• ISSRM 2007 •

Transcription

• ISSRM 2007 •
• ISSRM 2007 •
The 13th International Symposium on
Society and Resource Management
Photograph ©Stephen Trimble
Landscape Continuity and Change
Social Science Perspectives
and Interdisciplinary Contributions
Park City, Utah USA June 17-21, 2007
• ISSRM 2007 Schedule Overview •
June 16th (Saturday)
Student Forum (on USU campus in Logan, Utah)
June 17th (Sunday)
Student Forum
Collaborative Learning Workshop
ISSRM 2007 Registration Begins
Teaching Workshop
HD.Gov Workshop
ISSRM 2007 Welcoming Reception
ISSRM 2007 Opening Session & Keynote Address
June 18th (Monday)
Meeting Sessions and Special Events
Poster Session and Reception
June 19th (Tuesday)
Meeting Sessions and Special Events
Mini-Plenary Sessions
Graduate Program and Career Fair
June 20th (Wednesday)
Keynote Address
Meeting Sessions and Special Events
IASNR New Member Meeting
Evening IASNR Banquet and Keynote Address
June 21th (Thursday)
Morning Meeting Sessions
IASNR Business Meeting and Lunch
Social Impact Assessment Training Course Day 1
June 22th (Friday)
Social Impact Assessment Training Course Day 2
4:30 pm - 9:00 pm
8:00 am - Noon
9:00 am - 4:00 pm
Noon
2:00 pm - 5:00 pm
2:00 pm - 5:00 pm
5:30 pm - 6:30 pm
6:30 pm - 8:00 pm
8:30 am - 5:00 pm
5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
8:30 am - 5:30 pm
1:30 pm - 3:30 pm
5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
8:30 am - 10:00 am
8:30 am - 5:00 pm
5:00 pm - 6:00 pm
6:30 pm - 8:30 pm
8:30 am - Noon
12:15 pm - 2:00 pm
9:00 am - 5:00 pm
9:00 am - 5:00 pm
• The International Symposium on Society and Resource Management •
• Table of Contents •
Introduction
About Venue and Host Institution...........
Conference Organizers................................
Conference Logistics....................................
About IASNR and ISSRM ...........................
Greening the ISSRM 2007...........................
Special Events
Pre-Meeting Trainings and Workshops....
ISSRM 2007 Meeting Special Events........
Post-Meeting Social Impact Assessment
Keynote Speakers............................................
Mini-Plenary Panel Sessions .......................
Student Paper Competition Winners ......
Pre-Organized Sessions.................................
Schedule Details
Monday
Overview.............................................
Session and Paper Detail..............
Poster Presentations......................
Tuesday
Overview.............................................
Session and Paper Detail..............
Wednesday
Overview.............................................
Session and Paper Detail..............
Thursday
Overview............................................
Session and Paper Detail..............
Reference Material
Index of First Authors by Last Name.......
Map of Local Area and Eating Options
Map of Meeting Spaces...............................
Sponsors............................................................
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• About the Venue •
ISSRM 2007 will take place in Park City, Utah. Park City is located 30 minutes from downtown Salt Lake City on the eastern
slope of the Wasatch Mountain range. Meeting activities will take place at the Park City Marriott Hotel (symposium
headquarters) and the Prospector Square Lodge and Convention Center, a short 3-minute walk from the Marriott.
Best known as one of the main venues for the 2002 Olympic Winter Games, Park City is also a prime summer destination.
Park City and Summit County have long been forward-looking about preserving open space and incorporating public-access
trails into area development. Within the city limits, altitudes range from 6,720 to 8,460 feet above sea level. The surrounding
Wasatch Mountains rise to over 10,000 feet. In addition to the extensive trail system, Park City offers lift-served hiking and
biking, golf, fly-fishing, gondola rides, the Alpine Slide, outdoor concerts, numerous festivals, and much more. There are over
100 restaurants and bars, plus dozens of shops and galleries.
Park City is also an excellent starting point for an extended visit to the vast public lands of the American West. Many national
and state parks and national monuments (e.g., Yellowstone, Grant Teton, Arches, Bryce Canyon, Zion, Grand Canyon) are located
within a four- to eight-hour drive.
• About the Host Institution •
Utah State University (USU) is Utah’s Land-Grant University,
with a roughly $200 million in annual research grants
and a public mission to conduct research and outreach to
serve the state’s rapidly growing population. Located in
the beautiful Cache Valley between the Wellsville and Bear
River mountain ranges in northern Utah, USU is a perfect
base from which to conduct research (and recreate!) in the
diverse mountain and desert regions of the Intermountain
West. Our natural environment has attracted an unusually
large concentration of faculty and students with interests
in the intersection of society, natural resources, and the
environment.
Faculty and students from several departments and research centers at USU collaborated to organize the 2007 ISSRM. These
include the Departments of:
• Sociology, Social Work & Anthropology (www.usu.edu/sswa)
• Environment and Society
• Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning
• Economics
• Languages, Philosophy & Speech Communication, and
• Political Science
As well as:
– The Colleges of Natural Resources and Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
– The Institute for Outdoor Recreation & Tourism (IORT)
– The Ecology Center
– The Western Rural Development Center (WRDC)
– The School for Graduate Studies (www.usu.edu/gradsch)
Graduate students and others interested in more information about USU’s programs should contact the departments
individually. Additional information on many programs will be available during the career fair on Tuesday evening.
• Conference Organizers •
The ISSRM 2007 Organizing Committee is comprised of students and faculty representing several
departments at Utah State University.
Organizing Chair: Douglas Jackson-Smith
Conference Coordinator: Lorien Belton
Core Conference Staff
Student Forum Coordinator
Susan Wilmot Reid
Green Team Chair
Mark Brunson
Website Developer and Database Programmer
Paulus Mau
Fundraising Chair
John Allen
Supporting Conference Staff
Faculty
Graduate Students
Session Naming Committee
Dale Blahna, Margie Borecki, Steve Burr, Steve Daniels, Chris Fawson, Paul Jakus, Richard Krannich, Peter Kumble, , Sandy Marquart-Pyatt, Peggy Petrzelka, Jennifer Peeples
Scott Hoffmann, Stephanie Malin, Joyce Mumah, Jennifer Pope, Bill Spain, Carla Koons Trentelman, Stephen VanGeem,
Kendra Womack
Lorien Belton, Mark Brunson, Douglas Jackson-Smith, Paul Jakus, Lynne McNeill, Flora Shrode, Stephen VanGeem
International Scientific Advisory Committee
Allan L. Curtis C. Michael Hall Clare Ryan Courtney G. Flint Cynthia Van Der Wiele Daniel Williams Harry C. Zinn Heather J. Aslin Jacqueline Vaughn Jens Emborg Ketil Skogen Kevin S. Hanna Linda Kruger Mae A. Davenport Naomi Krogman Nick Sanyal Peter Fredman Richard Margerum Robert Manning Susan Stewart Tara L. Teel Tom Beckley Tony Cheng Ulrike Pröebstl Urs P. Kreuter Wolfgang Haider Charles Sturt University University of Canterbury University of Washington University of Illinois North Carolina State University U.S. Forest Service (Rocky Mountain Region) Pennsylvania State University Bureau of Rural Sciences Northern Arizona University The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Wilfrid Laurier University U.S. Forest Service (Pacific NW Region) Southern Illinois University University of Alberta University of Idaho Mid-Sweden University University of Oregon University of Vermont U.S. Forest Service (North Central Region) Colorado State University University of New Brunswick Colorado State University University of Natural Resources & Applied Life Sciences Texas A & M University Simon Fraser University Australia
New Zealand
United States
United States
United States
United States
United States
Australia
United States
Denmark
Norway
Canada
United States
United States
Canada
United States
Sweden
United States
United States
United States
United States
Canada
United States
Austria
United States
Canada
• Conference Logistics •
I Already Have a Program, But I’m Curious: Registration Information
The ISSRM 2007 Registration Desk will be located in the Park City Marriott Hotel Mezzanine. The registration desk will be open
during the following hours:
Sunday, June 17th
Monday, June 18th
Noon – 9:00 pm
7:00 am – 5:00 pm
If you wish to register at other times, please stop at the Marriott front desk and ask to contact the meeting registration staff.
Better Late than Never: Uploading Presentations
Presenters planning to use PowerPoint files who did not upload them to our website before June 15th must come to the
session room 30 minutes prior to the start of their session to load their talk to the room’s laptop. Please bring presentations on
flash drives or CDs.
Reach Out and Touch Someone: Email and Web Access
All meeting areas in the Prospector Square Lodge and Conference Center have free wireless internet access. Ask at the front
desk for help with connection information.
The main lobby in the Park City Marriott has free public wireless access. In other spaces inside the hotel (meeting rooms, hotel
rooms, etc.) you will need to pay $5.00 per day (per computer) for access. Contact the Marriott front desk for more information.
Give Me a Break: Lounges and Work Rooms
We have set aside two large rooms at the Prospector Square Lodge & Convention Center for informal use by meeting
registrants. One of these rooms (the Theater Lounge North) will be available as a lounge for relaxation and casual conversation.
We have scheduled massage therapists to come to the meeting in the afternoons. The second room (Theater Lounge South)
will be used as a quiet workspace. Tables and chairs will be set up to facilitate within-meeting work opportunities.
In addition, on Wednesday the Park City Marriott Outdoor Pavilion Tent will be set up and available for socializing and small
group meetings.
Small groups who wish to have a more private space to hold working meetings can use the Marriott Boardroom during
times when it is otherwise not occupied. Contact the meeting organizers (through the Marriott front desk) to check into the
availability of this boardroom.
Feed Me: Food Logistics
The registration fees for the 2007 ISSRM were set significantly lower than in previous years to enable more people to attend
the meeting. To keep costs down, we are not offering any meals as part of the registration package. All registrants will receive:
• Morning coffee & tea (7:30-9:00 am)
• Morning break snacks & beverage service (10:00-10:30 am)
• Afternoon break snacks & beverage service (usually 3:00-3:30 pm)
• Reception food & drinks – Monday and Tuesday evenings (5:30-7:30 pm)
Individuals who prepaid for the Wednesday evening banquet will receive tickets at registration to attend this event. If you did
not prepay, but wish to attend the banquet, please talk to conference staff to see about availability.
Drink Up! Dealing with the Altitude
• Conference Logistics (cont.) •
Park City is located at a relatively high altitude (within the city limits, altitudes start at 6,720 feet above sea level.) Persons
not accustomed to high elevation should take care to drink a lot of water to avoid headaches, fatigue, and possible elevation
sickness. All attendees will be provided with a water bottle at registration; keep track of your bottle and reuse it throughout
the meeting.
There IS Such a Thing as a Free Lunch! IASNR Business Meeting
People who pre-registered (at no cost) for the IASNR business meeting lunch will be provided with a free lunch on Thursday at
noon. If you want to join the party, let us know at the registration desk on Sunday or Monday.
I’m Still Hungry: Other Food Options
Although we are not providing meals, there are a wide range of options available to you in the immediate neighborhood (and
in downtown Park City). Within a 2-block radius of the two meeting venues, there are a number of restaurants that offer lunch
and dinner. We have printed a map at the back of this program. In addition, the Park City Marriott has an in-hotel restaurant
and will be setting up kiosks for meeting participants where breakfast and lunch items will be available. For people staying
in condominiums with kitchen facilities, an Albertson’s grocery store is located just a few blocks away, near the intersection of
Kearns Boulevard & Park Avenue.
The Historic District located on Main Street in downtown Park City has a large number of restaurants, shops, and bars. It is
located about 1.5 miles from the meeting venues.
The Wheels on the Bus Go Round & Round: Getting Around Park City
The Park City/Summit County bus system is free and has convenient service to and from the meeting venues, the downtown
Main Street District, and the Park City Mountain Resort (a taking off point for recreation activities). The “Prospector/Deer
Valley” bus route passes the Marriott and Prospector Square venues every 20 minutes (from 7:30 a.m. until 10:30 p.m.). The last
bus leaves the Old Town Transit Center at 10:19 p.m. to return to the hotel area. A free trolley service runs along Main Street
from 10:00 a.m. until 10:00 p.m. Copies of the Park City Transit System Guide will be available in the hotel lobbies. To arrange
taxis or other transportation options, ask at the hotel front desks.
Gotta Get Outta Here! Recreational Opportunities in the Area
The Park City area offers ample opportunities for recreation and relaxation.
During the meeting, participants might explore the 2002 Winter Olympic Park and Museum (you can try your hand at skijumping and bobsled or luge riding). Within and around the city, there is an extensive system of bike paths, including the
Rail Trail which passes within blocks of the hotels. The Park City Mountain Resort has a large trail system and chairlift rides
allow for easy access to high-elevation hiking and biking. Other local businesses offer rentals and guides for mountain biking,
rafting, fly fishing, camping, and horseback riding. Mountain bikes can also be rented directly from the conference hotels.
Immediately after the meeting, visitors can learn about the region’s Native American heritage and participate in a regional
PowWow dance by attending the Heber Valley PowWow at Soldier Hollow, June 22-24, not far from the conference venue.
Visitors might also want to use their Park City trip as a taking off point for a tour of the nearby Uinta mountains (one of the
largest roadless areas in the continental United States with peaks over 13,000 feet) or any of the many National Parks in Utah,
Colorado, and Wyoming.
For more information about all of these options, ask at the front desk of either hotel.
• About IASNR •
The International Symposium on Society and Resource Management (ISSRM) is the official annual meeting of the International
Association for Society and Natural Resources (http://www.iasnr.org), an interdisciplinary professional association whose
members bring a variety of social science and natural science backgrounds to their research on environmental and
natural resource issues. Since its inception in 1986, the ISSRM has become the premier scientific meeting for academic
and government researchers, students, land managers and NGO representatives who are broadly interested in the human
dimensions of natural resources and the environment. Although the largest percentage of IASNR members live and work in
the United States and Canada, symposia have been held in six countries on three continents – most recently in Vancouver, B.C.,
Canada in 2006 and Östersund, Sweden, in 2005.
The ISSRM is unique in that the meeting itself was the catalyst for the professional organization and its journal, rather than the
other way around. The first symposium was held at Oregon State University in 1986. Its organizer and prime mover was Donald
R. Field, then a professor of sociology and forest management and National Park Service scientist at the Corvallis campus. His
idea was simple: to provide a venue for social scientists and federal and state land management agencies to exchange research
knowledge on emerging environmental and natural resource issues.
Two important actions came about as a result of that 1986 meeting. First, it was clear that the information exchange was
valuable enough to warrant more meetings, so the ISSRM became first a biannual conference and since 2004 an annual
meeting. Second, conferees agreed that enough research was being conducted on the social science aspects of environment
and natural resources that it warranted its own publication. Hence the well-known journal Society and Natural Resources
appeared in 1988, published by Taylor & Francis. IASNR officially was established in 2002 in order to solidify the professional
identity of this interdisciplinary research field, as well as to maintain the journal and ISSRM.
These days a typical ISSRM attracts 600 or more scientists, managers and conservation professionals from 25 or more nations.
Participating disciplines include sociology, psychology, anthropology, political science, economics, landscape architecture,
environmental planning, outdoor recreation management, history, and the natural sciences.
Past and Present ISSRM Symposia Hosts, Locations, and Themes
2007
Utah State University, Park City, Utah USA
Landscape Continuity and Change: Social Science Perspectives and Interdisciplinary Conversations
(http://www.issrm2007.org)
2006
Simon Fraser University & University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Social Sciences in Resource Management: Global Challenges & Local Responses (http://www.issrm2006.rem.sfu.ca/)
2005
Mid Sweden University, Östersund, Sweden
From Knowledge to Management: Balancing Resource Extraction Protection and Experiences (http://www.issrm2005.com)
2004
Colorado State University, Keystone, Colorado, USA
ISSRM: Past and Future (http://www.warnercnr.colostate.edu/2004ISSRM/)
2002
Colorado State University & University of Sassari, Sardinia, Italy
Global Challenges of Parks and Protected Area Management Symposium
(http://www.warnercnr.colostate.edu/NRRT/SSRM/)
2000
Western Washington University, Bellingham, Washington, USA
1999
University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
1998
University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, Missouri, USA (http://www.ssu.missouri.edu/ssu/issrm/)
1996
Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania, USA
1994
Colorado State University, Ft. Collins, Colorado, USA
1992
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
1990
Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, USA
1988
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Illinois, USA
1986
Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA
Future ISSRM Symposia
2008
2009
University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont USA
University of Natural Resources & Applied Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria
• Greening the ISSRM 2007 •
Environmental Meeting Practices
The organizers of the ISSRM 2007 have taken a number of steps to reduce the ‘environmental footprint’ of our meeting. We
have negotiated with the venue hotels to minimize wasteful practices, and used the following practices, among others, to help
‘green’ the meeting:
Reduce
- Publicity was coordinated with IASNR membership mailing to save paper and cost
- Water coolers are available instead of bottled water at breaks to reduce waste
- Airport shuttle services have been coordinated to reduce carbon emissions (and costs!)
- Planned snacks do not require extensive paper plates or napkins
Re-Use
- Attendees have been encouraged to bring their own tote-bags
- Nametag holders, donated by the Outdoor Retailers Association, will be returned for re-use
- Conference mugs made available to reduce paper waste and encourage re-use
Recycle
- Paper, plastic, and glass recycling provided at the hotels
- Glass and plastic mugs for the event made of recycled material
- Program printed on light-weight, easily recycled paper
Responsible
- Posters and flyers printed on recycled paper with vegetable inks
- T-shirts printed on organic cotton
- Triple-certified (organic, fair trade, shade-grown) coffee at the breaks
- Extra food from banquet will be donated to needy local families
- Profits from sales of mugs and T-shirts donated to carbon-sequestration projects that benefit local communities
You Can Help!
Among the many ways you can help:
- Refill the water bottle provided to you to rather than buying additional bottles
- Buy and use a mug during the conference
- Celebrate the ways the people around you are helping in small ways
- Donate to help offset your carbon footprint (see below)
- Take public transportation home if possible
- Talk about how ISSRM can become more sustainable as an annual event.
If a group of highly educated individuals dedicated to the linkages between society and natural resources
cannot “green” themselves, then we have a great deal of work ahead of us.
Carbon Offset Donations
Long distance travel to conferences is one of the major ways each of us contributes to carbon dioxide emissions and global
warming. To help compensate, the ISSRM 2007 is raising money to provide to organizations coordinating tree-planting,
alternative energy, and sustainable development projects designed to ‘offset carbon emissions’.
If you have yet to do so, we strongly encourage all ISSRM attendees to make a donation to these organizations during the
registration process. We are also selling limited quantities of t-shirts, tote bags, and mugs. Ask at the registration desk for more
details.
A typical round trip flight from NYC to SLC would generate 0.9 to 1.5 tonnes of carbon emission per person. Offsetting that
amount of carbon would cost $8-$20 (depending on your assumptions). Each t-shirt, mug, or bag we sell will generate roughly
$5 profit toward offsetting your carbon footprint. Donate cash or purchase your offsets today!
• Pre-Meeting Symposia and Workshops •
Student Forum
Saturday and Sunday, June 16-17, USU campus, Logan, Utah
Organizers: ISSRM 2007 Organizing Committee and Susan Wilmot Reid, Student Forum Chair
The 2007 ISSRM includes a special pre-meeting symposium for graduate and undergraduate students to be held on the Utah
State University campus (in Logan, Utah) that is designed to enhance the student ISSRM experience. The ISSRM Student Forum
is an overnight event, beginning the day before the actual start of the symposium. The Forum begins with a late afternoon
workshop, dinner and an evening social. After spending the night in local accommodations, there is a Sunday morning
program followed by an opportunity for recreation or relaxation and an afternoon shuttle from Logan to Park City for the start
of the official ISSRM meeting Sunday evening.
Collaborative Learning Workshop
Sunday, June 17th, 9:00 am - 4:00 pm, Park City Marriott: Grill Room
Organizers: Steve Daniels and Gregg Walker
Steve Daniels and Gregg Walker are the originators of the Collaborative Learning approach to managing natural resource
conflict, as articulated in their 2001 book, Working through Environmental Conflict: The Collaborative Learning Approach. The
approach has been used in many locales in the US and abroad over the past 15 years, and is steadily evolving as experience
with it expands. This session provides an overview into the technique and some of the specific tools that have been
developed in recent years. An overview to Collaborative Learning and an assessment process for measuring collaborative
potential is provided in the morning. The focus for the afternoon is developed in response to participant preferences, and
will draw from a set of techniques as varied as developing a “commitment to collaboration compact,” the importance of
collaborative leadership, using system thinking techniques to promote integrative creativity, guiding principles for designing
collaborative processes, and the role of Collaborative Learning in planning by the USDA-Forest Service under the “New Rule.”
The session is designed to meet the needs of managers and academics who are interested in applying the Collaborative
Learning approach in their own work.
