National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949

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The National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which created the Countryside Commission (which later became the Countryside Agency), provided the framework for the creation of national parks and Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty in England and Wales, and also addressed public rights of way and access to open land. The Act was passed in 1949 with all-party support, as part of the reconstruction of the UK by the Labour Party government after World War II.

The Act followed reports by:

The first 10 British national parks were designated as such in the 1950s under the Act in mostly poor-quality agricultural upland. An eleventh 'national park' in the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads was set up by a special Act of Parliament, the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads Act, in 1988 (strictly speaking, this is not a national park, but the differences are sufficiently small that this entity is always regarded as being "equivalent to" a national park). The New Forest was designated a national park on 1 March 2005. One more area is as of 2006 in the process of being designated as a national park, the South Downs (the last of the 12 areas chosen in the 1947 Hobhouse Report which has yet to become a national park).

The structure set up by the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949 was amended by:

Further amendments are made by the Natural Environment and Rural Communities Act 2006, under which English Nature, the Countryside Agency and the Rural Development Service will be merged from 1 October 2006, to form a new bodies called Natural England and the Commission for Rural Communities.

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