Uncommon Ground

Rethinking Our Relationship with the Countryside

Patrick Galbraith author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:HarperCollins Publishers

Publishing:24th Apr '25

£22.00

This title is due to be published on 24th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Uncommon Ground cover

Rethinking our relationship with the countryside

‘An adventurous, intelligent, bold, empathetic, provocative, curious and argumentative exploration of the English countryside and its various human landscapes’ Richard Smyth

'This then is Britain. A perverse treat' Jonathan Meades

‘An adventurous, intelligent, bold, empathetic, provocative, curious and argumentative exploration of the English countryside and its various human landscapes’ Richard Smyth

'This then is Britain. A perverse treat' Jonathan Meades

We know that Britain's land ownership is unbalanced, but what about land access? Who can visit our green and pleasant spaces, who is making use of them and who is taking care of them?

Much is made of open access in Scotland, but what is the reality of the policy in practice, and should England and Wales embrace it?

In January 2023 the largest land access demonstration since the 1930s took place on a bright wintery morning on Dartmoor. Those who spearheaded the protest want open access to every acre of rural Britain. They claim that access helps nature by allowing the public to hold landowners and farmers to account and they claim it will have no effect on wildlife. But where does the truth actually lie?

Is access to the countryside quite as restricted as we are led to believe and are all of those farmers, conservationists and landowners who worry about public access simply misguided? Is it time that somebody put them right?

In Uncommon Ground, Patrick Galbraith takes us on an extraordinary tour of rural Britain, from the Western Isles to Dorset, and from the Norman Conquest to the present day, to uncover the truth. Along the way he meets salmon poachers, landowners, foxhunters, and activists calling for a total abolition of the right to own land. And he spends time with politicians, historians and conservationists, many of whom have mixed feelings about the contemporary access campaign. He also, in order to understand our deep-rooted spiritual connections with the land, heads out with naturists, Travellers and magic mushroom pickers.

What Patrick finds is that the 128,000 miles of formal public footpaths and the 3.6 million acres of access land, give the public the right to visit vast swathes of England and Wales. If laid out in a straight line, our footpath system would be the...

Uncommon Ground is an urgent, illuminating, and provocative work—essential reading for anyone who cherishes Britain’s green spaces and seeks to understand their future.

Peter Oborne

A provocative and timely book that hymns Galbraith's deep love for our landscape and those who live and work within it.

Luke Turner

Uncommon Ground is a genuinely revelatory text. As the debate about land access and sustainability becomes ever more intense and fractious here is that rare thing – a beautifully written narrative based on original research and open minded conversation. It is a book that all activists should read and learn from and which anyone who earns their living from the land will welcome and treasure.

John Mitchinson

Galbraith brings to life the realities of our 'right to roam', and in the process delivers a raking survey of an England, ancient and modern, traditional and outlandish, that for too long has been left unexplored, and unspoken for.

Richard Smyth

We're often told that the current system is unfair, but this intricately detailed journey across the UK turns and overturns the story of land ownership so often that it's impossible to see who "the bad guys" really are – and we're left wondering if they ever existed at all.

Patrick Laurie

Come for the clear-eyed, consummately researched deep dive into the perennially complex question of land access in Britain through the centuries; stay for the marvelously described, decidedly Balzacien cast of characters and Galbraith's perfectly calibrated blend of serious engagement with the natural world — and the people who wish, for better or worse, to tromp around in it — and his crackling wit.

Laird Hunt

Intelligent and fearless, Galbraith challenges widely-held assumptions about what would most benefit wildlife and people.

Katrina Porteous, T.S. Eliot Prize shortlisted poet

ISBN: 9780008644406

Dimensions: 240mm x 159mm x 26mm

Weight: 270g

368 pages