Innovations and Insights in Teaching about Society, Natural Resources, and Environment:
A Participatory Workshop
Sunday, June 17th, 2:00 - 5:00 pm, Park City Marriott: Ballrooms III & IV
Organizers: Joan Brehm (Illinois State) and Courtney Flint (University of Illinois)
Moderator: Brian Eisenhauer (Plymouth State)
Learn to create a more engaged and critically-minded student of natural resources, society, and the environment! This preconference workshop showcases a variety of tangible active learning and student-centered activities that work to link specific
teaching and learning goals with an engaged classroom. The workshop opens with presentations of innovative and tried and
true lesson plans and activities for engaging students in the process of learning and researching the intersection of society and
natural resources, while at the same time employing essential critical thinking skills and tools. Presenters will share materials
and handouts on their ‘best practices’ so participants can leave with the tools and background they need to implement these
teaching methods in their own curriculum. In addition, ample time will be given for broader discussion and participation from
the larger group of attendees to facilitate further cross-fertilization of ideas and concepts.
HD.gov Workshop
Sunday, June 17th, 2:00 - 5:00 pm, Park City Marriott: Ballroom II
Organizers: Thomas Fish and Hansje Gold-Kruek, NOAA Coastal Services Center, and Fred Clark, USDA Forest Service
HD.gov is a joint effort by several U.S. and International agencies, NGOs and academic institutions to establish a credible
online information resource and “one-stop shop” dedicated to the human dimensions of natural resource management and
environmental problem solving. The goal of this workshop is to introduce participants to the HD.gov Web portal, including
its potential, components, and capabilities, as well as to solicit advice on how to further develop its content and capabilities.
HD.gov is intended to be developed with full and open input and participation from all members of the human dimensions
of natural resource management community. The ISSRM 2007 pre-meeting workshop provides an opportunity for ISSRM
attendees to learn about and contribute to this resource. In addition, participants will meet others in their fields and have the
chance to join an informal consortium of users that will continue sharing information after the conference.
• ISSRM 2007 Meeting Special Events •
Welcome Reception and Opening Keynote Address: Pati Ruiz Corzo
Sunday, June 17th, 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Park City Marriott: Ballrooms
“Biodiversity Conservation: A Social Strategy for Orchestrating the Participation of Multiple Stakeholders”
Poster Session and Reception
Monday, June 18th, 5:30 - 7:30 pm, Park City Marriott: Outdoor Pavilion Tent
Drinks and snacks will be served as poster authors will be available to discuss their research and projects.
Graduate Program and Career Fair
Tuesday, June 19th, 5:30 - 7:30 pm, Park City Marriott: Outdoor Pavilion Tent
Come meet with potential graduate students and employers.
Mini-Plenary Panel Sessions
Tuesday, June 19th, 1:30 - 3:30 pm
Two special simultaneous “Mini-Plenary” events will address the following topics:
• “Challenges and Opportunities of Oil and Gas Development in the Intermountain West,” Park City Marriott: Ballrooms
• “Social Science and Interdisciplinary Perspectives,” Prospector Square Lodge and Convention Center: Celebrity Theater.
Keynote Address: Brent Haglund
Wednesday, June 20th, 8:30 - 10:00 am, Park City Marriott: Ballrooms
“A Land Ethic, Good Science and Meaningful Incentives: Sand County Foundation Conversations with Landholders and
Resource Users”
IASNR New Member Meeting
Wednesday, June 20th, 5:00-6:00 p.m., Park City Marriott Outdoor Pavilion Tent
If you joined the International Association for Society and Natural Resources (IASNR) for the first time within the past year
(as part of your ISSRM registration or independent of ISSRM) please plan to attend this special session. This year we’ll again
introduce new members to key IASNR and SNR journal staff and to the benefits of being an IASNR member. This is a great time
to meet other new members. We also encourage you to bring your questions and suggestions regarding IASNR, the Society
and Natural Resources journal, and future ISSRMs.
IASNR Awards Banquet and Keynote Address: Patrick A. Shea
Wednesday, June 20th, 6:30 - 8:30 pm, Park City Marriott: Ballrooms
“What would Max Weber have to say to Al Gore and Jon Huntsman?”
IASNR Business Meeting
Thursday, June 21st, 12:15 - 2:00 pm, Park City Marriott: Ballrooms III and IV
Come to the annual IASNR business meeting. Find out what the society leadership has been doing, review the society budget,
weigh in on important society policy decisions, volunteer to work on committees, and sit in a chair for another 90 minutes. All
members are encouraged to attend. Did we mention you get a free lunch (if you sign up in advance)?
• Post-Meeting Workshop •
Social Impact Assessment Training
Thursday and Friday, June 21-22nd, 9:00-5:00, Park City Marriott
Organizers: Rabel Burge and C. Nicholas Taylor
Social Impact Assessment (SIA) is the systematic analysis in advance of the likely impacts a proposed action (project, policy
or plan) will have on the day-to-day life (environment) of persons and communities. The goal of this workshop is to equip
participants with the knowledge, understanding and technical skills to commission or do SIA at the community and project
level for a variety of development and policy proposals for both developed and developing countries. A combination of
instructor presentations and group activities around practical case studies are used. The two day SIA course is designed for
natural resource managers, planners; government agency personnel; development workers for domestic and international
donor organizations, extension and community development workers; as well as faculty and students in town and regional
planning, environmental studies, engineering, the social sciences; and any person wanting to learn about or do social impact
assessment either as a stand alone activity or part of environmental or other types of assessments.
• Keynote Speakers •
Opening Keynote Address
Sunday, June 17th, 6:30 pm
Park City Marriott Ballrooms
Pati Ruiz Corzo, Director, Grupo Ecológico Sierra Gorda
(www.sierragordamexico.org/es/)
“Biodiversity Conservation: A Social Strategy for Orchestrating the
Participation of Mulitple Stakeholders”
Born in Mexico City, Martha “Pati” Ruiz Corzo grew up in the state capital of Queretaro State where she studied and became a history
and music teacher. In 1984, she and her family made a radical change moving to the rural mountains of the Sierra Gorda to live
self-sufficiently, gain knowledge of the region and its social processes and to serve Life. Having learned first hand the severe socioenvironmental problems in the mountains derived from unsustainable economic practices, in 1987 Pati and her husband founded the
Sierra Gorda Ecological Group which is now recognized by Ashoka: Innovators for the Public, the Schwab Foundation and the World
Economic Forum, the Rolex Prize for Enterprise and IUCN. Leading a regional movement culminating in the federal decree of the onemillion acre (383,567-hectare) Sierra Gorda Biosphere Reserve in 1997, an area roughly one third of Queretaro State territory and 97%
private property, Pati Ruiz Corzo was designated federal director of the Reserve and established the first co-management model that
partners the federal authority with a local civil organization. Subsequently she became the Regional Coordinator of the largest Global
Environmental Facility project in the UNDP portfolio for Mexico in 2001.
The Sierra Gorda Biosphere Reserve (SGBR) is the most eco-diverse protected natural area in Mexico, with 14 different vegetation types,
including semi-desert scrub, cloud forests, coniferous and oak forests, riparian forests, dry tropical forests, tropical sub-deciduous forests
and others. At the same time, the Sierra Gorda region has become Mexico’s leading model of active participation – and heightened
awareness – by rural residents in both community development and conservation of natural resources. The Reserve has approximately
100,000 citizens living in 638 localities. The project takes a bioregional approach, demonstrating and formalizing alternative
conservation schemes for private and community-owned lands that build on existing use traditions and community involvement.
Keynote Address
Wednesday, June 20th, 8:30 a.m.
Park City Marriott: Grand Ballrooms
Brent Haglund, President, Sand County Foundation
(www.sandcounty.net)
“A Land Ethic, Good Science and Meaningful Incentives: Sand County
Foundation Conversations with Landholders and Resource Users”
Brent Haglund earned a Ph.D in ecology from the University of Georgia where he studied with Eugene Odum and Frank Golley. His
research interests have been in ecosystem level effects of weather modification, fire management and wildlife populations. Dr. Haglund
was ecological consultant to the Wisconsin Legislative Council on non-point water pollution, is a member of the Executive Committee
of the Wisconsin Public Utility Institute, and was a private sector conservation advisor to the Cabinet of Premier Nick Greiner, New South
Wales, Australia. His latest book, “Hands on Environmentalism” Encounter Books (2005) was co-authored with Tom Still.
The Sand County Foundation’s mission is “to advance the use of ethical and scientifically sound land management practices and
partnerships for the benefit of people and the ecological landscape.” The objective behind Sand County Foundation programs is
to learn from, encourage, and where appropriate, assist citizen-based conservation projects that incorporate multiple landowners,
a commitment to ethics and incentives, monitoring, independent review and a willingness to share the social, economic and
environmental outcomes with others.
10
• Keynote Speakers (cont.) •
IASNR Banquet Keynote Address
Wednesday, June 20th, 6:30 p.m.
Park City Marriott Ballrooms
Patrick A. Shea, P.C. Former Director of the Bureau of Land Management,
and Deputy Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management, U. S.
Department of Interior
“What would Max Weber have to say to Al Gore and Jon Huntsman?”
A former Rhodes Scholar and graduate of Stanford University, Oxford University, and Harvard Law School, Patrick A. Shea currently
practices business, development, government and environmental law. From 1997 to 2000 he served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Land and Minerals Management and Director of the Bureau of Land Management, for the U.S. Department of Interior in Washington,
D.C. As Deputy Assistant Secretary he oversaw the Bureau of Land Management, Minerals Management Services and Office of Surface
Mining. These agencies are responsible for the management of over 270 million acres of land in the United States and for all off-shore
drilling for oil and gas production in the United States. He created the first Science Advisory Board for the Bureau, which has over
12,000 employees in 25 states. The agencies under the Land and Minerals Management division work in over 20 foreign countries and
with over three hundred Native American tribes.
11
• Mini-Plenary Panel Sessions
Two simultaneous “Mini-Plenary” panels will take place Tuesday, June 19th, from 1:30-3:30 pm.
Challenges & Opportunities of Oil and Gas Development in the Intermountain West
Organizer: Douglas Jackson-Smith, Utah State University
Marriott Ballroom II, III and IV
Tuesday 1:30 - 3:30 pm
Speakers
Jim Evans
Geologist, Utah State University
John Martin
County Commissioner, Garfield County, Colorado
Nancy Sorenson
Rancher, Powder River Basin, Wyoming
Gayle McKeachnie
Rural Affairs Coordinator, Utah State Governor’s Rural & Economic Development Office
Randy Teeuwen
Community Relations Advisor, EnCana Oil and Gas (USA) Inc
Selma Sierra
Utah State Director, Bureau of Land Management
This panel seeks to bring non-academics from different walks of life together to discuss their experiences and recommendations for
managing oil and gas development in the American West in a manner that might maximize benefits and minimize unnecessary costs. A
diverse range of speakers will present background on the causes and consequences of the recent energy exploration boom, and share
their personal observations about the role of local, state, and federal government actors in responding to the boom.
Social Science Conversations and Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Organizer: Douglas Jackson-Smith, Utah State University
Prospector Celebrity Theater
Tuesday 1:30 - 3:30 pm
Speakers
Thomas Beckley
University of New Brunswick
Dana Dolsen
Organization of Wildlife Planners; Utah Division of Wildlife Resources
Nick Salafsky
Foundations of Success
Tom Fish and Hansje Gold-Kreuck
NOAA Coastal Services Center and IMSG at NOAA Coastal Services Center
Sarah Timpson
Special Advisor on Community-Based Initiatives, United Nations Development Programme
This panel will examine the ways that social science and interdisciplinary perspectives are used in a variety of institutional contexts –
state and federal government, nonprofit, private sector, international organizations, etc – where human dimensions of natural resource
issues are at the fore. The speakers have been asked to reflect about whether (and how adequately) both social and natural resource
issues are being integrated, and how social science research is (or is not) employed toward those ends.
12
• Student Paper Competition Winners •
Each year at ISSRM, Taylor & Francis, the publisher of the Society and Natural Resources Journal, sponsors a student paper competition.
This year’s winners are highlighted below.
Winner of the Best Doctoral Student Paper
Kirsten M. Leong, Cornell University/ National Park Service
“The Tragedy of Becoming Common: Landscape Change and Perceptions of Wildlife”
Presented in: Bats and Snakes and Deer, Oh My! Values and Attitudes about Wildlife
Monday June 18th at 10:30 am - 12:00 pm, Room: Prospector Coalition III
Since 1970, more Americans have lived in suburbs than anywhere else in the country, and exurban development is now the
fastest growing residential sector. At the same time, changes in land-use practices and conservation efforts have increased
numbers of many wildlife species. As a result, wildlife are adapting to urbanizing settings and to humans. People are
encountering wildlife more frequently with varying reactions to the interactions, often leading to conflicts over suburban
wildlife management. One species demonstrates the conundrum well--white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus). The National
Park Service administers a number of parks in suburban areas that experience impacts related to deer. In-depth interviews
conducted with residents living near three parks yielded insight into community perceptions of deer to better understand
these conflicts. Interviewees’ evaluations of their experiences with deer appear strongly influenced by both frequency of
encounters and deer behavior. Deer were described more positively when perceived as rare versus common and wild versus
tame. Yet cultural conceptions of “wildness” were based on deer behavior in the absence of humans rather than adaptive
ability. This study suggests that the coexistence of people and deer in urbanizing landscapes creates a positive feedback loop:
when deer are rare and “wild,” people actively seek encounters; deer become habituated when people are unthreatening,
which lowers their fear response and brings them into contact with people more frequently; people become habituated to
deer as they become less novel and act less “wild”; habituated deer cause undesirable impacts to people; a level of human
tolerance of negative impacts is exceeded where deer are no longer viewed as wildlife, but as pests. Just as Roderick Nash
describes wilderness as a “state of mind,” so too is “wildness” in wild life. The extent to which humans and wildlife continue to
coexist may depend on the ability of our cultural conceptions of “wildness” to keep pace with the rate at which wildlife adapts
to anthropogenic landscape change.
Winner of the Best Undergraduate/Master’s Student Paper
Robert A Smail, University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point
“The Recreational Motivations of Wisconsin All Terrain Vehicle Users”
Presented in: ATV Riders in Minnesota and Wisconsin: Understanding Attitudes, Preferences and Motivations
Monday June 18th at 1:30 pm - 3:00 pm, Room: Prospector Celebrity Theater
Over the last two decades, All Terrain Vehicle (ATV) ownership in Wisconsin has increased from 25,000 vehicles to over 300,000.
The addition of these new stakeholders has complicated an already contentious process of outdoor recreation management
and dramatically changed the dynamic of public land policy development. While many other recreational users have been
extensively studied, there is very little information regarding the environmental values and recreational motivations of ATV
users. In the fall of 2006, a mail survey (n=519, response rate 56%) was administered to ATV owners who had registered their
vehicle for use on Wisconsin’s public lands. This survey queried demographics, riding habits, use preferences, place attachment
and willingness to pay. In addition, the survey measured the motivations and environmental values of ATV users. While
respondents indicated a clear divergence in recreational motivations, they were surprisingly biocentric and overwhelmingly
supported an intrinsic value of nature. These results highlight the diverse goals of ATV users while raising questions about their
place among other outdoor recreationists.
13
• Individual Pre-Organized Sessions •
A3
Innovative USDA Forest Service Information Assets Projects
Organizers: Patrick C Reed and Ashley Goldhor-Wilcock, USDA Forest Service
Monday June 18th8:30 am - 10:00 am
This session provides an overview of the USFS Information Assets (IA) Projects program, which was designed to encourage
innovative protocols for applied information delivery. Each panelist received an IA grant and will share their experiences and
findings.
A4
Environmental Services and Rural Development
Organizer: Pati Ruiz Corzo, Sierra Gorda Biosphere Reserve and Lorien Belton, Utah State University
Monday June 18th8:30 am - 10:00 am
This session brings together papers from Mexico and Belize to examine the social, economic, cultural, and ecological
implications of creating biosphere reserves in developing societies. A particular focus is the potential for capturing the
economic value of ecosystem services as part of an integrated rural development approach to nature conservation.
B4
Communities, Governance, and Forest Change
Organizer: Courtney G Flint, University of Illinois
Monday June 18th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
The concept of governance is useful for examining policies, decisions, and experiences related to changing forest landscapes.
This session explores governance at multiple scales of analysis and how policy and community operate in the context of forest
change.
B13
Bringing Motorized Recreation Research Up To Speed: Implications for Management
Organizer: Taylor V Stein, University of Florida
Monday June 18th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
This session will highlight research that examines OHV recreation planning, users, and environmental impacts. The four
presentations will discuss original research that compared snowmobiles and ATV’s in Pennsylvania, examined collaborative
approaches to OHV recreation in North Carolina, and identified management strategies for social and ecological impacts in
Florida and Texas.
C1
Adventure, Legal Liability and Public Lands: Issues and Trends Surrounding this Growing Concern
Organizer: Alan W Ewert, Indiana University
Monday June 18th1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
This panel examines the trends and issues associated with adventure activities and legal liability on public lands from a variety
of perspectives.
C3
BLM’s Cooperating Agency Initiative: Deepening Intergovernmental Involvement in Managing the
Public Lands
Organizer: Cynthia Moses-Nedd, USDI Bureau of Land Management
Monday June 18th1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
This session describes a policy initiative at the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM) that offers
state, local, and tribal governments unprecedented involvement in the preparation of the agency’s resource management
plans and environmental impact statements (EISs). Organized in a panel discussion format, the session will consider the
lessons learned over the first two years of implementing this new approach to intergovernmental cooperation.
C13
ATV Riders in Minnesota and Wisconsin: Understanding Attitudes, Preferences and Motivations
Organizer: Stephanie Snyder, USDA Forest Service
Monday June 18th1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
Recent surveys of registered ATV owners were conducted in both Minnesota and Wisconsin to gather information about
rider experience preferences, location preferences, motivations, habits, values and opinions about mechanisms for funding
development and maintenance of ATV trails. Results from these two surveys will be presented.
D2
Promoting Active Recreation in Natural Areas
Organizer: Karla A Henderson, North Carolina State University
Monday June 18th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
Promoting health through active living is a concern of many groups. The purpose of this panel discussion is to summarize the
emerging issues about the role of public lands as opportunities to encourage physical activity and promote health.
14
• Individual Pre-Organized Sessions (cont.) •
D3
Social Trends Impacting Resource Management in Alaska: Unique or Ubiquitous?
Organizer: Peter J Fix, University of Alaska-Fairbanks, Linda Kruger, USDA Forest Service, and Brian Glaspell, US Fish & Wildlife Service
Monday June 18th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
This panel will discuss current social trends and issues impacting resource management in Alaska, compare these trends and
issues to what is occurring in areas outside of Alaska, and discuss social science research needs. Panel participants are currently
involved in an interagency social science research project in Alaska.
D4
We Need Answers NOW: Using Research in the Field
Organizer: Kelly D Lawrence, USDA Forest Service, PNW Research Station, and Utah State University
Monday June 18th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
A panel of forest managers discusses how they utilize social science research in their every-day decision-making, and identify
ways to make existing research more useful and accessible.
E3
Outdoor Recreation/Tourism Research and Education for the 21st Century: Defining Strategic
Directions and Building Capacity through a National Strategic Planning Process
Organizer: Fen Hunt, USDA-CSREES and Steve Selin, West Virginia University
Tuesday June 19th8:30 am - 10:00 am
In response to society’s significant demographic, economic, environmental, technological, and land use changes, this session
intends to garner ideas and inputs for a strategic plan that guides outdoor recreation research, education, extension, and
engagement program of the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service.
E4
Compatibility of Forestry Incentive Programs and the Practice of Sustainable Forestry on NonIndustrial Private Forest Lands
Organizers: Steve E Daniels, Utah State University, and John L. Greene, USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station
Tuesday June 19th8:30 am - 10:00 am
This panel discussion reports the results of a national research project on forestry incentive programs and sustainable forestry.
The presenters will discuss findings from focus group interviews and a national survey of forestry assistance program officers.
E9
Using Secondary Data to Understand Community-Forest Linkages and Resilience
Organizer: Linda E Kruger, USDA Forest Service, PNW Research Station
Tuesday June 19th8:30 am - 10:00 am
This session uses several recent research projects that developed innovative uses of secondary data for understanding the role
forests play in community well being and resilience.
E11
Aesthetics and Ecology in the Context of Landscape Change
Organizer: Paul H Gobster, USDA Forest Service, Terry Daniel, University of Arizona, and Joan Nassauer, University of Michigan
Tuesday June 19th8:30 am - 10:00 am
This panel presentation and audience discussion session is focused on a critical evaluation of a conceptual working model of
the relationship between aesthetics and ecology in the context of landscape planning, design, and management developed
by Gobster, Nassauer, Daniel, and Fry (in press). After an overview of the model and prepared commentary and critique by a
discussant, the session will open to discussion and critique by audience participants.
F1
Knowledge into Action: Researchers’ and Educators’ Perspectives on Applying Social Learning to
Improve Natural Resource and Environmental Management Practices
Organizer: Heather J Aslin, Australian National University
Tuesday June 19th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
This session focuses on how researchers and educators can engage with other practitioners to make a real difference in
resource and environmental management. The papers consider this issue from a range of different perspectives - how to
develop effective participatory research practices, how choice of research methods influences outcomes and their relevance to
land users, and how environmental performance indicators can be applied to engage farmers.
