cover image: The world at night

20.500.12592/gqnkg4k

The world at night

2024

Light pollution is the human-caused alteration of outdoor light levels from those occurring naturally. It threatens ecological and commemorative integrity, interferes with amateur and research astronomy, degrades the appreciation of mythologies and cultural practices related to the night sky, mars wilderness experience and landscape beauty, carries risks to human health and wastes energy. Counterintuitively, excess outdoor lighting reduces safety and security. In response to these many threats, not just to astronomy, the International Dark-Sky Association, the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada and Fundaci n Starlight have operated programmes to certify places that have effective protections against light pollution, impact monitoring, public education and lighting management strategies. There are also several other initiatives outside these three leading programmes that have awarded dark sky status to protected areas. The lessons learnt presented in this report are drawn from case studies of dark sky places certified by the IDA, RASC, Fundaci n Starlight and other organizations.
light pollution artificial light best practice protected area guidelines series dark sky starlight

Authors

Welch, David, Dick, Robert, Trevi o, Karen, Longcore, Travis, Rich, Catherine, Hearnshaw, John, Ruggles, Clive, Dalton, Adam, Barentine, John, Gyarmathy, Istv n

Call number
IUCN-PAG-033, En
ISBN
978-2-8317-2260-3
Imprint
Gland, Switzerland : IUCN, 2024
Monographic Series no
033
Physical Description
xxiv, 133p. : ill., maps
Published in
IUCN World Commission on Protected Areas (WCPA), Urban Conservation Strategies Specialist Group, Dark Skies Advisory Group