Heterogeneity in preferences for non-financial incentives to engage landholders in native vegetation management

Research output: Working paperResearch

Standard

Heterogeneity in preferences for non-financial incentives to engage landholders in native vegetation management. / Brown, Josh; Burton, Michael; Davis, Katrina J.; Iftekhar, Sayed ; Olsen, Søren Bøye; Simmonds, B. Alexander; Strange, Niels; Wilson, Kerrie A.

2020.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Brown, J, Burton, M, Davis, KJ, Iftekhar, S, Olsen, SB, Simmonds, BA, Strange, N & Wilson, KA 2020 'Heterogeneity in preferences for non-financial incentives to engage landholders in native vegetation management'.

APA

Brown, J., Burton, M., Davis, K. J., Iftekhar, S., Olsen, S. B., Simmonds, B. A., Strange, N., & Wilson, K. A. (2020). Heterogeneity in preferences for non-financial incentives to engage landholders in native vegetation management.

Vancouver

Brown J, Burton M, Davis KJ, Iftekhar S, Olsen SB, Simmonds BA et al. Heterogeneity in preferences for non-financial incentives to engage landholders in native vegetation management. 2020.

Author

Brown, Josh ; Burton, Michael ; Davis, Katrina J. ; Iftekhar, Sayed ; Olsen, Søren Bøye ; Simmonds, B. Alexander ; Strange, Niels ; Wilson, Kerrie A. / Heterogeneity in preferences for non-financial incentives to engage landholders in native vegetation management. 2020.

Bibtex

@techreport{da694739315e48da90cff93fbe3820fc,
title = "Heterogeneity in preferences for non-financial incentives to engage landholders in native vegetation management",
abstract = "Most of Australia{\textquoteright}s native-forest vegetation is located on private land, and conservation success often depends on farmers{\textquoteright} participation in bush management programmes. 251 landholders within the Brigalow Belt bioregion of southeast Queensland were asked to make pairwise comparisons of 10 non-financial incentives and one financial compensation scheme. Based on a latent class analysis we identify three distinct landholder classes. We discuss the implication of our results for the future design of native vegetation management and conservation policies.",
author = "Josh Brown and Michael Burton and Davis, {Katrina J.} and Sayed Iftekhar and Olsen, {S{\o}ren B{\o}ye} and Simmonds, {B. Alexander} and Niels Strange and Wilson, {Kerrie A.}",
year = "2020",
language = "English",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Heterogeneity in preferences for non-financial incentives to engage landholders in native vegetation management

AU - Brown, Josh

AU - Burton, Michael

AU - Davis, Katrina J.

AU - Iftekhar, Sayed

AU - Olsen, Søren Bøye

AU - Simmonds, B. Alexander

AU - Strange, Niels

AU - Wilson, Kerrie A.

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Most of Australia’s native-forest vegetation is located on private land, and conservation success often depends on farmers’ participation in bush management programmes. 251 landholders within the Brigalow Belt bioregion of southeast Queensland were asked to make pairwise comparisons of 10 non-financial incentives and one financial compensation scheme. Based on a latent class analysis we identify three distinct landholder classes. We discuss the implication of our results for the future design of native vegetation management and conservation policies.

AB - Most of Australia’s native-forest vegetation is located on private land, and conservation success often depends on farmers’ participation in bush management programmes. 251 landholders within the Brigalow Belt bioregion of southeast Queensland were asked to make pairwise comparisons of 10 non-financial incentives and one financial compensation scheme. Based on a latent class analysis we identify three distinct landholder classes. We discuss the implication of our results for the future design of native vegetation management and conservation policies.

M3 - Working paper

BT - Heterogeneity in preferences for non-financial incentives to engage landholders in native vegetation management

ER -

ID: 241213325