F2
Ecology and the City: Understanding the Social Factors
Organizer: Lynne M Westphal, USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station
Tuesday June 19th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
This session will address issues of ecology in cities, looking at the intersection of ecological and social factors: specifically, a
new paradigm for ecological planning in urban areas; modeling as a participatory tool in environmental decision making; the
importance of non-timber forest products in cities, and the use of modeling to optimize urban habitat conservation.
15
• Individual Pre-Organized Sessions (cont.) •
F3
Staying Home on the Range: Challenges for Ranch Conservation in a Changing West
Organizer: Mark Brunson, Utah State University
Tuesday June 19th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
Ranching is increasingly said to be the most viable land use in the rural West for sustaining healthy communities and
ecosystems. Presentations in this session outline why this may be so, and describe challenges to maintaining a sustainable
ranching industry.
F4
County Commissioners and Natural Resource Management
Organizer: Courtney G Flint, University of Illinois, Steve Daniels and John Allen, Utah State University
Tuesday June 19th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
This panel on county governance highlights experiences and perspectives on natural resource management and landscape
change from county commissioners from the Intermountain West.
G2
Will Local Working Groups Measure Up? Perspectives of Scale in Collaborative Wildlife Management
Organizer: Sarah Lupis, Utah State Cooperative Extension, and Lorien Belton, Utah State University
Tuesday June 19th4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
Over the last decade, a multi-stakeholder collaborative process have formed around the Western United States to address
declines in Greater and Gunnison sage-grouse. This panel brings together individuals involved with these working groups to
discuss their experiences addressing the needs of partners and wildlife at multiple scales through this collaborative process.
G5
Research Methods in Evaluating Collaborative Natural Resources Management
Organizer: Richard Margerum, University of Oregon
Tuesday June 19th4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
This preorganized paper session critically evaluates some of the common approaches and underlying theoretical principles
associated with evaluations of collaborative resource management. The goal is to improve research on collaboration by
identifying commonalities, theoretical tensions, and gaps in evaluation methods.
G7
Western Land Use and Conservation Issues: The Role of Corporate, Non-Profit Environmental and
Land Conservation Partners
Organizer: Peter A Kumble, Utah State University
Tuesday June 19th4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
This panel discussion highlights some exciting land conservation partnerships and land management approaches currently
being utilized by Rocky Mountain Power (formerly Pacificorp) a major Western landowner and energy utility.
G8
New Approaches in Open Space Protection
Organizer: Toddi A Steelman, North Carolina State University
Tuesday June 19th4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
Open space protection assumes that planning and science are relevant to the conservation of ecosystem values and functions.
But are they? This panel of researchers and practitioners challenges the conventional wisdom and provide alternative ways to
begin thinking about how science and planning should be used for more sustainable land use.
G11
Contributions of Natural Resource Extension to Sustainable Communities and Ecosystems
Organizers: Ajit Krishnaswamy and Chris Hollstedt, FORREX Forest Research Extension Partnership
Tuesday June 19th4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
Several case studies on extension work in natural resources in the US and Canada will be presented. Panelists will discuss the
effectiveness and efficiency of extension work in trying to bring on-the-ground or policy-level change.
H2
Changing Cultural Meanings of Hunting
Organizers: Ketil Skogen and Olve Krange, Norweigian Institute for Nature Research
Wednesday June 20th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
The struggle over hunting, as well as its changing cultural significance, seems to be embedded in societal tensions that
originate deep in the structure of modern societies and in contemporary processes of change. Research on the cultural
meaning of hunting addresses a topic of relevance to policy-makers, managers, NGOs and conservationists, but it is also an
empirical field that lends itself to analyses of more general aspects of social and cultural change.
16
• Individual Pre-Organized Sessions (cont.) •
H5
The Joyful Promise of University Life: A University of Michigan Mentoring Story
Organizer: Dan Dustin, University of Utah
Wednesday June 20th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
Using their University of Michigan experience as a foundation for discussion, each panel member will share his perspective on
the joyful promise that effective mentoring holds for ensuring a lifelong wellspring of creative and collaborative enthusiasm.
H15
Fitting Place Research into Decision-Making
Organizers: William P Stewart, University of Illinois and Daniel R. Williams, USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mtn. Research Station
Wednesday June 20th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
This roundtable discusses ways to connect place research to managerial decision-making, and to explore innovative decision
contexts that fit with concepts of place and community. Audience comments and discussion will follow panelist presentations.
I6
An Interview with Walter Firey, Author of Man, Mind and Land and the First Environmental/Natural
Resource Sociologist
Organizers: Don Field, University of Wisconsin, and Rabel J. Burdge, Western Washington University
Wednesday June 20th1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
This session will show a videotaped interview with Walter Firey in the summer of 2006. The video lays out Firey’s thoughts on
the origins of natural resource sociology. After the video, Field and Burdge will offer comments regarding Firey’s contributions
to the founding of IASNR and the ISSRM.
I13
Integrating Local and Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Resource Management
Organizers: Ellen M. Donoghue and Susan Charnley, USDA Forest Service, PNW Research Station
Wednesday June 20th1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
The session explores the role of local knowledge (LK) and traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) in the management of
natural resources across a range of management issues and approaches, including fire use and management, ecological
stewardship and monitoring associated with community-based forestry projects, conservation of biological diversity, and
collaborative arrangements between American Indian Tribes and resource management agencies.
J6
Cove Hydroelectric Project Decomissioning Video and Discussion
Organizer: Mark J. Stenborg, PacifiCorp Energy
Wednesday June 20th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
This session reviews a recent agreement with Rocky Mountain Power (formerly PacifiCorp) to decommission a dam on the Bear
River in Southeastern Idaho. The session begins with a short video, which will be followed by a question and answer panel
discussion.
J9
Generating Ownership and Trust through Community-Based Ecosystem Restoration
Organizer: Mae A Davenport, Southern Illinois University
Wednesday June 20th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
Ecosystem restoration demands the insight and involvement of community institutions, members and property owners as
ecosystems span public and private ownership boundaries and influences. The challenges and successes of community-based
ecosystem restoration associated with participatory planning, environmental interpretation and education, and cooperative
implementation in informing, motivating and empowering communities will be discussed.
J13
Field Social Science and Resource Management in Alaska and Canada: Subsistence Harvesting and
Traditional Land Use
Organizer: Robert Schroeder, USDA Forest Service
Wednesday June 20th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
This session examines recent social science field research on subsistence harvesting among indigenous communities in Alaska
and Canada.
J15
Twenty Years of Society and Natural Resources
Organizers: Toddi A Steelman, North Carolina State University, and Troy Hall, University of Idaho
Wednesday June 20th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
This special session reflects on the 20th anniversary of the Society and Natural Resources Journal. Steelman and Hall will
present a critical analysis of themes and methods used in SNR publications, and a panel of discussants will respond.
17
• Multiple Pre-Organized Sessions •
Human Dimensions of Coastal and Marine Resource Management I and II
Organizer: Thomas E Fish, NOAA Coastal Services Center
A2
Monday June 18th8:30 am - 10:00 am
B2
Monday June 18th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
This two-part session highlights projects that address the human dimension of coastal and marine resource management
at different scales -- from site specific assessment, planning, and resource management to community-based monitoring to
watershed, state, and regional scale social characterizations, institutional analysis, and marine fisheries management. The
format will include presentations followed by guided dialog and discussion with session participants and attendees.
Collaborative NRM in Africa: (I) Conservation and Human Welfare Linkages, and (II) CBNRM and Human
Welfare in sub-Saharan Africa
Organizers: Urs P Kreuter, Texas A&M University, and Dilys Roe, International Inst. for Environment and Development
B5
Monday June 18th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
C5
Monday June 18th1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment highlights that poverty reduction is linked with, and dependent on, biodiversity
conservation. The first session includes four papers that examine various elements of this perception. In sub-Saharan Africa,
initiatives to devolve decision making for natural resource management from central government to the community level have
been tried since the 1980s. The second session includes four papers that examine the role of community based-conservation in
protecting biodiversity while at the same time enhancing human welfare in sub-Saharan Africa.
The Cumberland Plateau of Tennessee: A Region in Transition I and II
Organizer: Donald G Hodges, University of Tennessee
C10 Monday June 18th1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
D10 Monday June 18th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
This is a two-part panel session examining patterns of land use change on the Cumberland Plateau region of Tennessee.
Panelists report on their recent research on social, economic, and ecological drivers and consequences of change. The second
session also includes two comparison papers from other regions.
Energy Development in the Western United States I and II: Assessing and Mitigating the Impacts
Organizer: Robert H Winthrop and Darla Pindell, USDI Bureau of Land Management
G3
Tuesday June 19th4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
H4
Wednesday June 20th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
This is a two-part panel session addressing the social and economic consequences of recent federal oil and gas leasing
activities. The panelists will discuss challenges associated with measuring and anticipating impacts, as well as efforts to
mitigate possible adverse effects. Panel 1 focuses on the Pinedale, Wyoming area. Panel 2 compares the experiences of federal
agency managers and local leaders across a range of contexts.
Wildfire Management in the Wildland Urban Interface: (I) Analytical Frameworks for Exploring Community
Capacity, (II) Analysis of Cases and Networks, and (III) Community and Landowner Perceptions of Wildfire
Organizer: Yvonne Everett, Humboldt State University
H3
Wednesday June 20th10:30 am - 12:00 pm
I3
Wednesday June 20th1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
J3
Wednesday June 20th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
In the last decade, the scale and intensity of wildfires burning in the growing wildland urban interface (WUI) have resulted
in a range of responses to managing fire in the WUI. The papers in these three coordinated sessions have in common their
focus on understanding these human and institutional responses to fire in the Wildland Urban Interface with implications for
strengthening supportive management responses. In this first session, analytical frameworks are drawn from theories of social
capital and community capacity, networks, diffusion of innovation and organization across scale. In the second session, we
discuss specific cases and the role of social and community networks. The final session focuses in more depth on community
and landowner perceptions of wildfires and their aftermath.
18
• Multiple Pre-Organized Sessions (cont.) •
Environmental and Anti-Environmental Movements I and II
Organizers: J. William Gibson, California State University Long Beach and David B Tindall, University of British Columbia
I2
Wednesday June 20th1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
J2
Wednesday June 20th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
This session presents important case studies concerning cultural, political, and social diemensions of environmental and
anti-environmentalist movements, and the implications of these movements for society and natural resources. Comments by
attendees are welcome.
Social and Health Benefits of Natural Resources I: Outdoor Experiences; and II: Conservation Volunteersim
Organizers: Mardie A Townsend, Deakin University, Liz O’Brien, Forestry UK, and Dorothy Anderson, University of Minnesota
I14
Wednesday June 20th1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
J14
Wednesday June 20th3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
The links between access to nature/natural environments and human health and wellbeing are often unrecognised and
undervalued. The first session explores these links and highlights specific benefits and challenges involved with outdoor
experiences in parks and wilderness areas. The importance of conservation volunteerism as a means of achieving ecological
sustainability should not be underestimated, but recruiting and retaining volunteers is increasingly difficult. The second
session highlights a range of benefits flowing from such volunteering and suggests strategies for maximising involvement and
optimising outcomes.
19
• Monday, June 18 Overview •
8:30 am - 10:00 am
A1: A2: A3: A4:
A5: A6: A7: A8:
A9: A10: A11: A12: A13: Impacts of Environmental and Land Use Change on Sense of Place, Marriott Ballroom I
Human Dimensions of Coastal and Marine Resource Management I, Marriott Ballroom II
Innovative USDA Forest Service Information Assets Projects, Marriott Ballroom III
Environmental Services and Rural Development, Marriott Ballroom IV
Carry On My Wayward Son: Demographic Changes and Recreation Behavior, Prospector Coalition I
Environmental Causes and Consequences of Migration, Prospector Coalition II
Where the Wild Things Are: Human-Wildlife Interactions, Prospector Coalition III
Beyond the 80th Meridian: Forest Management in Eastern North America, Prospector Coalition IV
Culture and Conservation, Prospector Silver King I
Save Me a Place: Preserving Landscapes through Planning and Design, Prospector Silver King II
Comparative Approaches to Valuing Natural Resources, Prospector Silver King III
Wildland Tourism, Prospector Silver King IV
Use Conflicts in Parks and Forests, Prospector Celebrity Theater
10:00 am - 10:30 am BREAK
10:30 am - Noon
B1: B2: B3: B4: B5: B6: B7: B8: B9: B10: B11: B12: B13: No Place Like Home: Connections to Nature and Place, Marriott Ballroom I
Human Dimensions of Coastal and Marine Resource Management II, Marriott Ballroom II
Science, Law and Forest Management Policy, Marriott Ballroom III
Communities, Governance, and Forest Change, Marriott Ballroom IV
Collaborative NRM in Africa I: Conservation and Human Welfare Linkages, Prospector Coalition I
It Happens: Improving Analyses of Environmental Effects, Prospector Coalition II
Bats and Snakes and Deer, Oh My! Values and Attitudes about Wildlife, Prospector Coalition III
Alternative Futures: The Use of Scenarios in Landscape Mangement and Planning, Prospector Coalition IV
Alternative Approaches to Wildfire Prevention and Management, Prospector Silver King I
Rare, Medium or Well Done: Incorporating Stakeholder Preferences in Park and Forest Planning, Prospector Silver King II
What’s the Use (and Nonuse)? Estimating Nature’s Worth, Prospector Silver King III
Managing Tourism as Rural Development Across the Globe, Prospector Silver King IV
Bringing Motorized Recreation Research Up To Speed: Implications for Management, Prospector Celebrity Theater
Noon - 1:30 pm LUNCH
1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
C1: Adventure, Legal Liability and the Public Lands: Issues and Trends Surrounding this Growing Concern, Marriott Ballroom I
C2: Living on the Edge: Coastal Areas and Management, Marriott Ballroom II
C3: BLM’s Cooperating Agency Initiative: Deepening Intergovernmental Involvement in Managing the Public Lands, Marriott Ballroom III
C4: Watershed Management: Values, Perceptions and Behavior, Marriott Ballroom IV
C5: Collaborative NRM in Africa II: CBNRM and Human Welfare in sub-Saharan Africa, Prospector Coalition I
C6: People and Biodiversity, Prospector Coalition II
C7: Babes in the Woods: Children and Nature, Prospector Coalition III
C8: Family Trees: Private Forest Management, Prospector Coalition IV
C9: Challenges of Wildfire Management: Communicating with the Public, Prospector Silver King I
C10: The Cumberland Plateau of Tennessee: A Region in Transition I, Prospector Silver King II
C11: Show Me the Value: Contingent Valuation Methodology & Practice, Prospector Silver King III
C12: Wish You Were Here? Community Perceptions of Ecotourism, Prospector Silver King IV
C13: ATV Riders in Minnesota and Wisconsin: Understanding Attitudes, Preferences and Motivations, Prospector Celebrity Theater
3:00 pm - 3:30 pm
20
BREAK
• Monday, June 18 Overview •
3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
D1: D2: D3: D4: D5: D6: D7: D8: D9: D10: D11: D12: D13: Problem or Panacea? Biomass and Biofuels in the 21st Century, Marriott Ballroom I
Promoting Active Recreation in Natural Areas, Marriott Ballroom II
Social Trends Impacting Resource Management in Alaska: Unique or Ubiquitous? Marriott Ballroom III
We Need Answers NOW: Using Research in the Field, Marriott Ballroom IV
Collaborative NRM in Africa III: Community-Based Approaches, Prospector Coalition I
Paint it Black: Responding to Invasive Species and Forest Disturbance, Prospector Coalition II
Social Indicators in Forest Communities, Prospector Coalition III
Use of the Media in Natural Resource Management Research, Prospector Coalition IV
Risky Business: Determinants of Wildfire Risk Perceptions and Behavior, Prospector Silver King I
The Cumberland Plateau of Tennessee: A Region in Transition II, Prospector Silver King II
One Fish, Two Fish, I Fish, You Fish: Angler Specialization and Place Attachment, Prospector Silver King III
Tripping Together: Residents’ Experiences with Ecotourism, Prospector Silver King IV
Fashionable Models? Alternative Methods for Park and Recreation Research, Prospector Celebrity Theater
5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Poster Session Marriott Outdoor Pavillion Tent, Uinta Rooms, and Grill Room
21
• Monday, June 18 - 8:30 - 10:00 Session •
A1: Impacts of
Environmental and
Land Use Change on
Sense of Place
Marriott Ballroom I
A2: Human Dimensions
of Coastal and Marine
Resource Management
Session I
Marriott Ballroom II
Organizer: Thomas E. Fish,
NOAA Coastal Services Center
A3: Innovative
USDA Forest Service
Information Assets
Projects
Marriott Ballroom III
Organizers: Patrick C. Reed
and Ashley Goldhor-Wilcock,
USDA Forest Service
A4: Environmental
Services and Rural
Development
Marriott Ballroom IV
A5: Carry On My
Wayward Son:
Demographic Changes
and Recreation
Behavior
Prospector Coalition I
22
Changing Priorities
of Place in the South
Carolina Low Country
Cassandra Y. Johnson, USDA
Forest Service; Angela C. Halfacre
and Patrick T. Hurley, College of
Charleston
Continue or discontinue
place identity on a
fragmenting landscape:
Examining the effect of
landscape change on
place identity
Po-Hsin Lai, Scott Shafer, Gerard
Kyle, and Urs Kreuter, Texas A&M
University
Relationship between
Human Well-being and
Land-Cover changes in
the Alabama’s Black Belt:
Linking Socioeconomic,
Demographic, and
Remotely-sensed Data
Buddhi R. Gyawali and Rory
Fraser, Alabama A&M University;
John Schelhas, USDA Forest
Service
Struggle to be Sacred?
Formative Evaluation of
the Affect of Interpretive
Signs at Yushan National
Park Summit Trail
W. Jasmine Chen, Ming Dao
University; Yun-Hsuan Eleanor
Chiu, National Kaohsiung Normal
University
Informing Coastal
Protected Area Planning
And Management: Social
Assessment within the
U.S. National Estuarine
Research Reserve System
Thomas E. Fish, NOAA Coastal
Services Center; Shawn E. Dalton,
University of New Brunswick;
Reid McLean, C-Zone Consulting
Gauging Coastal
Management Needs
and Capacities Through
Formal and Informal
Needs Assessments
Chris Ellis and Tom Fish, NOAA
Coastal Services Center
The Deschutes Estuary: a
case study in using social
science techniques to
guide decision making on
coastal restoration
Zachary H. Hart, I.M. Systems
Group, Inc., NOAA Coastal
Services Center; Thomas G.
Safford, University of New
Hampshire
Managing Water
to Support Salmon
Recovery: Institutional
Designs or Access to
Scientific Data?
Thomas G. Safford, University of
New Hampshire; Karma Norman
and Jason Wilkinson, NMFS
Northwest Fisheries Science
Center
Monitoring public
discussion about policy
and planning issues: a
new approach
David N. Bengston, Northern
Research Station, USDA Forest
Service; David P. Fan, InfoTrend,
Inc.
Utilizing NVUM Survey
Results and U.S. Census
Bureau Data to Estimate
and Forecast Recreation
Demand on National
Forests
J. M. Bowker, Don English, and
Pat Reed, USDA Forest Service
Meghan Starbuck, New Mexico
State University; Ray Souter, Rork
Associates
Innovative USDA Forest
Service Information
Assets Projects:
Community SelfEvaluation Toolkit
Stewart D. Allen, NOAA Fisheries
Values Compatibility
Analysis Mapping
Greg G. Brown, Green Mountain
College
National Payment for
Environmental Service
Programs in Mexico:
Social and Environmental
Sustainability at the
Community Level
Elizabeth N. Shapiro, University
of California, Berkeley
A new paradigm:
Recuperating a natural
balance
Laura Perez-Arce, Sierra Gorda
Biosphere Reserve
Examining the linkages
between conservation
initiatives, community
perceptions, and land-use
decisions: A study of
the Community Baboon
Sanctuary, Belize
Miriam S. Wyman and Taylor V.
