and even contradictory demands or interests placed on the whole range of rural landscapes currently facing similar challenges, such as climate change impacts, environmental degradation, social inequality, … Landscapes with high and low human pressures have different resilience and adaptability when it comes to responses to flooding and drought, biodiversity loss, food security, heritage protection, landscape management,…
The challenge is how to study these over- and depopulated landscapes from a structural, functional, and historical perspective. How to understand the intertwining factors that play a role in and shape landscapes? How to strengthen urban-rural connections? How to regenerate empty landscapes, reduce regional disparities, and support landscape community resilience?
The conference theme will focus on how to understand the process of finding balance or harmony among conflicting, opposing, contradictory demands or interests in landscapes.
PECSRL 2026 will discuss the following processes that are at stake in a variety of European landscapes and resulting in different stages of change and continuity in both rural and urbanised landscapes.
- Intensification and extensification
- Multifunctionality and homogenisation
- Urbanisation and ruralisation
- Overpopulated and empty landscapes
- Abandonment and revitalisation
- Flooding and drought
- Development and restoration
- Disconnecting and linking
- Coupling and segregation