Stein, University of Florida
Raising the bar on valuing
natural and social capital
Pati M. Ruiz Corzo, Sierra Gorda
Biosphere Reserve
Life Course Changes
and Competing Leisure
Interests as Obstacles to
Boating Specialization
Walter F. Kuentzel, University of
Vermont; Thomas A. Heberlein,
University of Wisconsin-Madison
The changing social order
of the backcountry at
Grand Canyon National
Park, 1984-2004
Erik A. Backlund, University of
Illinios at Urbana-Champaign
Youth and the Outdoors:
An Oregon Assessment
Robert C. Burns, West Virginia
University; Kreg Lindberg,
Oregon State University;
Alan Graefe, Penn State; Terry
Bergerson, State of Oregon
Boomers and PreBoomers: Recreation and
Migration
Kreg Lindberg, Oregon State
University; Robert Burns, West
Virginia University; Alan Graefe,
Pennsylvania State University;
Terry Bergerson, Oregon State
Park
• Monday, June 18 - 8:30 - 10:00 Session •
A6: Environmental
Causes and
Consequences of
Migration
Prospector Coalition II
A7: Where the Wild
Things Are: HumanWildlife Interactions
Prospector Coalition III
A8: Beyond the 80th
Meridian: Forest
Management in Eastern
North America
Prospector Coalition IV
A9: Culture and
Conservation
Prospector Silver King I
A10: Save Me a Place:
Preserving Landscapes
through Planning and
Design
Prospector Silver King II
Rural-to-Urban
Migration and the Rural
Environment in China:
A Comprehensive
Framework for Migration
and Environment
Research
Hua Qin, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
Land use change and
circular migration in
southern Mexico
Claudia A. Radel, Utah State
University; Birgit Schmook,
El Colegio de la Frontera Sur,
Mexico
At the Intersection of
Market, Landscape and
Culture: an Investigation
of Rural Youth’s
Adaptation and Visions of
Resilience in Mongolia
Victoria S. Laidlaw, Naomi
T. Krogman and Lory Laing,
University of Alberta
Impacts of
Hyperabundant Moose
in Gros Morne and Terra
Nova National Parks of
Canada: a Collaborative
Approach to Management
Diane J. Wilson and A. Pardy,
Parks Canada
Boater Compliance within
Manatee Conservation
Zones in Florida
and Techniques for
Quantitative Assessment
of Vessel Speeds
John S. Jett, University of Florida
John Confer California, University
of Pennsylvania
Impacts of nature-based
tourism on boreal bird
populations in protected
areas
Katja M. Kangas, University of
Oulu; Pirkko Siikamäki, Oulanka
research station, University of
Oulu; Miska Luoto and Antti
Ihantola, University of Oulu
Human interaction with
wildlife and tropical forest
in Bangladesh, which will
survive?
Mohammad M. Chowdhury
Certifying small-scale
private forests in New
Brunswick: What does it
take to make it happen?
Stephen W. Wyatt and Luc
Bourgoin, Université de
Moncton, campus d’Edmundston
Who will log?
Occupational choice and
prestige in New England’s
north woods
Deryth S. Taggart, University
of Maine; Andrew F. Egan,
Université Laval
Effects of land use change
on the sustainability
of forest products
businesses in the
Northeast US
Andrew Egan, Université Laval;
Louis Morin, University of Maine
Forest attitudes of
different interest groups
in three boreal regions
that vary in importance of
forestry
Kati Berninger, Daniel Kneeshaw
and Christian Messier, Centre
d’étude de la Forêt (CEF)
Industrial resource
development,
environmental change
and native hunting
culture: a clash of values?
Brian A. Joubert, University of
Alberta
The Changing Socialscape
for Indigenous Research
Naomi T. Krogman, Lisa
Christensen and Ken Caine,
University of Alberta
Empowerment and Hope
in Community-Based
Conservation Projects
Erik A. Nielsen, Alaska Pacific
University
Nepali Community
Forestry and a Case Study
of a Women’s Forest User
Group
Smriti Dahal and Kathleen
E. Halvorsen, Michigan
Technological University
Conserving subdivided
nature: A comparative
examination of
conservation subdivision
design in Oregon and
South Carolina
Patrick T. Hurley, Jessi A. Shuler
and Angela Halfacre, College of
Charleston
An evaluation of open
space quality in a neotraditional community: a
case study of Kentlands
Elizabeth Brabec, Utah State
University
Metropolitan attitudes
and behavior toward
parks and open space in
the Southwest
Randy J. Virden and Sarah
R. Ackerman, Arizona State
University
Development of a park
and recreation master
plan process with rural
communities in mind
Ariel Rodriguez, University of
Florida; Richard D. Paulsen,
Michigan State University;
Hal Hudson, Michigan State
University Extension
23
• Monday, June 18 - 8:30 - 10:00 Session •
A11: Comparative
Approaches to Valuing
Natural Resources
Prospector Silver King III
A12: Wildland Tourism
Prospector Silver King IV
A13: Use Conflicts in
Parks and Forests
Prospector Celebrity Theater
24
The relationship between
recreational values and
resource characteristics
of recreational forests in
Korea
Jung Nam Chun, Seoul National
University
Influence of markets
on the structure and
composition of northern
Appalachian hardwood
forests
William G. Luppold and Gary
Miller, USDA Forest Service
The community
economics of community
forestry: Two case studies
in the Intermountain West
Andrew F. Seidl and Elizabeth
Myrick, Colorado State University
Ecosystem values and
their relationship to
ecosystem services
Herbert W. Schroeder, US Forest
Service
Sustainable Tourism
Strategies on Fish
Farming Area along
Taiwan’s Southwest Coast:
Comparison of Residents
and Experts
Wei-Chen Li and Su-Hsin Lee,
Feng-Chia University; Yi-Kai
Chuang, Tung-Hai University
Adaptive governance of
Antarctic tourism: a policy
analysis
Machiel Lamers and Jan H. Stel,
Universiteit Maastricht
Regional, ecosystembased analysis of Alaska
bear viewing areas
Dale J. Blahna, USDA Forest
Sevice, PNW Research Station;
Courtney E. Brown, USDA Forest
Service, Chugach Nationa Forest;
Linda E. Kruger, USDA Forest
Service, PNW Research Station
The Galapagos National
Park: Management Plans,
Exotic Species, and IUCN
Guidelines
Bruce S. Kernan, Kernan
Consulting
Managing mountain
bike recreation and user
conflicts: a case study on
Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie
National Forest
Carla M. Jellum and Karl
Lillquist, Central Washington
University
Using the Potential for
Conflict Index to Clarify
“No Tolerance” Norms for
Off-Leash Dogs at City of
Boulder Open Space and
Mountain Parks
Matthew K. Jones, City of Boulder
Open Space and Mountain Parks;
Jerry J. Vaske and Maureen
P. Donnelly, Colorado State
Univ.; Marianne Giolitto, City of
Boulder, Colorado
Two Rivers and One
Challenge: Managing
Horseback Use at the
Ozark National Scenic
Riverways
Mark Morgan and Lina Dong,
University of Missouri
• Monday, June 18 - 10:30 - Noon Session •
B1: No Place Like Home:
Connections to Nature
and Place
Marriott Ballroom I
B2: Human Dimensions
of Coastal and Marine
Resource Management
Session II
Marriott Ballroom II
Organizer: Thomas E Fish,
NOAA Coastal Services Center
B3: Science, Law and
Forest Management
Policy
Marriott Ballroom III
B4: Communities,
Governance, and Forest
Change
Marriott Ballroom IV
Organizer: Courtney G. Flint,
University of Illinois
B5: Collaborative NRM
in Africa I: Conservation
and Human Welfare
Linkages
Prospector Coalition I
Organizers: Urs P. Kreuter,
Texas A&M University, and
Dilys Roe, IIED
Wilderness as spiritual
content and process: The
Wilderness Spirituality
Scale
Kelly S. Bloom, University of
Utah/San Jose State University
Determinants of Place
Bonding in Recreation
Resource Management
William E. Hammitt, Clemson
University; Gerard T. Kyle, Texas
A&M University; Chi-ok Oh,
Clemson University
The influence and role of
sense of place in natural
resource management
agencies
Penny A. Davidson, Charles Sturt
University; Alexandra Knight,
Department of Environment and
Conservation
Development of a
Methodology to Predict
Public Parking and Access
Requirements Sufficient
to Accommodate
Projected Annual and
Peak Visitation Demand
for a Nourished Beach
Jeffery M. Hill, James Herstine,
Robert Buerger and Chris
Dumas, Univ. of North Carolina
Wilmington; John Whitehead,
Appalachian State Univ.
Social network analysis
of water management
regime in the Annapolis
and Cornwallis River
Watersheds: a tool for
comparative analysis
Shawn E. Dalton, University of
New Brunswick
Guam as a Fishing
Community
Paul Bartram, Akala Products
Stewart Allen, NOAA Fisheries
Socioeconomic
Monitoring for
Community-based
Marine Protected Areas in
American Samoa
Arielle S. Levine, Pacific Islands
Fisheries Science Center
Building social capital
in forest communities:
revealed preference
analysis of the
Collaborative Forest
Restoration Program
Robert P. Berrens, Tyler Prante
and Jennifer A. Thacher,
University of New Mexico; Daniel
W. McCollum, USDA Forest
Service
The sequencing of science
and policy in collaborative
approaches to forest
management: a case
study from Colorado Lisa Dale, University of Denver
Understanding
Interactions between
Federal Wildland Fire
Managers and the
Scientific Community:
Ideals versus Reality
Anna E. Hohl and Clare M. Ryan,
University of Washington; Lee K.
Cerveny, USDA Forest Service
Contributions of Social
Science to Natural
Resource Management:
Can Interpretive and
Qualitative Science
Withstand Judicial
Scrutiny?
Michael E. Patterson, University
of Montana; Daniel R. Williams,
USDA Forest Service
Measuring and
Comparing the
Public’s and Scientists’
Perspectives on
Conservation Values
Al E. Luloff, J.C. Finley, W. Myers, D.
Matarrita-Cascante, C. Harbsion,
A. Metcalf, J. Gordon and J.
Gruver, The Pennsylvania State
University Afforestation in
County Kerry Ireland:
Transformations of
landscapes and lifeways
in a rapidly shifting rural
economy
Matthew S. Carroll, Washington
State University
Implementing the Healthy
Forests Restoration Act:
Examples from the White
Mountains, AZ
Melissa E. DuMond, ARCADIS;
Toddi A. Steelman, North
Carolina State University
Forging New
Relationships:
Stakeholder Response
to Forest Disturbance in
Northern Colorado
Courtney G. Flint, University of
Illinois at Urbana Champaign
Biodiversity conservation
and poverty reduction:
unravelling a diversity
of perspectives,
relationships and
assumptions
Dilys F. Roe, International
Institute for Environment
and Development (IIED);
Joanna Elliott, African Wildlife
Foundation
Should Residents be
Displaced from National
Parks and other Protected
Areas?
Chad E. Dear and Stephen F.
McCool, University of Montana
Do no harm?
Conservation and the
livelihoods of the poor
Barney Dickson, Fauna & Flora
International
Local Community
Perceptions of Wildlife
and Protected Aras in
Ethiopia
Mekbab E. Tessema, Utah State
University; Nigel LeaderWilliams, University of Kent;
Robert J. Lilieholm, University
of Maine
25
• Monday, June 18 - 10:30 - Noon Session •
B6: It Happens:
Improving Analyses of
Environmental Effects
Prospector Coalition II
B7: Bats and Snakes
and Deer, Oh My! Values and Attitudes
about Wildlife
Prospector Coalition III
B8: Alternative Futures:
The Use of Scenarios in
Landscape Mangement
and Planning
Prospector Coalition IV
B9: Alternative
Approaches to Wildfire
Prevention and
Management
Prospector Silver King I
B10: Rare, Medium
or Well Done:
Incorporating
Stakeholder
Preferences in Park and
Forest Planning
Prospector Silver King II
26
Integrating cumulative
impact assessment into
state environmental
review programs
Zhao Ma, Dennis R. Becker, and
Michael A. Kilgore, University of
Minnesota
Methods for conducting
cumulative effects
analysis for terrestrial
species and habitats
Courtney A. Schultz, University
of Montana
Scoping Processes in
Environmental Review: Assessing Application in
Transportation Agencies
Carissa Schively, University of
Minnesota
The tragedy of becoming
common: Landscape
change and perceptions
of wildlife
Kirsten M. Leong, Cornell
University/National Park Service
Stakeholder acceptance
capacity for rattlesnakes:
applicability of a concept
to unhuggables
Rebecca A. Christoffel and Shawn
J. Riley, Michigan State University
The Mediating and
Moderating Effects of
Attitudes and Knowledge
of Bats: An Application of
the Cognitive Hierarchy
Natalie R. Sexton and Susan C.
Stewart, US Geological Survey
Cache Valley 2030 - The
Future Explored
Jordy D. Guth, Richard E. Toth,
Kent Braddy, Ellie I. Leydsman,
Jay T. Price, Lynne M. Slade and
Brandon S. Taro, Utah State
University
Scenarios as a tool to
identify values and
define cultural landscape
objectives
Bettina Matzdorf and Astrid
Artner, Leibniz-Centre for
Agricultural Landscape Research
(ZALF) e.V.
Planning sport on urban
green - Requirement
of nature-based sport
activities in an urban
environment
Holger Kretschmer, German
Sport University Cologne
A social science approach
to forest management
and wildfire prevention
policies in Portugal
Fantina T Pedrosa, Faculty of Arts
of University of Porto
Shelter-in-Place as an
Alternative to Wildfire
Evacuation
Pamela J. Jakes, USDA Forest
Service; Travis Paveglio and
Matt Carroll, Washington State
University
Preventing catastrophic
change to the western
landscape: federal-state
fire management and
suppression coordination
William R. Mangun, East Carolina
University; Jean C. Mangun,
Southern Illinois University
Carbondale
A Market Segmentation
Strategy for Assessing
Public Preferences
Solicited Using Choice
Modeling
Donald F. Dennis, USDA Forest
Service
Social Learning and
Building Trust through
a Participatory Design
for National Forest Trail
Planning
Steve W. Selin, Chad Pierskalla
and David Smaldone, West
Virginia University
Community conversations
around public lands:
Exploring benefit
diversity in the Wood
River Valley
Megha S. Budruk, Randy J. Virden
and Troy Waskey, Arizona State
University
Historical changes in
the riparian habitats of
Labrador’s Churchill River
due to flow regulation: the
imperative of cumulative
effects assessment
Annette M. Luttermann,
Dalhousie University
• Monday, June 18 - 10:30 - Noon Session •
B11: What’s the
Use (and Nonuse)?
Estimating Nature’s
Worth
Valuing Taiwan Forest
Biodiversity: The
Perceptions of Americans
and Taiwanese
Yi-Chung, Hsu National Dong
Hwa University; Chieh-Lu Li,
The University of Hong Kong;
Ophelia L.J. Chuang, Taipei
Physical Education College; ChiChuan Lue, National Dong Hwa
University
Estimating the cultural
value of reef fish in Guam.
Wolfgang Haider, Simon Fraser
University; Margo Longland, BC
Hydro; Pieter van Beukering, Vrije
Universiteit Amsterdam
Predicting National Forest
Recreation User-Fees and
Patronage Using GIS and
Spatial Models
Namyun (Sunny) Kil, Timoty Fik,
and Stephen Holland, University
of Florida; James Glover,
Southern Illinois UniversityCarbondale
Prospector Silver King IV
A study on management
strategies of ecotourism
in Taiwan
Chia-Chun, Ko, Sheng-Jung Ou,
and Su-Mei Tsai, National Chung
Hsing University
The tourism industry
in Thailand’s hill
tribes: dependency
and development in
impoverished rural
groups
Richard G. Lacher and Sanjay K.
Nepal, Texas A&M
Tourism struggling as the
Icelandic wilderness is
developed
Anna Dóra Sæþórsdóttir,
University of Iceland
B13: Bringing
Motorized Recreation
Research Up To Speed:
Implications for
Management
ATVs and Snowmobiles:
Comparisions From
a Survey of 6000
Pennsylvania Owners
William F. Elmendorf, The
Pennsylvania State University
User Perceptions and
Local Knowledge of OHV
Use Assists National
Forest Managers in
Planning Process
Joseph P. Flood, East Carolina
University
The effect of off road
vehicles on water quality
and benthic macro
invertebrates on five
stream crossings on the
Angelina National Forest
in Texas
Michael H Legg, Deborah
M. Evans, Lori Hamiliton, Pat
Stephens Williams, and Jack
McCullough, Stephen F. Austin
State University Prospector Silver King III
B12: Managing Tourism
as Rural Development
Across the Globe
Prospector Celebrity Theater
Organizer: Taylor V. Stein
University of Florida
Recreation Access to
National Forests: What’s it
Really Worth?
James M. Bowker and Don BK
English, USDA Forest Service
John C. Bergstrom, University of
Georgia; Meghan Starbuck, New
Mexico State University; Randy
Rosenberger, Oregon State
University; Ross Arnold and Dan
McCollum, USDA Forest Service
Examining Differences
among Off-Highway
Vehicle Riders: An
Application of GIS in
Visitor Experience
Planning
Rachel Albritton and Taylor V.
Stein, University of Florida
27
• Monday, June 18 - 1:30 - 3:00 Session •
C1: Adventure, Legal
Liability and the Public
Lands: Issues and
Trends Surrounding
this Growing Concern
Adventure, Legal Liability,
and Using the Public
Lands: An Overview and
Personal Perspective
Alan W. Ewert, Indiana University
Does Increased Risk in
Adventure Recreation
Translate Into Increased
Legal Liability?
Bruce Hronek and Alan W. Ewert,
Indiana University
Laws and Managers- an
Inconvenient Mix
Les A Wadzinski, USDA Forest
Service, Hoosier National Forest
Fish and paddy:
Traditional knowledge
for sustainable use of
dynamic wetland system
in Bangladesh
Apurba K. Deb and Chowdhury
Haque, University of Manitoba
Collaboration and
Conversation: Keys to
Improving Coastal Fishing
Community Profiles
Flaxen Conway, Oregon State
University; Leesa Cobb,Port
Orford Ocean Resources Team
Christina Package,Oregon State
University
Awareness and Support
for Coastal Wetland
Restoration in the US Gulf
of Mexico
Craig A. Miller, University
of Georgia; Meya Holloway,
Louisiana State University
Moderator
Cynthia Moses-Nedd, USDI
Bureau of Land Management
Panelists
John Martin, County Commissioner, Garfield County, CO
Jamie Connell, BLM Field Manager, Glenwood Springs, CO
Vincent Matthews, State Geologist and Dir., CO Geological Survey
Robert Winthrop, Senior Social Scientist, USDI-BLM
Guiding public concern
for water resource issues
toward engagement
Joshua B. Gruver, A.E. Luloff,
James C. Finley, David MatarritaCascante, Cara Harbison, Alex
Metcalf, and Jason Gordon,
Pennsylvania State University
Investigating the
influence of personal
values and perceptions
on beneficial land
management practices
in the CanaanWashademoak watershed,
New Brunswick
Stephanie E. Merrill, University of
New Brunswick
But Can I Drink It? Water
Quality Awareness and
Attitudes in the Hinkson
Creek Watershed
Michele D. Baumer, University of
Missouri-Columbia
Challenges to CAMPFIRE
in Zimbabwe’s crisis
Peter J. Balint, George Mason
University
Community conservation
in Namibia: Developing
new models of community
conservation
Ivan Bond, International
Institute for Environment and
Development
Implementing a Virtuous
Cycle of Livestock Off-take,
Wealth Conservation, and
Livelihood Diversification to
Improve Risk Management
and Reduce Poverty among
Pastoralists in Southern
Ethiopia
D. Layne Coppock, Solomon Desta
and Getachew Gebru, Utah State
Univ; Seyoum Tezera, Intl. Livestock
Research Inst.
Therapeutic Use of Public
Lands
Alison E. Voight, Indiana
University
Marriott Ballroom I
Organizer: Alan W Ewert,
Indiana University
C2: Living on the Edge:
Coastal Areas and
Management
Marriott Ballroom II
C3: BLM’s Cooperating Agency Initiative:
Deepening Intergovernmental Involvement
in Managing the Public Lands
Marriott Ballroom III
Organizer: Cynthia Moses-Nedd, USDI Bureau of Land
Management
C4: Watershed
Management: Values,
Perceptions and
Behavior
Marriott Ballroom IV
C5: Collaborative NRM
in Africa II: CBNRM and
Human Welfare in subSaharan Africa
Prospector Coalition I
Organizers: Urs P Kreuter
Texas A&M University, and
Dilys Roe, IIED
28
A survey of innovations
adopted by watershed
projects in Northern
Luzon, Philippines
Ronald C. Estoque, Don Mariano
Marcos Memorial State
University
Community Based
Natural Resource
Management on
Private Conservancies
in the Great Limpopo
Conservation Area
Urs P. Kreuter, Texas A&M
Unviersity; Edward M. Warner,
Colorado State University
• Monday, June 18 - 1:30 - 3:00 Session •
C6: People and
Biodiversity
Prospector Coalition II
C7: Babes in the Woods:
Children and Nature
Prospector Coalition III
C8: Family Trees: Private
Forest Management
Prospector Coalition IV
C9: Challenges of
Wildfire Management:
Communicating with
the Public
Prospector Silver King I
C10: The Cumberland
Plateau of Tennessee: A
Region in Transition I
Prospector Silver King II
Organizer: Donald G Hodges,
University of Tennessee
Duty of care and
stewardship in
biodiversity conservation:
towards a shared
understanding
Gillian E. Earl, Allan Curtis, and
Catherine Allan, Charles Sturt
University; Vivienne Turner,
Department of Sustainability &
Environment, Victoria
Distributing conservation
incentives in Chitwan
National Park, Nepal
Sanjay K. Nepal, Texas A&M
University; Arian Spiteri
Thinking ‘meaningful’
participation in
‘effective’ conservation
management: a feedback
on the WWF RAPPAM
Mu-ning Wang, Dau-Jye Lu and
Ho-Chia Chueh, National Taiwan
University
Connection to nature: A
tool to measure children’s
affective feeling toward
nature
Judith Chen-Hsuan Cheng and
Martha C. Monroe, University of
Florida
Visions of Nature - More
Than Meets the Eye:
Using Autophotography
to Assess Meanings and
Values that Rural Children
Derive from Nature
Eunice M. Buck, Jean C. Mangun
and Mae Davenport, Southern
Illinois University Carbondale;
Corliss Outley, University of
Minnesota
Babes in the Wood – The
effects of recreational
tree-climbing on children
in a social context
John R. Gathright, Nagoya
University
Changes in children’s
use of their natural
surroundings through
three generations
– challenges for
management
Margrete Skar, Norwegian
Institute for Nature Research
Exploring the meaning
of “forest management”:
private forest landowner
(PFL) perspectives
Miriam L. Davis and J. Mark Fly,
University of Tennessee
Private Forest Owners:
Revisiting Our “MythPerceptions
Jim C. Finley, Alex L. Metcalf,
A.E. Luloff, and Rich C. Stedman,
Pennsylvania State University
Working together?
Neighboring behaviors
among Pennsylvania’s
forest landowners
Richard C. Stedman, Alexander
F. Metcalf, Albert E. Luloff, and
James F. Finley, Pennsylvania
State University
Private Forests, Public
Policy: Oak Conservation
on Family Forests in
Oregon’s Willamette
Valley
Alexandra Paige Fischer and
John C. Bliss, Oregon State
University
Identifying and
addressing social
constraints involved with
the use of prescribed fire
in forest ecosystems of
the Ouachita and Ozark
regions in Arkansas
Janean H. Creighton, Washington
State Univ; Tamara Walkingstick,
University of Arkansas Extension;
Rebecca Montgomery, Hal
Liechty, and Matthew Pelkki,
Univ of Arkansas-Monticello
The Front Range Fuels
Treatment Partnership:
congruence and
contradiction in the
‘production’ and
‘consumption’ of a
message
Joseph G. Champ and Jeffery
J. Brooks, Colorado State
University; Daniel R. Williams,
USDA Forest Service
Wildland fire and
fuel management: A
framework for effective
communication
Eric Toman and Bruce Shindler,
Oregon State University
Integrative complexity
and attitudes: a case
study of wildlandurban interface fire
management
Randall T. Burtz, Western
Washington University; Alan D.
Bright, Colorado State University
The Cumberland Plateau:
Past Trends and Future
Directions in Land Use
and Values
Angela N. Hartsfield, David
Ostermeier and Donald Hodges,
University of Tennessee
Landowner Changes in
Tennessee’s Northern
Cumberlands
Brandon R. Kaetzel, Cindy
Longmire, David Ostermeier,
Donald G. Hodges and J.M. Fly,
University of Tennessee
Natural resources on
Tennessee’s Cumberland
Plateau: a survey of
residents’ values
Cynthia L. Longmire and David
Ostermeier, University of
Tennessee
29
• Monday, June 18 - 1:30 - 3:00 Session •
C11: Show Me the
Value: Contingent
Valuation Methodology
& Practice
Prospector Silver King III
C12: Wish You Were
Here? Community
Perceptions of
Ecotourism
Prospector Silver King IV
C13: ATV Riders
in Minnesota
and Wisconsin:
Understanding
Attitudes, Preferences
and Motivations
Prospector Celebrity Theater
Organizer: Stephanie Snyder
USDA Forest Service
30
Testing the Effectiveness
of Cheap Talk, Dissonance
Minimization, and
Certainty Scales in
Reducing Hypothetical
Bias in Contingent
Valuation
Thomas C. Brown, US Forest
Service; Mark D. Morrison,
Charles Sturt University
Estimating Costs and
Benefits of the Four Large
Carnivores in Sweden
Göran K Bostedt, Swedish
University of Agricultural
Sciences
Valuing Access to our
Public Lands:
A Unique Public Good
Pricing Experiment
David M. Aadland, University of
Wyoming; Bistra Anatchkova
and Burke Grandjean, Wyoming
Survey and Analysis Center;
Jason Shogren and Patricia
Taylor, University of Wyoming;
Benjamin Simon, US Department
of Interior
Using Bid Design and
Anchoring Effects to
Measure the Boundaries
of WTP
Kimberly S. Rollins and Lucrecia
Rodriguez-Barahona, University
of Nevada, Reno
The aboriginal tribe’s
attitude toward
promoting ecotourism in
the Taroko National Park
of Taiwan
Ying-Hsuan Lin, Wen-Ching
Huang, and Chun-Yen Chang,
National Taiwan University
A study on the
development of
ecotourism in the
aboriginal reservation
Areas in Taiwan – Results
from 5-year studies in
sequence.
Wen-Tsann Yang, Feng Chia
University
Residents Perceptions
about Community-Based
Tourism Development in
Rural Western Botswana
Naomi N. Moswete and Brijesh
Thapa, University of Florida
Understanding
sustainable ecotourism
from stakeholders’
perspectives: A case
study in Wolong and
Wanglang panda reserves
in Sichuan, China
Lulu Zhou and William J.
McLaughlin, University of Idaho
Describing and
Differentiating
Recreational ATV Rider
Preferences
Anthony H. Schoenecker and
Ingrid E. Schneider, University of
Minnesota
Exploring the
environmental values and
recreational motivations
of Wisconsin ATV users.
Robert A. Smail, University of
Wisconsin-Stevens Point
ATV Riders’ Willingness to
Pay for Recreation User
Fees
Stephanie A. Snyder, Northern
Research Station; Robert A.
Smail, University of WisconsinSteven’s Point
• Monday, June 18 - 3:30 - 5:00 Session •
D1: Problem or
Panacea? Biomass and
Biofuels in the 21st
Century
Marriott Ballroom I
Cultural Models of
Biofuels and Climate
Change Mitigation
Policies
Kathleen E. Halvorsen, Smriti
Dahal and Barry D. Solomon,
Michigan Technological
University
D2: Promoting Active Recreation in Natural
Areas
Woody biomass
inventories for biofuels
use in Mississippi
Gustavo Perez-Verdin, Donald
Grebner, Changyou Sun, Ian
Munn, Emily Schultz and Thomas
Matney, Mississippi State
University
Stakeholder Views toward
Biomass Harvests and the
Bioproducts Industry in
Maine
Robert J. Lilieholm, Jessica
Leahyand Terry Porter, University
of Maine
Moderator
Karla A. Henderson,North
Carolina State University
Panelists
Dr. Jim Gramann, National Park Service
Dr. Paul Gobster, USDA Forest Service
Dr. Myron Floyd, North Carolina State University
Moderator
Linda Kruger, USDA Forest
Service, PNW Research Station
Panelists
Brian Glaspell, US Fish and Wildlife Service
Quinn Tracy, University of Alaska-Fairbanks
Peter J. Fix, University of Alaska-Fairbanks
Daniel W. McCollum, USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mt. Research Station
Lois Dalle-Molle, National Park Service
Susan J. Alexander, USDA Forest Service
Moderator
Kelly Lawrence, USDA Forest
Service and Utah State
University
Panelists
Dave Iverson, USDA Forest Service, Ogden, UT
Lee Cerveny, Res. Social Scientist, USDA Forest Service, Seattle, WA
Ron Vance, USDA Forest Service, Logan UT Ranger District
John Campbell, USDA Forest Service, Heber UT Ranger District
Anna Hohl, University of Washington
Paradise Under Fire:
Writing People into
“Pristine” Environment in
South Africa
Thembela Kepe, University of
Toronto
Legitimacy and the use
of natural resources in
Kruger National Park,
South Africa
Randy J. Tanner, University of
Montana
Marriott Ballroom II
Organizer: Karla A. Henderson, North Carolina State
University
D3: Social Trends Impacting Resource
Management in Alaska: Unique or
Ubiquitous?
Marriott Ballroom III
Organizers: Peter J. Fix, University of Alaska-Fairbanks,
Linda Kruger, USDA Forest Service, and Brian Glaspell, US
Fish & Wildlife Service
D4: We Need Answers NOW: Using Research
in the Field
Marriott Ballroom IV
Organizer: Kelly D. Lawrence, USDA Forest Service, PNW
Research Station, and Utah State Univeristy
D5: Community-Based
Approaches
Prospector Coalition I
Community-based natural
nesource management
and tourism partnership
in Botswana: which way
forward?
Joyce Lepetu, University of
Florida; Richard O. Makopondo
Converting woody
biomass to energy
in Oregon: social
perspectives on a growing
movement
Melanie Stidham, Oregon State
University
HIV/AIDS and
Conservation in southern
Africa: impacts and
intervention Strategies
Jennifer A. Cash and Stephen F.
McCool, University of Montana
31
• Monday, June 18 - 3:30 - 5:00 Session •
D6: Paint it Black:
Responding to Invasive
Species and Forest
Disturbance
Basic conservation values
as factors underlying
public attitudes towards
management of an
“invasive” plant
Anke Fischer, Macaulay Land
Use Research Institute; Rene van
der Wal, Centre for Ecology and
Hydrology
Public Awareness of
Invasive Plant Species
and Forest Disturbance in
Northern Colorado
Michael T. Daab and Courtney G.
Flint, University of Illinois
The Effects of Wildland
Fire on a Natural Resource
Dependent Community
Mary Moneta and D. Clayton
Smith, Western Kentucky
University
Citizens’ perceptions
of federal forest
management planning
and practices in post-fire
communities
Christine S. Olsen and Bruce A.
Shindler, Oregon State University
Prospector Coalition III
Managing with the
difficult to measure in
mind: indicators and
proxies for forest estate
planning models.
Chris B. Ward and Thomas M.
Beckley, Univeristy of New
Brunswick
Social indicators
and sustainable
forest management:
Opportunities and
limitations
Tom M. Beckley, University of
New Brunswick
Socioeconomic well-being
of boreal communities in
Canada
Mike N. Patriquin and John
R. Parkins, Natural Resources
Canada; Richard C. Stedman,
Pennsylvania State University
Using Secondary Data
to Estimate CommunityForest Linkages in Alaska
and the Pacific Northwest
Mekbeb E. Tessema, Utah State
University; Dale J. Blahna and
Linda E. Kruger, USDA-Forest
Service, PNW Research Station;
Robert J. Lilieholm, University
Of Maine
D8: Use of the Media
in Natural Resource
Management Research
Media discourse on forest
resource management
Mi Sun Park, University of
Goettingen
An Investigation of Media
and Interpersonal Effects
on Consumers’ Decisions
about Fish and Seafood
Shannon M. Amberg and Troy E.
Hall, University of Idaho
The Smile Index:
Assessing Community
Vitality during Periods of
Social Change
Patricia A. Stokowski, University
of Vermont
Community Wildfire Risk
Perception: From Timber
to Tourism and Collective
Response to Risk
Jason S. Gordon, Pennsylvania
State University
Wildfire risk perception
and climate change: The
influence on homeowner
mitigation behavior in the
wildland-urban interface
Stacey L. Schulte, Land Use
Futures Lab; Kathleen Miller,
National Center for Atmospheric
Research
The effect of wildfire risk
on the home purchases in
Colorado Springs
Patricia A. Champ, US Forest
Service
Determinants of Land Use
Change in the Northern
Cumberland
Neelam C. Poudyal, Seong-Hoon
Cho and Donald G. Hodges,
University of Tennesee
Supplementing
Tennessee’s Regulatory
Framework through
Habitat Conservation
Planning
Julie H. Mawhorter and David
M. Ostermeier, University of
Tennessee
Landscape change and
planning in coastal
North Carolina: applying
a model of long-term
landscape change to
Currituck County
Daniel J. Marcucci, East Carolina
University
Prospector Coalition II
D7: Social Indicators in
Forest Communities
Prospector Coalition IV
D9: Risky Business:
Determinants
of Wildfire Risk
Perceptions and
Behavior
Prospector Silver King I
D10: The Cumberland
Plateau of Tennessee II: Comparitive Examples
Prospector Silver King II
Organizer: Donald G Hodges,
University of Tennessee
32
Alternative Future
Development Scenarios
for Utah’s Wasatch Front:
Assessing the Impacts of
Urban Growth on Rural
Lands
Glen A. Busch, Thomas J. Edwards
and Richard E. Toth, Utah State
University; Robert J. Lilieholm,
University of Maine
• Monday, June 18 - 3:30 - 5:00 Session •
D11: One Fish, Two Fish,
I Fish, You Fish: Angler
Specialization and
Place Attachment
Prospector Silver King III
D12: Tripping Together:
Residents’ Experiences
with Ecotourism
Prospector Silver King IV
D13: Fashionable
Models? Alternative
Methods for Park and
Recreation Research
Prospector Celebrity Theater
Changing Coastal
Landscapes: Factors
Affecting Participation
in North Carolina and
Georgia Fisheries (USA)
Benjamin G. Blount, University of
Texas at San Antonio
Level of Specialization
and Place Attachment of
Anglers in Taiwan
Sian-Si Liu, Lai-Hsin Lai and
Yi-Chung Hsu, National Dong
Hwa University; Chieh-Lu Li, The
University of Hong Kong
Understanding resource
substitution using
recreation specialization
and place attachment
Yung-Ping Tseng, Po-Hsin Lai,
Robert B. Ditton and Gerard T.
Kyle, Texas A&M University
Entrepreneurs’
perceptions and
involvement of naturebased tourism impacts:
case study of I-Lan, Taiwan
Joe Y. Yang, Diwan College of
Management
Benefits of Protected Area
Network Status: Resident
perceptions at Central
Balkan National Park,
Bulgaria
Stuart P. Cottrell, Colorado
State University; Petar Mateev,
Wageningen University, The
Netherlands; Jerry Vaske and
Tyler Rose, Colorado State
University
Residents’ Perceptions of
Tourism Impacts in Deqin,
China
Pete Parker and Brijesh Thapa,
University of Florida
Alternative tourism as
an agent of sustainable
livelihood development: Conceptualizing
sustainable tourismbased livelihoods.
Trace E. Gale, West Virginia
University
“Range effect” as a
methodological issue in
normative research
Rebecca E. Stanfield McCown
and Robert Manning, Univeristy
of Vermont; William Valliere
Assessing the spatial and
temporal implications
of forest management
assumptions on outdoor
recreation outcomes
using the Recreation
Opportunity Spectrum
Howie W. Harshaw, Univesity of
British Columbia
Linking recreation
and natural resource
management across
multiple scales
Wayde C. Morse and Troy E. Hall,
University of Idaho; Linda Kruger,
USFS
Using the Almost Ideal
Demand System to
Estimate the Impact of
Drought on Demand for
Fishing Licenses in Utah
Yuexia Zhu, Paul M. Jakus and
Steven S. Vickner, Utah State
University
33
• Monday, June 18 - 5:30 pm - 7:30 pm Poster Session •
Poster Presentations
Landscape Management and Assessment (in Marriott Outdoor Pavillion Tent)
PA01 Forest Landscape Assessment: The Effects of Pre-Experience Education on Public Perception of Scenic
Beauty. Chad Pierskalla, West Virginia Univ. (USA); Kevin Saunders, West Virginia Univ; David McGill, West Virginia Univ.
PA02 Effect and Presence of Wild and Domestic Animals on Landscape Assessment. Gretchen Schorre, Colorado
State Univ. (USA); Dr. Paul Bell, Colorado State Univ.
PA03 How much more for that home near a protected area? Examining the value of conservation
subdivision design. Jan Thompson, Iowa State Univ. (USA); Troy Bowman, Iowa State Univ.; Cathy Mabry, Iowa
State Univ.; Joe Colletti, Iowa State Univ.
PA04 Integrating landscape amenities with historic parcelization trends to better target landscape
conservation efforts. Dan McFarlane, Univ. of Wisconsin-Stevens Point (USA).
PA05 Remnants of medieval field patterns: spatio-temporal changes and conservation principles. Kristina
Molnarova, Univ. of Life Sciences, Prague (Czech Republic); Petr Sklenicka, Univ. of Life Sciences, Prague; Elizabeth Brabec,
Utah State Univ.; Peter Kumble, Utah State Univ.; Blanka Pittnerova, Univ. of Life Sciences, Prague; Katerina Pixova, Univ. of Life
Sciences, Prague; Miroslav Salek, Univ. of Life Sciences, Prague.
PA06 The Role of Environmental Features in Suburban Housing Choices. Cherie LeBlanc, USDA Forest Service (USA);
Susan Stewart, USDA Forest Service; Rohit Verma, Univ. of Utah; Herbert Schroeder, USDA Forest Service .
PA07 How much carbon can a suburban neighborhood sequester? A comparison of four suburban
neighborhoods. Kiyoko Julyk, Univ. of Michigan (USA).
PA08 An investigation of coastal change in North Carolina: urban development patterns, demographics
and economic indicators. Joanne Halls, UNC Wilmington (USA).
PA09 The Aesthetic Qualities of Urban and Natural Landscapes in Hawaii as Perceived by Native Hawaiians,
Residents and Visitors. Andrew Kaufman, Univ. of Hawaii at Manoa (USA); Linda Cox, Univ. of Hawaii; Roxanne
Adams, Univ. of Hawaii.
PA10 Perception to Action? Findings from the Cache Valley Air Quality Perception Survey. Joshua Marquit, Utah
State Univ. (USA); Scott Bates, Utah State Univ.; Edward Redd, Bear River Health Department.
PA11 The Conversion of Private Timberlands to Residential Development in Upper Kittitas County. Todd
Snider, Central Washington Univ. (USA).
PA12 Housing growth across the United States, 1940-2030, and implications for natural resource
management. Susan Stewart, USDA Forest Service (USA); Roger Hammer, Oregon State Univ.; Volker Radeloff,
Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison; Todd Hawbaker, Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison; Shaun Golding, Univ. of WisconsinMadison.
PA13 Transformation and Modification of Rural Landscape of Pingtong County in Taiwan. Hou Shoung, TungHai Univ., Taichung 407, Taiwan (Taiwan); Lee Hsin, Feng-Chia Univ., Taichung 403, Taiwan .
PA14 The relationship between landscape ecological structures and natural environmental impact in
ecotourism areas. Chun-Yen Chang, National Taiwan Univ. (Taiwan); Kuan-Chieh Sung, National Taiwan Univ.;
Hsiao-Chang Huang, National Taiwan Univ..
PA15 A Study on the Ryukyu Islands Pattern Feng Shui Village Landscape: A Case Study of Tarama Island
in Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. Bixia Chen, Kagoshima Univ. (Japan); Yuei Nakama, Univ. of the Ryukyus; Genji
Kurima, Midori Net in Okinawa.
34
• Monday, June 18 - 5:30 pm- 7:30 pm Poster Session •
Natural Resource Management (in Marriott Outdoor Pavillion Tent)
PB01 Reseach on African American Forest Landowners in Alabama. John Schelhas, USDA Forest Service (USA); Rory
Fraser, Alabama A&M Univ. .
PB02 A Community Capacity Assessment Tool and Process for Natural Resource Management: The South
Australian Experience. Chris Raymond, South Australian Government (Australia); Jenny Cleary, South Australian
Government; Karen Cosgrove, South Australian Government.
PB03 A forest in conflict: the case for qualitative inquiry in natural resource management. Elizabeth Baldwin,
Clemson Univ. (USA); Laura Kenefic, Univ. of Maine, and USFS; Will LaPage, Parks and Protected Areas Consultant, Author;
Elizabeth Allan, Univ. of Maine .
PB04 Benefits of Social Impact Assessment for the Natural Resource Manager. Rabel Burdge, Private Consultant
(USA).
PB05 Assessment of four management goals in selected NPS interpretive programs. Gregory Benton, Indiana
Univ. (USA).
PB06 Cooperative Extension Programs in Natural Resource Management and Land Use Planning. Sabrina
Drill, Land Use Planning Workgroup, Univ. of California Cooperative Extension (USA).
PB07 Development of Indicators for National Park Monitoring and Estimation of Psychological Carrying
Capacity. Kwon Gyo, Korea National Park Service (Korea (south)); Han Yeol, Korea National Park Service; Shin Sop, Chungbuk
National Univ..
PB08 HD.gov -- A New Interagency Human Dimensions Web Portal. Thomas Fish, NOAA Coastal Services Center (USA);
Hansje Gold-Krueck, I. M. Systems Group at NOAA Coastal Services Center; Fred Clark, USDA Forest Service; Barry Girsh, I. M.
Systems Group at NOAA Coastal Services Center .
NR Communities, Parks and Protected Areas (in Marriott Outdoor Pavillion Tent)
PC01 Scientist and Fishermen Exchange. Flaxen Conway, Oregon State Univ. (USA); Kaety Hildenbrand, Oregon State Univ.;
Scott McMullen, Oregon Fishermen’s Cable Committee; John Harms, NOAA Fisheries .
PC02 Hunting motives and hunting type of Bunun hunter at Danda area in Taiwan. Hsiang Ling Chen, National
Taiwan Normal Univ. (Taiwan); Ying Wang, National Taiwan Normal Univ. .
PC03 Community engagement practices in Australian forest management. Melanie Dare, Univ. of Tasmania
(Australia).
PC04 CapReef: a model for community engagement in marine resource monitoring in Australia. Stephen
Sutton, James Cook Univ. (Australia); William Sawynok, Infofish Services; John Platten, CapReef.
PC05 Lincoln NF Capability Assessment. Constance Zipperer, Lincoln National Forest (USA).
PC06 Dropped
PC07 Collaborative and community-based monitoring in community forestry: lessons from five community
forestry organizations in the western USA. Heidi Ballard, Univ. of California, Davis (USA); Maria Fernandez-Gimenez,
Colorado State Univ.; Victoria Sturtevant, Southern Oregon Univ..
PC08 Pro-poor Initiatives on Community Based Forest Conservation and livelihood Benefits. Netrra Aryal,
Nepal Agroforestry Foundation (Nepal); Bishnu Pandit, New ERA; Cynthia McDougall, CIFOR; Manik Maharjan, New ERA; Sushma
Dangol, New ERA.
35
• Monday, June 18 - 5:30 pm- 7:30 pm Poster Session •
PC09 Powering the Nation at Whose Expense: Rural Community Resistance to Energy Facilities. Jennifer
Carrera, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (USA); Stephen Gasteyer, Univ. of Illinois Urbana-Champaign .
PC10 Parks, people, and posterity: a normative analysis of international conservation projects. Thaddeus
Miller, Arizona State Univ. (USA); Ben Minteer, Arizona State Univ. .
PC11 Private Working Lands in Eastern Oregon: Open Space, Livelihoods, and an Uncertain Future. Shiloh
Sundstrom, Oregon State Univ. (USA).
PC12 Stakeholders attitudes towards Elk in the occupied elk range in Arkansas. Pat Stephens Williams, Stephen
F. Austin State Univ. (USA); Stephen Parker, Illinois Natural History; Don White, Univ. of Arkansas - Monticello; Mike Cartwright,
Arkansas Fish and Wildlife Commission .
PC13 Communicating the Impacts of Hyperabundant Moose in Gros Morne and Terra Nova National Parks
of Canada. Diane Wilson, Parks Canada (Canada); A. Blair Pardy, Parks Canada; Debra Calder, Parks Canada.
PC14 Evaluating participatory watershed management:a case study of the Albemarle Pamlico National
Estuary Program. Lisa Lurie, Duke Univ. (USA).
Environmental Education (in Marriott Outdoor Pavillion Tent)
PD01 SCA Conservation Initiatives. Joey Ruehrwein, Student Conservation Association (USA).
PD02 An evaluation of the Citizen Science Water Quality Education Program. Ted Cable, Kansas State Univ. (USA);
Rhonda Janke, Kansas State Univ.; Tyler Ficken, Kansas State Univ.; Steven Hill, Kansas State Univ. .
PD03 The Ecological Education Effect on Butterfly Ecological Education Garden in Taiwan. Ying-Hsuan Lin,
National Taiwan Univ. (Taiwan); Chun-Yen Chang, National Taiwan Univ.; Der-Lin Ling, National Taiwan Univ..
PD04 Patterns in water education density, modes and messages. Bethany Cutts, Arizona State Univ. (USA).
PD05 Engaging Rural Youth in a Geographic Evaluation of the Impacts of Dam Removal on Sustainability in
the Upper Klamath Basin, Oregon. Hannah Gosnell, Oregon State Univ. (USA); Jason Hatch, Oregon State Univ.; Kelley
Thomas, Oregon State Univ.; Lindsey Lyons, Oregon State Univ.; Lena Etuk, Oregon State Univ.; Kurt Peters, Oregon State Univ. .
PD06 The pathway to conservation easement adoption in the Kaskaskia River Corridor: a landowner
decision tree diagram. Tami Newman, Southern Illinois Univ. Carbondale (USA); Jean Mangun, Southern Illinois Univ.
Carbondale; Mae Davenport, Southern Illinois Univ. Carbondale; Andrew Carver, Southern Illinois Univ. Carbondale .
Policy and Governance (in Marriott Outdoor Pavillion Tent)
PE01 Interest Groups: Partners for Successful Forest Restoration? Caitlin Burke, North Carolina State Univ. (USA).
PE02 Governance as ecology: intergenerational change and its impact on future sustainability. Daniela
Stehlik, Curtin Univ. of Technology (Australia).
PE03 The Need for Instream Flow Protection in New Mexico: A Comparative Analysis of the Yakima River,
Washington with the San Juan River, New Mexico. Josh Fitzpatrick, Central Washington Univ. (USA).
PE04 The Dynamics of different knowledge forms in landuse, nature conservation and biodiversity in the
European countryside. Rosemarie Siebert, Leibniz-Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (Germany).
PE05 Implications of disequilibrium ecology for conserving biodiversity on private land: a political ecology
of the Willamette Valley’s oak savanna. Adam Novick, Univ. of Oregon (USA).
36
• Monday, June 18 - 5:30 pm - 7:30 pm Poster Session •
Agriculture (in Marriott Outdoor Pavillion Tent)
PF01 Renewing the urban landscape: benefits of community garden programs as perceived by Chicago
inner city residents. Crystal Scott, Southern Illinois Univ. Carbondale (USA); Jean Mangun, Southern Illinois Univ.
Carbondale; Andrew Carver, Southern Illinois Univ. Carbondale.
PF02 How we told the BSE story: Media analysis of two rural Alberta communities. Eva Bogdan, Univ. of Alberta
(Canada); Debra Davidson, Univ. of Alberta; Michael Heasman, Univ. of Alberta.
PF03 Why do farmers adopt conservation practices? Case studies from the Lower Roanoke Watershed,
North Carolina. Lucy Henry, Duke Univ. (USA).
Wildland Fire (in Marriott Grill Room)
PG01 Public Opinion on Wildland Fire, Fire Risk, and Fire Recovery: An Examination of Socio-economic
Factors. J. M. Bowker, USDA Forest Service (USA); Siew Lim, North Dakota State Univ.; Sandra Rideout-Hanzak, Texas Tech
Univ.; Ken Cordell, USDA Forest Service; Cassandra Johnson, USDA Forest Service.
PG02 A Comparison of Manager and Visitor Perceptions of Fire Management and Recreation. Deborah Chavez,
USDA Forest Service (USA); William Hendricks, California State Polytechnic Univ.; Kelly Bricker.
PG03 Content of Wildland Fire Education Programs. Suzanne Forrest, California Polytechnic State Univ. (USA); William
Hendricks, California Polytechnic State Univ. San Luis Obispo; Deborah Chavez, USDA Forest Service.
PG04 Replication of Place Attachment, Amenities, and Motivation in a State Park Setting. William Hendricks, Cal
Poly (USA); Sheridan Bohlken, Cal Poly; Lynn Hamilton, Cal Poly.
Recreation and Visitation (in Marriott Uinta I & II)
PH01 Exploring social and economic impacts in Maricopa County Parks: Trend analysis over seven years.
Sarah Ackerman, Arizona State Univ. (USA); Randy Virden, Arizona State Univ..
PH02 Determining Visitor Attitudes Towards Alternative Transportation in Yosemite National Park:
Unearthing Indicators and Standards. Jessica Aquino, Arizona State Univ. (USA); Dave White, Arizona State Univ.; Jim
Bacon, National Park Service.
PH03 Visitor characteristics, rainfall and gasoline prices: understanding river recreation visitation on the
Buffalo National River. Ryan Smith, Southern Illinois Univ. Carbondale (USA); Mae Davenport, Southern Illinois Univ.
Carbondale; Jean Mangun, Southern Illinois Univ. Carbondale; Andrew Carver, Southern Illinois Univ. Carbondale .
PH04 Recreation opportunities on the Lake Superior shoreline:A four season application of the recreation
opportunity spectrum to the Canadian boreal shield landscape. Jeff Moore, Lakehead Univ. (Canada); Jennifer
Bond, Parks Canada .
PH05 Bivariate Point Pattern Analysis between Vegetation Change and Visitor Management of the SubAlpine Nature Environment: Acadia National Park, Maine. Min Kook Kim and John Daigle, Univ. of Maine (USA).
PH06 The importance of nearby nature in an aging society: An analysis of visitor characteristics and visit
pattern for a suburban forest park in Japan. Mao Kaise, Hokkaido Univ. (Japan); Tetsuya AIKOH, Hokkaido Univ.;
Reina ABE, Sapporo City Goverment.
PH07 Testing Demographic Attribute Combinations as Predictors of Attitudes Toward Forestry in Oregon.
Robert Ribe, Univ. of Oregon (USA).
PH08 Factors affecting water-based recreation participation by water flow change. Woo-Yong Hyun, Texas A&M
Univ. (USA); Michael Schuett, Texas A&M Univ. .
PH09 Relationships between Value and Life Quality of Taiwan Travelers: The Intervening Effect of Travel
Lifestyle. Cheng Jen-Son, Asia Univ. (Taiwan); Lin Shih-Yen, National Chiayi Univ. .
37
• Tuesday, June 19 Overview •
8:30 am - 10:00 am
E1: Breaking Up is Hard to Do: Land Fragmentation and Natural Resource Management, Marriott Ballroom I
E2: Public Perceptions and Trust of US Federal Agencies, Marriott Ballroom II
E3: Outdoor Recreation/Tourism Research and Education for the 21st Century: Defining Strategic Directions and Building
Capacity through a National Strategic Planning Process, Marriott Ballroom III
E4: Compatibility of Forestry Incentive Programs and the Practice of Sustainable Forestry on Non-Industrial Private
Forest Lands, Marriott Ballroom IV
E5: Tourism and Its Impacts in the Pacific Rim, Marriott Uinta I & II
E6: The Heat is On: Climate Change Impacts and Local Solutions, Prospector Coalition I & II
E7: Imagine All the People: Processes for Public Participation, Prospector Coalition III
E8: Developing Effective Natural Resource Management Professionals, Prospector Coalition IV
E9: Using Secondary Data to Understand Community-Forest Linkages & Resilience, Prospector Silver King I & II
E10: Water Resource Management I: Water Banking, Trading, and Sustainability, Prospector Silver King III & IV
E11: Aesthetics and Ecology in the Context of Landscape Change, Prospector Celebrity Theater
10:00 am - 10:30 am BREAK
10:30 am - Noon
F1: Knowledge into Action: Researchers’ and Educators’ Perspectives on Applying Social Learning to Improve Natural Resource and Environmental Management Practices, Marriott Ballroom I
F2: Ecology and the City: Understanding the Social Factors, Marriott Ballroom II
F3: Staying Home on the Range: Challenges for Ranch Conservation in a Changing West, Marriott Ballroom III
F4: County Commissioners and Natural Resource Management, Marriott Ballroom IV
F5: Running On Empty: Alternative Energy and Sustainability, Marriott Uinta I & II
F6: Spatially-Referenced Data in Land Use and Watershed Management, Prospector Coalition I & II
F7: Science, Public Input, and Natural Resource Decision-Making, Prospector Coalition III
F8: Balancing Human and Natural Factors in Managing Landscape Change, Prospector Coalition IV
F9: Attitudes, Values and Cognitive Frames Toward Nature and Natural Resources, Prospector Silver King I & II
F10: Understanding the Recreational User Experience, Prospector Silver King III & IV
F11: Put that Fire Out, Katrina!: Lessons from Natural Disasters, Prospector Celebrity Theater
Noon - 1:30 pm LUNCH
1:30 pm - 3:30 pm MINIPLENARY SESSIONS
3:30 pm - 4:00 pm
BREAK
4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
G1: Natural Resources in Urban Contexts, Marriott Ballroom I
G2: Will local working groups measure up? Perspectives of scale in collaborative wildlife management, Marriott Ballroom II
G3: Energy Development in the Western United States I, Marriott Ballroom III and IV
G4: Cultural Diversity and International Heritage Tourism, Marriott Uinta I & II
G5: Research Methods in Evaluating Collaborative Natural Resources Management, Prospector Coalition I
G6: Water Resource Management II: Data Needs and Innovations, Prospector Coalition II
G7: Western Land Use and Conservation Issues: The Role of Corporate, Non-Profit Environmental and Land
Conservation Partners, Prospector Coalition III
G8: New Approaches in Open Space Protection, Prospector Coalition IV
G9: Addressing Challenges to Parks and Protected Areas, Prospector Silver King I & II
G10: Thinking Federally, Acting Locally, Prospector Silver King III & IV
G11: Contributions of Natural Resource Extension to Sustainable Communities and Ecosystems, Prospector Celebrity Theater
5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Graduate Program and Career Fair
Marriott Outdoor Pavillion Tent
38
• Tuesday, June 19 - 8:30 - 10:00 Session •
E1: Breaking Up is
Hard to Do: Land
Fragmentation and
Natural Resource
Management
Marriott Ballroom I
E2: Public Perceptions
and Trust of US Federal
Agencies
Marriott Ballroom II
Sustainable forest
management:
bridging property
and organizational
boundaries through
partnerships in Vermont
Michelle J. Baumflek and Clare
Ginger, University of Vermont
Factors influencing forest
management on small
tracts of land
Cara M. Raboanarielina, A.E.
Luloff, James C. Finley and
Richard C. Stedman, The
Pennsylvania State University
Exploring the
Private Forestlands
of Pennsylvania:
Methodology for a
State-wide Survey of
Private Forest Lands and
Landowners
Alexander L. Metcalf, James C
Finley, A.E. Luloff and Richard
C. Stedman, Pennsylvania State
University
Understanding trust
in inclusive public
participation processes
- development of an
analytical framework
Jens Emborg, University of
Copenhagen; Steven Daniels,
Utah State University; Paul
LaChapelle, Montana State
University; Gregg Walker, Oregon
State University
Walkin’ a fine line along
the Grand Staircase:
Escalante Residents’
Perceptions of the BLM
from 1996 to 2006
Peggy Petrzelka and Sandra
Marquart-Pyatt, Utah State
University
A Theory of Public
Opposition and Conflict
Resolution for Protected
Areas Management
Marc J. Stern, Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University
Moderator
Fen Hunt, USDA-CSREES
Panelists
Steve Selin, West Virginia University
Sam Foster, USDA Forest Service
Anne Hoover, USDA Forest Service
Moderator
Steve E. Daniels, Utah State
University
Panelists
John L. Greene, USDA Forest Service
Michael Kilgore, University of Minnesota
E3: Outdoor Recreation/Tourism Research
and Education for the 21st Century: Defining
Strategic Directions and Building Capacity
through a National Strategic Planning
Process
The relationship between
landowner demographics
and attitudes and their
willingness to participate
in a quail habitat
restoration cooperative in
Missouri, USA
T.B. Treiman, T. V. Dailey, R.A. Reiz,
C.D. Scroggins, H.J. Scroggins,
and S.L. Sheriff, Missouri Dept.
of Conservation; R.A. Pierce and
W.B. Kurtz, Univ. of Missouri
Marriott Ballroom III
Organizers: Fen Hunt, USDA-CSREES, and Steve Selin,
West Virginia University
E4: Compatibility of Forestry Incentive
Programs and the Practice of Sustainable
Forestry on Non-Industrial Private Forest
Lands
Marriott Ballroom IV
Organizers: Steve E. Daniels, Utah State University, and
John L. Greene, USDA Forest Service, Southern Research
Station
39
•- Tuesday,
Monday, June
June 18
19 -- 8:30
8:30 -- 10:00
10:00 Session
Session -•
E5: Tourism and Its
Impacts in the Pacific
Rim
Marriott Uinta I & II
E6: The Heat is On:
Climate Change
Impacts and Local
Solutions
Prospector Coalition I & II
E7: Imagine All the
People: Processes for
Public Participation
Prospector Coalition III
E8: Developing
Effective Natural
Resource Management
Professionals
Prospector Coalition IV
40
Economic impact of the
firework festival at Sun
Moon Lake National
Scenic Area in Taiwan
Ting-Ju Lin, Yann-Jou Lin and
Bau-Show Lin, National Taiwan
University
Transformation of Tourist
Destination Image
Patterns from the Organic,
Induced, to Complex
Stage: An Exploratory
Study on Wang Kong
Recreation Area, Taiwan
Chang-Chan Huang, Providence
University
Destination image of
Sun Moon Lake National
Scenic Area, Taiwan
Bau-Show Lin, Yann-Jou Lin and
Ting-Ju Lin, National Taiwan
University
The Conflict of Tourism
Mobility: Hualein as a land
of pure and a place of
barbarian
Yulan Yuan, National Dong Hwa
University
Adapting Tourism
Optimisation
Management Model for
managing a European
Winter sport destination
considering Climate
Change
Andrea Prutsch and Vienna
Ulrike, Pröbstl University of
Natural Resources and Applied
Life Sciences
Climate Change in
Wintersport Destination
– A new Approach
to Transdisciplinary
Research and
Implementation
Vienna Ulrike, Pröbstl University
of Natural Resources and Applied
Life Sciences
Local and regional
decision makers
and climate change
scientists: exploring the
communication interface
Stacy Rosenberg, Texas A&M
University
Stepping outside the
NEPA box: Changing the
rules of engagement for
local participation at
Yosemite National Park
Christopher Lever, University of
California, Berkeley
Perceived Differences
in Citizen Participation
between Stakeholders
and Managers of Liu-Kuei
Forest, Taiwan
Chih-Kuei Yeh and Yi-Chung Hsu,
National Dong Hwa University;
Ophelia L.J. Chuang, Taipei
Physical Education College
Building a sustainable
high-tech park through
public participation:
A case study of local
initiative citizen
conference at Ilan, Taiwan
Wenling Tu, Shih-Hsin University,
Taiwan
Institutional aspects of
participatory local natural
resource management
Herminia C. Tanguilig, Don
Mariano, Marcos Memorial State
University
Professional development
guide for wildland-urban
interface issues
Martha C. Monroe and Lauren W.
McDonell, University of Florida
Annie Hermansen-Baez, USDA
Forest Service
Upstream sources
of natural resource
professionals: one
college’s efforts to
understand how students
choose resource careers
and improve recruitment
Erin K Henegar and Eric Olson,
University of Wisconsin-Stevens
Point
A Comprehensive needs
assessment of wildlife
services personell and
wildlife professionals to
identify education and
training opportunities
Jessica L. Tegt and Ben West,
Mississippi State University
Turf grass or grass roots?
How are leadership
development programs
in natural resources
cultivating tomorrow’s
leaders?
Meredith L. Gore, Shawn J. Riley
and Frank A. Fear, Michigan State
University
•- Tuesday,
Monday, June
June 18
19 -- 8:30
8:30 -- 10:00
10:00 Session
Session -•
E9: Using Secondary
Data to Understand
Community-Forest
Linkages and Resilience
Prospector Silver King I & II
Organizers: Linda E. Kruger,
USDA Forest Service, PNW
Research Station
E10: Water Resource
Management I: Water
Banking, Trading, and
Sustainability
Prospector Silver King III & IV
Indicator and
measurement needs for
describing the social
environment of public
lands
Joanna Endter-Wada, Utah
State University; Dale
Blahna and Linda Kruger,
US Forest Service
Using secondary data
to describe communityresource linkages for
Utah’s Grand StaircaseEscalante National
Monument
Robert J. Lilieholm, Univ of Maine
Mekbeb E. Tessema, Utah State
Univ; Dale J. Blahna, USDA Forest
Service
Evaluating Indicators
of Resilience and
Adaptability in AmenityTransition Communities
Scott L. Hoffmann, Utah State
University; Dale J. Blahna and
Linda E. Kruger, US Forest Service
John C. Allen, Utah State
University
Natural Resources,
Tourism and Changes
in Southeastern Alaska,
1990-2000
Annabel R. Kirschner, Washington
State University; Lee Cerveny and
Linda Kurger, US Forest Service
Random Acts of
Restoration? Towards an
Assessment of the Efficacy
and Viability of Water
Banking in the Upper
Klamath Basin, Oregon
Hannah Gosnell, Oregon State
University Current and Future Water
Use in Alberta, Canada:
Debunking Myths and
Paving the Way for
Sustainable Watershed
Management
Amanda L. Spyce, Anish
Neupane, Menzie McEachern and
John Thompson, AMEC Earth
and Enviornmental
Exploring Issues of Water
Sustainability in Island
Communities
Craig Forster, University of Utah
Shannon Denny, Murray
Journeay and Sonia Talwar,
National Resources Canada
Brett Korteling, Islands Trust
Local Robustness,
Regional Fragility: A
historical analysis of
robustness tradeoffs
within water policy in Los
Angeles County, California
Brian C. Steed, Indiana University
Moderator
Paul H Gobster, USDA Forest
Service
Panelists
Rob Ribe, University of Oregon
Paul Gobster, US Forest Service
Terry C. Daniel, Univeristy of Arizona
E11: Aesthetics and Ecology in the Context of
Landscape Change
Prospector Celebrity Theater
Organizers: Paul H. Gobster, USDA Forest Service, Terry
C. Daniel, University of Arizona, and Joan Nassauer,
University of Michigan
41
• -Tuesday,
Monday, June 19
18 - 10:30
8:30 -- 10:00
NoonSession
Session- •
F1: Knowledge into
Action: Researchers’ and
Educators’ Perspectives
on Applying Social
Learning to Improve
Natural Resource
and Environmental
Management Practices
Marriott Ballroom I
Organizer: Heather J. Aslin,
Australian National Univ.
Principles for
participatory projects:
learnings from
community engagement
practice in museum
settings
Frank M. Vanclay and Joanna
Wills, University of Tasmania
Ruth Lane, RMIT University
Why Bother About
Methodology? - How
what we do constructs
what we might know. A case study from a
sustainable grazing
project in south eastern
Australia
David Dumaresq, Australian
National University
Re-viewing the landscape:
working across disciplines
to link local and global
knowledges. Daniela A Stehlik and Jonathan
Majer, Curtin University of
Technology, Australia
F2: Ecology and the
City: Understanding the
Social Factors
Defining ecological goals
for open-space protection
in metropolitan areas
Robert G. Haight and Stephanie
A. Snyder, USDA Forest Service
Northern Research Station
Ecological Planning: A
New Paradigm
Erika S. Svendsen, USDA Forest
Service
Urban Nontimber Forest
Products: Nature, culture,
and practice in the 21st
century city
Marla R. Emery, U.S. Forest
Service
Using a collaborative
modeling process for
environmental decision
making in the Calumet
region of Chicago
Lynne M. Westphal, USDA Forest
Service, Northern Research
Station
Can new ranchers save the
old West?
Mark W. Brunson, Utah State
University; Lynn Huntsinger,
University of California-Berkeley
Working landscapes:
The stockpond and
the challenge of the
anthropogenic landscape
Lynn Huntsinger, University of
California-Berkeley
A governmental approach
to keeping ranchers on
the land: the Utah Grazing
Improvement Program
Bill Hopkin, Director, Utah
Grazing Improvement Program
Discussant
Hannah Gosnell, Oregon State
University Moderator
Courtney G. Flint, University of
Illinois
Panel
Ralph Okerlund, County Commissioner, Sevier County, UT
Tammie Archibald, County Commissioner, Lincoln County, WY
Bruce Adams, County Commissioner, San Juan County, UT
Brian Cottam, UT Governor’s Office of Budget and Planning
The disconnect between
hypothetical and
observed values for green
energy in Tennessee
Charles B. Sims, University of
Wyoming
Doanld G. Hodges, Mark Fly and
Becky Stephens, University of
Tennessee
Climate change mitigation
from renewable fuels:
assessing the regional
economic and population
effects of biomass ethanol
refineries
Barry D. Solomon, Michigan
Technological University
Marriott Ballroom II
Organizer: Lynne M. Westphal,
USDA Forest Service, Nothern
Research Station
F3: Staying Home on
the Range: Challenges
for Ranch Conservation
in a Changing West
Marriott Ballroom III
Organizer: Mark Brunson,
Utah State University
F4: County Commissioners and Natural
Resource Management
Marriott Ballroom IV
Organizers: Courtney G. Flint, University of Illinois, and
Steve E. Daniels and John Allen, Utah State University
F5: Running On Empty:
Alternative Energy and
Sustainability
Marriott Uinta I & II
42
Estimating the implicit
costs of adopting HybridElectric and Hydrogen
Fuel-Cell Vehicles due to
Dynamics in Consumer
Preferences
Paulus Mau, InterVISTAS
Consulting Inc.; Jimena
Eyzaguirre, Natural Resources
CAN; Mark Jaccard and Colleen
Collins-Dodd, Simon Fraser Univ.;
Ken Tiedemann, BC Hydro
Reframing “peak”
oil: uncovering the
social, technical and
organizational forces
behind oil depletion
Daniel M. Lord, University of
Illinois Urbana-Champaign
• -Tuesday,
Monday, June 19
18 - 10:30
8:30 -- 10:00
NoonSession
Session- •
F6:Spatially-Referenced
Data in Land Use
and Watershed
Management
Prospector Coalition I & II
Providing the missing
link: integrating spatiallyreferenced social and
economic data for
watershed management
Allan L. Curtis, Charles Sturt
University
Linking Land Use
Planning with Water
Resource Management:
Empirical evidence from
the Portland metropolitan
region
Vivek Shandas, Portland State
University
Combining landscape
histories, spatial policy
forecasts, and landscape
ecology metrics to
compare alternative
futures in developing
rural areas
Eric F. Olson and Dan McFarlane
University of Wisconsin-Stevens
Point
Discussant
Cynthia Van Der Wiele,
North Carolina State University,
USA
Using Social Science to
Guide the Implementation
of Utah’s Wildlife Action
Plan
Dana E. Dolsen and Janet
Sutter, Utah Division of Wildlife
Resources
Keeping an Eye on the
Why: Facts, Values, and
Public Involvement
in Land Management
Decision Processes
Robert R. Dow and Chris Miller,
USDA Forest Service
Strengthening
Sustainable Agriculture
on Indian Lands
Staci K. Emm, Loretta Singletary
and Marilyn Smith, University of
Nevada Cooperative Extension
The next generation of
USDA Forest Service
community assistance
grants programs
Dennis R. Becker, University of
Minnesota
Making plans as if the
environment really
mattered
Peter A. Shilton, Queensland
Department of Natural
Resources and Water
Will it Still be
Appreciated? NatureBased Recreation and
Future Landscapes
– A Case Study in Mueritz
National Park (Germany)
Gerd Lupp, Albert-LudwigsUniversity
Discussant
Jens Emborg,
Royal Veterinary and Agricultural
University, Denmark
On the Origin and
Consequences of Extreme
Attitudes Toward Wolves
Jeremy T. Bruskotter, University
of Minnesota; Robert H. Schmidt,
Utah State University; David C.
Fulton, US Geological Survey
Contrasting agricultural
smoke vs. new neighbors
in northern Idaho
Julia D. Parker, J.D. Wulfhorst,
Stephanie L. Kane and Larry W.
Van Tassell, University of Idaho
Lay people’s images of
nature: Cognitive frames
as networks of related
values, beliefs and value
orientations.
Arjen Buijs, Wageningen
University
Discussant
Harry C. Zinn,
Pennsylvania State University,
USA
Leisure place advocacy
behavior: The relationship
of winter recreation
enthusiasts and a
destination ski resort
Susan P. Stevenson, University of
Central Missouri
The relationship between
benefit importance
and attainment: initial
explorations
Chad D. Pierskalla, West Virginia
University; Ingrid E. Schneider,
University of Minnesota; Dwayne
Moore, Clemson University A Rapid Assessment
Visitor Inventory (RAVI)
to Reduce Recreation
Management Decision
Conflicts
Kenneth C. Chilman, Southern
Illinois University; Carbondale
Les Wadzinski, US Forest Service;
Andy West, State of Missouri
Discussant
Peter Fix,
University of Alaska-Fairbanks,
USA
Juried Paper Session
F7: Science, Public
Input, and Natural
Resource DecisionMaking
Prospector Coalition III
F8: Balancing Human
and Natural Factors in
Managing Landscape
Change
Prospector Coalition IV
Juried Paper Session
F9: Attitudes, Values
and Cognitive Frames
Toward Nature and
Natural Resources
Prospector Silver King I & II
Juried Paper Session
F10: Understanding
the Recreational User
Experience
Prospector Silver King III & IV
Juried Paper Session
43
• -Tuesday,
Monday, June 19
18 - 10:30
8:30 -- 10:00
NoonSession
Session- •
F11: Put that Fire Out,
Katrina!: Lessons from
Natural Disasters
Prospector Celebrity Theater
Juried Paper Session
The Axe in the Attic:
Learning the Lingering
Lessons of Katrina
William Freudenburg, UCSB;
Robert Gramling, University
of Louisiana, Lafayette; Shirley
Laska, University of New Orleans;
Kai Erikson, Yale
Dislocation and
Depression: Social
Consequences of
Hurricane Katrina
Joachim Singelmann and
Mark Schafer, Louisiana State
University
Grassroots Efforts to
Enhance Community
Resilience to Natural
Disasters: Wildfire Risk
Reduction Programs in
the U.S. and Indigenous
Flood Protection
Strategies in the Sudan
Margaret A. Reams, Diana
Obanda and Cheryl R. Renner,
Louisiana State Univ.; Terry K.
Haines, US Forest Service
Discussant
Matthew S. Carroll,
Washington State University,
USA
• Mini-Plenary Panel Sessions - 1:30 - 3:30 •
Challenges and Opportunities of Oil and
Gas Development in the
Intermountain West
Social Science Conversations and
Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Marriott Ballroom II, III and IV
Organizer: Douglas Jackson-Smith, Utah State University
Prospector Celebrity Theater
Organizer: Douglas Jackson-Smith, Utah State University
Panelists
Panelists
Jim Evans
Geologist, Utah State University
John Martin
County Commissioner, Garfield County, Colorado
Nancy Sorenson
Rancher, Powder River Basin, Wyoming
Gayle McKeachnie
Rural Affairs Coordinator, Utah State Governor’s
Rural & Economic Development Office
Randy Teeuwen
Community Relations Advisor, EnCana Oil and
Gas (USA) Inc
Selma Sierra
Utah State Director, Bureau of Land
Management
44
Thomas Beckley
University of New Brunswick
Dana Dolsen
Organization of Wildlife Planners; Utah Division
of Wildlife Resources
Nick Salafsky
Foundations of Success
Tom Fish and Hansje Gold-Kreuck
NOAA Coastal Services Center, and IMSG at
NOAA Coastal Services Center
Sarah Timpson
Special Advisor on Community-Based Initiatives,
United Nations Development Programme
- Monday,
Tuesday,June
June1818--8:30
4:00--10:00
5:30 Session G1: Natural Resources
in Urban Contexts
Marriott Ballroom I
Towards a
framework for
mapping urban
environmental
stewardship
Dana R. Fisher, Columbia
University
Erika S. Svendsen and
Lindsay Campbell, USDA
Forest Service
Conflicts Over
Nature in the City
Stephanie S. Pincetl, USDA
Forest Service
G2: Will local working groups measure up?
Perspectives of scale in collaborative wildlife
management
Shifting Paradigms
of Design in the
Urban Realm:
Intersections
Revealed
Lucinda R Sanders Olin
Partnership
The effect of
environmental cues
and social cues
on fear of crime in
community park
settings
Lisa J. Jorgensen,
California State Univ.,
Sacramento; Edward
Ruddell, Univ. of Utah
Moderator
Sarah Lupis, Utah State
Cooperative Extension
Panelists
Clait Braun, Wildlife Biologist, Grouse Inc.
Dean Mitchell, Upland Game Coordinator, UT Division of Wildlife
Verl Bagley, Parker Mt. ARM Coordinator, Wayne & Sevier Cnty. Extn.
Mark Hilliard, Wildlife Biologist, ID Bureau of Land Management
Moderator
Robert H. Winthrop, USDI Bureau
of Land Management
Panelists
Roy Allen, Economist, USDI-BLM
Jeffery Jacquet, Socioeconomic Analyst, Sublette Cmty. Partnership
Carmel Kail, Archeologist, Pinedale Anticline Working Group (PAWG)
Marriott Ballroom II
Organizers: Sarah Lupis, Utah State Cooperative
Extension, and Lorien Belton, Utah State University
G3: Energy Development in the Western
United States I: Assessing the Social and
Economic Impacts
Place as Hidden
Treasures in Urban
Environments
Andrew J. Kerins,
James Barkley and Bill
Stewart, University of
Illinois
Marriott Ballroom III and IV
Organizer: Robert H Winthrop, USDI Bureau of Land
Management
G4: Cultural Diversity
and International
Heritage Tourism
Marriott Uinta I & II
The Evolution of a System: A Tale of Two Traditionally
African-American State
Parks in Tennesse
K.C. Bloom, University of Georgia
Exploring links between
cultural heritage values,
interpretation and
community engagement
in the Castlemaine
Diggings National
Heritage Park, Australia
Leah H. Stamm, Monash
University Has the designation of a
World Heritage site led to
environmental
improvement or
environmental destruction?
A Case study of Yakushima
Island, Japan
S. Shibasaki, Iwate Univ.; Y. Shoji,
Hokkaido Univ., T. Tsuge, Takasaki
City Univ. of Economics; Y. Yokota,
Japan Intl. Research Cent. for Agric.
Sciences; K. Hirata, Kagoshima Univ.;
T. Tsuchiya, Tokyo Univ. of Agric. and
Tech.; S. Nagata, Univ. of Tokyo
Service Models for
Culturally Diverse
Customers
Chieh-Lu Li, The University
of Hong Kong; Yi-Chung Hsu,
National Dong Hwa University;
Alan R. Graefe, Harry C.
Zinn and Garry E. Chick,
Pennsylvania State University;
James D. Absher USDA Forest
Service
45
•- Monday,
Tuesday,June
June1819- -8:30
4:00--10:00
5:30 Session -•
G5: Research Methods
in Evaluating
Collaborative Natural
Resources Management
Roles of Researcher/
Practitioners in
Community-Based
Forestry
Cassandra Moseley, University
of Oregon
Evaluating Group Process
and Its Relationship to
Group Outcomes
Richard D Margerum Univ. of
Oregon
Social Entrepreneurship
in Community-based
Forestry
Cecilia Danks, University of
Vermont
Anthony Cheng, Colorado State
University
Shorna Broussard, Purdue
University
Challenges facing water
resources management
in Idaho: A representative
survey of stakeholders.
Erin L. Seekamp and Charles C.
Harris, University of Idaho
Credibility, saliency, and
legitimacy of boundary
objects for water resource
management decision
making: Assessing
stakeholder response to
DCDC WaterSim
Dave D. White, Amber Y. Wutich,
Timothy W. Lant, Susan E. Ledlow
and Patricia Gober, Arizona State
University
A practical approach to
integrating watershed,
land use, and social
data in rural community
planning
Michael D. Smith, Humboldt
State University
Ruth Blyther, Jennifer Rice
and Dana Dickman, Redwood
Community Action Agency
Moderator
Peter A. Kumble, Utah State
University
Panelists
Eve Davies, Rocky Mountain Power (formerly PacifiCorp)
Joan Degiorgio, The Nature Conservancy Northern Mountains,
Bryan Dixon, Bridgerland Audubon Society
Does Planning Matter in
the Protection of Open
Space?
Toddi A. Steelman and George
R. Hess, North Carolina State
University
Discussants
Nora Shepard, Summit County
Planner
Wendy Fisher, Utah Open Lands
Prospector Coalition I
Organizer: Richard
Margerum, University of
Oregon
Evaluating Collaboration or
Evaluation for Collaboratives:
G6: Water Resource
Management II: Data
Needs and Innovations
Prospector Coalition II
G7: Western Land Use and Conservation
Issues: The Role of Corporate, Non-Profit
Environmental and Land Conservation
Partners
Prospector Coalition III
Organizer: Peter A. Kumble, Utah State University
G8: New Approaches in
Open Space Protection
Prospector Coalition IV
Organizers: Toddi A. Steelman,
North Carolina State, Nora
Shepard, Summit County
Planner, and Wendy Fisher,
Utah Open Lands
46
Where is biodiversity
conservation in local
planning?
George Hess and Toddi
Steelman, North Carolina State
University; James Miller and
Janette Thompson, Iowa State
University; Martha Groom and
David Stokes, University of
Washington-Bothell
Lessons learned in
developing social
indicators for water
quality management
Ken Genskow, University of
Wisconsin-Madison
Linda Prokopy, Purdue University •- Monday,
Tuesday,June
June1819- -8:30
4:00--10:00
5:30 Session -•
G9: Addressing
Challenges to Parks and
Protected Areas
Prospector Silver King I & II
G10: Thinking Federally,
Acting Locally
Prospector Silver King III & IV
Can U.S. National Parks
Withstand a Downturn in
Visitation?
Thomas A. More, US Forest
Service; Thomas Stevens,
University of Massachusetts;
Daniel R. Dustin, University of
Utah; Walter Kuentzel, University
of Vermont
A Multiple-Methods
Examination of Ethnically/
Racially Diverse Outdoor
Recreation Users Needs
and Constraints in the
Pacific Northwest
Elizabeth A. Covelli and Alan
R. Graefe, Pennsylvania State
University; Robert C. Burns, West
Virginia University; Erwei Dong,
SUNY Cortland
Is the message getting
through? A proposed
method for examining
backcountry visitor
compliance with
recommended “LeaveNo-Trace” practices in U.S.
National Parks
Wade M. Vagias and Bob Powell,
Clemson University
Federal disinvestment
from natural resource
management and rural
communities: what ways
forward?
Tony Cheng, Colorado State
University; Cassandra Moseley,
University of Oregon; Rebecca
McLain, Institute for Culture and
Ecology
Factors affecting
landowner participation
in the Candidate
Conservation Agreements
with Assurances (CCAA)
program
Kendra Womack, Steven E.
Daniels, Terry A. Messmer and
Mark Brunson, Utah State
University
Glacier National Park and
Its Neighbors: A Twenty
Year Study in Regional
Resource Management
Robert B. Keiter, University of
Utah
Moderator
Ajit Krishnaswamy, FORREX
Forest Research Extension
Partnership
Panelists
Sarah Ashton, University of Georgia
Janean H. Creighton, Washington State University
Eric Norland, USDA-CSREES
Tamara L. Walkingstick, University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension
Chris Hollstedt, FORREX Forest Research Extension Partnership
G11: Contributions of Natural Resource
Extension to Sustainable Communities and
Ecosystems
Prospector Celebrity Theater
Organizers: Ajit Krishnaswamy and Chris Hollstedt,
FORREX Forest Research Extension Partnership
Modeling changes in the
number of recreation
participants
Eric P. English, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration
47
• Wednesday,
Monday, JuneJune
18 Overview
20 Overview
• •
8:30 am - 10:00 am KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Brent Haglund
“A Land Ethic, Good Science and Meaningful Incentives: Sand County Foundation Conversations
with Landholders and Resource Users”
Marriott Ballrooms I-IV
10:00 am - 10:30 am BREAK
10:30 am - Noon
H1: Deal or No Deal: Managing and Understanding Conflict, Marriott Ballroom I
H2: Changing Cultural Meanings of Hunting, Marriott Ballroom II
H3: Wildfire Management in the Wildland Urban Interface I: Analytical Frameworks for Exploring Community,
Marriott Ballroom III
H4: Energy Development in the Western United States II: Assessing and Mitigating Social and Economic Effects,
Marriott Ballroom IV
H5: The Joyful Promise of University Life: A University of Michigan Mentoring Story, Marriott Uinta I & II
H6: Agritourism in an Asian Context, Marriott Grill Room
H7: The Final Frontier: Alternative Approaches to Incorporating Space into Natural Resource Management,
Prospector Coalition I
H8: I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For: Understanding Visitor Experiences on Public Lands,
Prospector Coalition II
H9: Engaging Communities in Natural Resource Management: Challenges and Techniques, Prospector Coalition III
H10: Common Pool Management, Prospector Coalition IV
H11: On The Outside Looking In: Pattern, Process, and Performance at Landscape Boundaries, Prospector Silver King I
H12: Trends in Planning, Parks and Recreation Areas, Prospector Silver King II
H13: Can’t See the Opinions for the Trees: Public Values and Attitudes toward Forest Practices, Prospector Silver King III
H14: Laws Happen: Power, Politics and the Formulation of Environmental/Natural Resource Policy, Prospector Silver King IV
H15: Fitting Place Research into Decision-Making, Prospector Celebrity Theater
Noon - 1:30 pm LUNCH
1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
I1: Whatever Floats Your Boat: Water-Based Recreation, Marriott Ballroom I
I2: Environmental and Anti-Environmentalist Movements I, Marriott Ballroom II
I3: Wildfire Management in the WUI II: Analysis of Cases and Networks, Marriott Ballroom III
I4: Wild Thing: Attitudes toward Wildlife, Marriott Ballroom IV
I5: All the World’s a Stage: Global Environmental Problems, Marriott Uinta I & II
I6: An Interview with Walter Firey, Author of Man, Mind and Land and the First Environmental/Natural Resource
Sociologist, Marriott Grill Room
I7: Spatial Dimensions of Landscape Values: Alternative Conceptualizations and Techniques, Prospector Coalition I
I8: Predicting Satisfaction with Leisure and Recreation Opportunities, Prospector Coalition II
I9: Bricolage Happens: Thinking About Theory for Collaborative Management and Planning, Prospector Coalition III
I10: Changing Faces: New Rural Landowners and Resource Management & Planning, Prospector Coalition IV
I11: Transformations of Rural Farmscapes, Prospector Silver King I
I12: Dynamics of Conservation Behavior in Agriculture, Prospector Silver King II
I13: Integrating Local and Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Resource Management, Prospector Silver King III
I14: Social and Health Benefits of Natural Resources I: Outdoor Experiences, Prospector Silver King IV
I15: Sustainability, Insitutional Innovation, and Natural Resource Management, Prospector Celebrity Theater
3:00 pm - 3:30 pm
48
BREAK
• Wednesday,
Monday, JuneJune
18 Overview
20 Overview
• •
3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
J1: Wheels of Fortune: Managing Mechanized Recreation in Wildlands, Marriott Ballroom I
J2: Environmental and Anti-Environmental Movements II, Marriott Ballroom II
J3: Wildfire Management in the WUI III: Community and Landowners Perceptions of Wildfire, Marriott Ballroom III
J4: Eats, Shoots, and Leaves: Hunting and Society, Marriott Ballroom IV
J5: It’s Not Easy Being Green: Institutional Responses to Environmental Problems, Marriott Uinta I & II
J6: Cove Hydroelectric Project Decomissioning, Marriott Grill Room
J7: Evaluating Visual Experience: Is What You Get What You See? Prospector Coalition I
J8: The Sound and the Fury: Considering Noise and Light in Recreation Management, Prospector Coalition II
J9: Generating Ownership and Trust through Community-Based Ecosystem Restoration, Prospector Coalition III
J10: Community Attachment in High Amenity Places, Prospector Coalition IV
J11: Dig It! Social and Cultural Impacts of Extractive Resource Development, Prospector Silver King I
J12: Views from the Field: Insights from Qualitative Research with Agriculturalists, Prospector Silver King II
J13: Field social science and resource management in Alaska: subsistence harvesting and traditional land use,
Prospector Silver King III
J14: Social and Health Benefits of Natural Resources II: Conservation Volunteerism, Prospector Silver King IV
J15: Twenty Years of Society and Natural Resources, Prospector Celebrity Theater
5:00 pm - 6:00 pm
IASNR New Member Meeting
Marriott Outdoor Pavilion Tent
6:30 pm - 8:30 pm
IASNR BANQUET and Keynote Address: Patrick A. Shea
“What would Max Weber have to say to Al Gore and Jon Huntsman?”
Marriott Ballrooms I-IV
49
• Wednesday,
- Monday, June
June1820- 8:30
- 10:30
- 10:00
- Noon
Session
Session
- •
H1: Deal or No Deal:
Managing and
Understanding Conflict
Marriott Ballroom I
H2: Changing Cultural
Meanings of Hunting
Marriott Ballroom II
Organizers: Ketil Skogen and
Olve Krange, Norwegian
Institute for Nature Research H3: Wildfire Management
in the Wildland Urban
Interface I: Analytical
Frameworks for
Exploring Community
Capacity
Marriott Ballroom III
Organizer: Yvonne Everett,
Humboldt State Univ. Managing forest road
access on public lands:
A conceptual model of
conflict
Len M Hunt, Ontario Ministry
of Natural Resources; Harvey
Lemelin, Lakehead University;
Karen C. Saunders, Ontario
Ministry of Natural Resources
Network Analysis
as a Method for
Understanding
Environmental Conflict
Chih-Yao Chang, John C Allen,
Susan Dawson, and Gary E.
Madsen, Utah State University
Monitoring the visitor
experience at the Oregon
Dunes: A longitudinal
study of perceptions and
behavior
Alan R Graefe, Penn State
University; Robert C. Burns, West
Virginia University Social Network Approach
to Study the Participation
of Community Forestry in
Taiwan
Mei-Chih Yeh Chaoyang,
University of Technology Vermont Coyote-Hunting
Tournaments and the
Contested Meaning of
Hunting
Marc A Boglioli, Drew University The consumptive network
around hunting; can
that explain why we
see attitude stability in
Sweden?
Göran C Ericsson, SLU
The hunter identity:
Serious leisure and social
class Olve Krange and Ketil Skogen,
Norwegian Institute for Nature
Research
Constructing the
Cosmopolitan “Other”
in Canadian Hunting
Debates
Thomas Dunk, Lakehead
University Networks as mechanisms
for community wildfire
preparedness: Across
scale relationship
building for embedded
plans K.C. Nelson, R.F. Brummel and
S. Grayzeck, Univ. of Minnesota;
S. Burns, Fort Lewis College; T.
Cheng and E. Saelie, Colorado
St. Univ.; P. Jakes, USDA Forest
Service; V. Sturtevant, Southern
Oregon Univ; D.R. Williams, Rocky
Mt. Research Station
Understanding
elements contributing
to collaboration in
community-based wildfire
and forest restoration
planning
Emily C Saeli, Anthony S Cheng,
Colorado State University Social learning and the
creation of Communities
of Understanding in
collaborative natural
resource planning
Rachel F Brummel, Kristen
C Nelson, and Stephanie
A Grayzeck, University of
Minnesota; Pamela J Jakes, USDA
Forest Service; Daniel R Williams,
USDA Forest Service Interpreting federal
policy at the local level:
How local government
becomes a partner at
the table by defining the
wildland-urban interface
Stephanie A Grayzeck, Kristen C
Nelson, and Rachel F Brummel,
University of Minnesota; Pamela
J Jakes, USDA Forest Service; Dan
R Williams, USDA Forest Service Moderator
Darla Pindell, USDI Bureau of
Land Management
Panelists
Elizabeth A. Vonhoff, USDI-Bureau of Land Management
Stacie McIntosh, Anthropologist, BLM Artic Field Office
Robert Winthrop, Senior Social Scientist, BLM Washing Office
Moderator
Dan Dustin, University of Utah
Panelists
S. Ross Tocher, University of Michigan
J. Douglas Wellman, North Carolina State University
Bill Hammitt,Clemson University
Rick Knopf, Arizona State University
West Joe Roggenbuck, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State Univ.
H4: Energy Development in the Western
United States II: Mitigating Social and
Economic Effects
Marriott Ballroom IV
Organizer: Robert H Winthrop, USDI Bureau of Land
Management H5: The Joyful Promise of University Life: A
University of Michigan Mentoring Story
Marriott Uinta I & II
Organizer: Dan Dustin, University of Utah
50
• Wednesday,
- Monday, June
June1820- 8:30
- 10:30
- 10:00
- Noon
Session
Session
- •
H6: Agritourism in an
Asian Context
Marriott Grill Room
H7:The Final Frontier:
Alternative Approaches
to Incorporating Space
into Natural Resource
Management
Japanese Case study on
the Management of Rural
Tourism in Farm Village
Shinpei Shimoura and Shinichi
Kurihara, Chiba University; Albert
E Luloff, The Pennsylvania State
University Organic farm tour as a
potential new form of
“ecotourism” in South
Korea
Hyungsuk Choo and Tazim
Jamal, Texas A&M University
A Case of Hermeneutic
Study on Development of
Leisure Farm in Taiwan
Ming Ching Yang and Chun-Yu
Yang, Providence University The health benefits of
recreational activities on
leisure farms in Taiwan
Chun-Yen Chang, National
Taiwan University; Hsing-Fen
Tang, Asia University; Ying-Hsuan
Lin and Shu-Fang Peng, National
Taiwan University Using landscape
indicators to ecologize
land use policy
Ghislain Geniaux and Claude
Napoleone, INRA The use of exterior space
planning to enable
community strength and
cultural well being for
Indigenous Australians
Tammy Grice, Queensland
University of Technology
Country Roads and
Scenery: A GIS Viewshed
Analysis for Monroe
County, WV
Jason Davis, Jinyang Deng, and
Michael Strager, West Virginia
University A Study on the Ryukyu
Islands Pattern Feng Shui
Village Landscape: A Case
Study of Tarama Island
in Okinawa Prefecture,
Japan
Bixia Chen, The United Graduate
School of Agricultural Sciences,
Kagoshima Univ.; Yuei Nakama,
Univ. of the Ryukyus Genji
Kurima Midori Net in Okinawa
The Commodification
of the Landscape: Using
Qualitative Insights
to Explore Visitor
Experiences in Ireland’s
National Parks and
Protected Areas
Noel P Healy, National University
of Ireland, Galway Understanding Visitors’
Preferences for Public
Beach Access Using a
Stated Preference Choice
Approach
Chi-Ok Oh, Jason Draper, and
Anthony W. Dixon, Clemson
University; Elizabeth von Kolnitz,
South Carolina Department
Health and Environmental
Control A national study of
constraints to public
recreation participation
in New Zealand protected
natural areas
Gordon R Cessford and Jude
Borcherds, Department of
Conservation, New Zealand Information Complexity
as a Constraint to Public
Involvement in Forest
Management Planning
Mark Robson, Julie Rosenthal,
and Reginald H. Lemelin,
Lakehead University; Len Hunt,
Ontario Ministry of Natural
Resources; Norm McIntyre,
Lakehead University
Co-Planning with
Aboriginal Peoples: A
Synthesis of Existing
Models of Indigenous
Governance and
Collaborative Planning
Janice M Barry, School of
Community and Regional
Planning, University of British
Columbia Diamonds are Forever:
The Limitations of
Aboriginal Participation
in Resource Management
in Northern Canada
Brenda L Parlee, University of
Alberta
Corralling contract of
Fulani pastoralists in
Central Nigeria
Regina Hoi Yee Fu, University of
Tokyo, Japan Nakatehtamasoyahk
Ote Nekan Nitaskenan:
Caring for our Land for
the Future
Karen A Geertsema and Brenda
Parlee, University of Alberta The challenges and
outcomes of collaborative
behavior in the NE Tilefish
fishery
Barbara P Rountree, Andrew
Kitts, and Patricia Pinto da Silva,
USDOC/NOAA/NEFSC Prospector Coalition I
H8: I Still Haven’t Found
What I’m Looking For:
Understanding Visitor
Experiences on Public
Lands
Prospector Coalition II
H9: Engaging
Communities in Natural
Resource Management:
Challenges and
Techniques
Prospector Coalition III
H10: Common Pool
Management
Prospector Coalition IV
From Enthusiasm
to Apathy: Local
Perspectives and
the Environmental
Assessment Process in
Nova Scotia
Hendricus A Van Wilgenburg,
Dalhousie University
Community involvement
and participation
in natural resources
management is the
only key to protecting
and managing natural
resources which has a
success in the Gambia
Kabiro Jatta, Forestry
Department, The Gambia 51
• Wednesday,
- Monday, June
June1820- 8:30
- 10:30
- 10:00
- Noon
Session
Session
- •
H11: On The
Outside Looking
In: Pattern, Process,
and Performance at
Landscape Boundaries
Prospector Silver King I
H12: Trends in Planning,
Parks and Recreation
Areas
Prospector Silver King II
H13: Can’t See the
Opinions for the Trees:
Public Values and
Attitudes toward Forest
Practices
Prospector Silver King III
H14: Laws Happen:
Power, Politics and
the Formulation of
Environmental/Natural
Resource Policy
Remnants of medieval
field patterns: Spatiotemporal changes and
conservation principles
Kristina Molnarova, Univ. of Life
Sciences, Czech Republic; Peter
A Kumble, Utah State Univ.; Petr
Sklenicka, Univ. of Life Sciences;
Elizabeth A Brabec, Utah State
Univ; Blanka Pittnerova, Katerina
Pixova, & Miroslav Salek, Univ. of
Life Sciences
Resident Perceptions
of Tourism Related
Impacts on the Natural
Environment and
Community in a Gateway
Mountain County
Eric D Frauman, Appalachian
State University; Sarah Banks,
Appalachian State University Human Induced
Switches on Public
Lands Boundaries: The
Emergence of Ecological
Islands
Zola K Moon and Frank L Farmer,
University of Arkansas; Steve
Jacob,York College, Pennsylvania
The proposal for a
national park in Maine’s
managed forest:
interviews with Maine
decision leaders about
alternative large-scale
conservation visions
Elizabeth D Baldwin, Clemson
Univ.; Will LaPage, Parks and
Protected Areas Consultant;
Laura Kenefic, Univ. of Maine
Adjusting Management
Strategies for Fu-Yuan
Forest Recreation Area
Sheng-Jung Ou, National Chung
Hsing University; Yu-Hsiu
Huang, Chun-Chou Institute
of Technology; Hung-Hsu Yen,
National Formosa University;
Chien-Yau Lin, Chung-Chou
Institute of Techonology PerformanceBased Planning
and Environmental
Management: Desired
Environmental Outcomes
in Queensland
Douglas C Baker and Kristine P
Jerome, Queensland University
of Technology; Neil Sipe, Griffith
University
Predicting evaluation of
National Forest managers’
performance: The role of
forest value orientations,
management preferences,
and personal importance
Harry C Zinn and Sharon X. Shen,
Penn State University Public Values, Objectives,
Beliefs, and Attitudes
towards Forests and
Forest Management
Lori B Shelby, Colorado State
University; Deborah J Shields,
USDA Forest Service, Rocky
Mountain Research Station Making sense of forest
management in the
landscape
Rebecca M Ford, Kathryn J H
Williams, Ian D Bishop, and
Anika E O’Connell, University of
Melbourne Comparing environmental
concern and activism in
regions in Germany
Sandy T Marquart-Pyatt, Utah
State University
Conflict resolution
through collaborative
workgroups: A case study
of the Yuma, Arizona
Desalting Plant/Cienega
de Santa Clara conflict
Gabriel Judkins, Arizona State
University Power in Paradise
Gaylene J Pridham, University
of Alberta Moderator
William P Stewart, University of
Illinois
Panelists
Jim Burchfield, University of Montana
Linda Kruger, USDA Forest Service, PNW Research Station
Tarla Peterson, Texas A&M University
Dan Williams, USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station Prospector Silver King IV
H15: Fitting Place Research into DecisionMaking
Prospector Celebrity Theater
Organizers: William P. Stewart, University of Illinois, and
Daniel R. Williams, USDA Rocky Mountain Research
Station
52
Social or Spatial:
Neighborhood Influence
on Land Use in the
Amazon Frontier
Shubhayu Saha, North Carolina
State University Development of a
Vulnerability Assessment
Tool for Public Lands Used
for Recreation
Paul M Whitworth, Middle
Tennessee State University;
Fred May, Jacksonville State
University; Minsoo Kang, Middle
Tennessee State University
The Ecologization
of European Union
Agricultural Policy and
Research Agenda. Which
Theoretical Choices?
Christian Deverre and Christine
de Sainte Marie, INRA • Wednesday,
- Monday, June
June
18 20
- 8:30
- 1:30
- 10:00
- 3:00Session
Session- •
I1: Whatever Floats
Your Boat: Water-Based
Recreation
Marriott Ballroom I
I2: Environmental and
Anti-Environmentalist
Movements I
Marriott Ballroom II
Organizers: David B. Tindall,
Univ. of British Columbia, and
J. William Gibson, California
State Univ., Long Beach
I3: Wildfire
Management in the
WUI II: Analysis of Cases
and Networks
Marriott Ballroom III
Organizer: Yvonne Everett,
Humboldt State University I4: Wild Thing: Attitudes
toward Wildlife
Marriott Ballroom IV
I5: All the World’s
a Stage: Global
Environmental
Problems
Marriott Uinta I & II
Managing Water-Based
Recreation Within a
Changing Landscape
Elizabeth A Didier, Becky
Stephens, and Mark Fly,
University of Tennessee; Clay
Guerry, Tennessee Valley
Authority A comparison of
managers’ and users’
preferences for
management actions on
lakes and reservoirs in
Utah
William S Spain, Steven W Burr,
and Douglas K Reiter, Utah State
University; Dale J Blahna, United
States Forest Service Enduring involvement of
Recreational Anglers
Jinhee Jun and Gerard T Kyle,
Texas A & M University; William
Norman C Norman and Laurie W
Jodice, Clemson University
Recreation Use and
Economic Value at Ken’s
Lake, Utah
Paul M Jakus and John E Keith
Utah State University Making Places Sacred
in Order to Save Them:
Eco-Warriors, The Monkey
Wrench Gang, and
Consecration Through
Resistance
James W Gibson, California State
University, Long Beach Mountaintop Removal
and Environmental
Injustice in Southern
Appalachia: Progress and
Prospects of Mountain
Justice Summer
W. Ryan Wishart and Robert E
Jones, University of Tennessee On the trail of maíze:
tracking a vanishing
seed through a maze of
globalization and the
struggle from below
Jennifer B Rogers, University of
CA, Santa Barbara
Diffusing innovation to
involve communities in
wildfire management: Fire
Safe, Firewise and FireFree
Victoria Sturtevant, Southern
Oregon University; Pamela J
Jakes and Sarah M McCaffrey,
USDA Forest Service Variations in community
Herding cats: response from the WUI:
centralization vs.
California Fire Safe
idiosyncratic voluntary
Councils
organizing in Fire Safe
Yvonne Everett and Michelle
Councils in California
Fuller, Humboldt State University Michelle M Fuller and Yvonne
Everett, Humboldt State
University Conundrums of
Accountability: Evaluating
Success at Multiple Levels
of the U.S. Fire Learning
Network
Curt D Gervich and Bruce
Goldstein, Virginia Tech
University Measurement and
quantification of factors
affecting acceptance
capacity for white-tailed
deer in southern Michigan Stacy A Lischka, Illinois Natural
History Survey; Shawn J Riley,
Michigan State University;
Brent A. Rudolph, Michigan
Department of Natural
Resources
Disparate Stakeholder
Management of Wildlife
Issues in the Southern
Greater Yellowstone Area
Lynne M Koontz, U.S. Geological
Survey; Dana L. Hoag, Colorado
State University Stakeholders’ attitudes
towards the return of
black bear to Northeast
Texas
Adam Keul, Pat S Stephens
Williams, Ray Darville, and Chris
Comer, Stephen F. Austin State
University; Nathan Garner and
Ricky Maxey, Texas Parks and
Wildlife
Structural Pluralism and
Environmental Conflict: A
case study of newspaper
coverage on the wolf
reintroduction to Idaho
Teresa A Mikelson and
Joe Champ, Colorado State
University
Educating for
Environmental Collapse:
The Re-birth of Tragedy Steven R Mather, University of
Alberta
Uncertainty, Robustness,
and learning in
Sustainable Resource
Management
John M Anderies, Armando
Rodriguez, Oguzhan Cifdaloz,
and Marco A Janssen, Arizona
State University Landscape Change and
Global Homogenisation
Kristine P Jerome and Douglas C
Baker, Queensland University of
Technology
Bringing sociological
theory into our
understanding of the
social context of waste
Emily Huddart-Kennedy,
University of Alberta; Naomi
Krogman, University of Alberta
53
• Wednesday,
- Monday, June
June
18 20
- 8:30
- 1:30
- 10:00
- 3:00Session
Session- •
I6: An Interview with
Walter Firey, Author
of Man, Mind and
Land and the First
Environmental/Natural
Resource Sociologist
Organizers and
Video Presentation and
Discussants
Discussion
Donald R Field, University of
Wisconsin-Madison; Rabel J.
Burdge, Western Washington
University (Bellingham) Marriott Grill Room
I7: Spatial Dimensions
of Landscape
Values: Alternative
Conceptualizations and
Techniques
Prospector Coalition I
I8: Predicting
Satisfaction with
Leisure and Recreation
Opportunities
Prospector Coalition II
I9: Bricolage Happens:
Thinking About Theory
for Collaborative
Management and
Planning
Mapping landscape
values: using scale to
understand geographical
associations among
values
Max Nielsen-Pincus, University
of Idaho
The Relationship between
Place Attachment and
Landscape Values:
Toward Mapping Place
Attachment
Chris Raymond, Government of
South Australia Measuring national
forest landscape values
using an internet-based
participatory mapping
approach
Greg G Brown, Green Mountain
College Determinants of Visitor
Perceptions of Recreation
Impacts at Molalla River
Recreation Area, Oregon
Carena J van Riper, Dave D White,
and Randy J Virden, Arizona
State University; Zachary Jarrett,
Bureau of Land Management
Investigation of park
satisfaction – Links to
demographics, past
experience, norms, and
quality in Florida State
Parks Joohyun Lee, Cheryl Beeler, and
Rosie
Keween, Florida State
University
Matching expectations
to on-site experiences:
An application
of expectationsdisconfirmations theory
Junghun Lee and William P.
Stewart, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign Collaborative Ecosystem
Management: Competing
Theoretical Frameworks
Sarah A Di Vittorio, University of
California, Berkeley Applying a Knowledge
Systems Analysis to
Regional Approaches
to Natural Resource
Management Planning
- Implications for
Knowledge Integration Heather J Aslin, The Australian
National University Community-based natural
resource management
as bricolage: Practice
and strategy in the
development of new
resource management
institutions in the
Canadian North
Ken J Caine, University of Alberta
Knowing Your Boundaries:
A Bioregional Approach
to Defining the Palouse
Shannon M Donovan, Chris
Looney, J.D. Wulfhorst, and
Sanford Eigenbrode, University
of Idaho
Taking over the reins:
trends, challenges and
opportunities of changing
property ownership for
NRM
Emily K Mendham and Allan L
Curtis, Institute for Land, Water
and Society
Absentee Landowners
and their Views on
Conservation Efforts: A
Descriptive Study of an
Understudied Group
Thomas J Buman, Agren, Inc.;
Peggy Petrzelka, Utah State
University; Jamie Ridgely, Agren,
Inc. A Progressive Land Use
Planning Case Study:
Opportunities and
Challenges of Planning
Sustainable Agriculture
in Chatham County, North
Carolina
Cynthia F Van Der Wiele and
Leslie Titchner, North Carolina
State University
Ownership Change in
the Forest: Institutional
Investors of Industrial
Timberland and What
it Means for Local
Communities
Erin C Kelly, Oregon State
University Prospector Coalition III
I10: Changing Faces:
New Rural Landowners
and Resource
Management &
Planning
Prospector Coalition IV
54
Values Mapping– A
Collaboration Tool for
Public Land Planning
Julie E Schaefers, USDA Forest
Service; Jessica M Clement,
Colorado State University
• Wednesday,
- Monday, June
June
18 20
- 8:30
- 1:30
- 10:00
- 3:00Session
Session- •
I11: Transformations of
Rural Farmscapes
Prospector Silver King I
I12: Dynamics of
Conservation Behavior
in Agriculture
Navigating the farm
through a changing
social and operational
landscape: an Australian
experience
Cathy A Wagg, RMIT University
Agricultural conservation
and the art of stewardship J.D. Wulfhorst, Larry W. Van
Tassell, Jan Boll, and Bob
Mahler, University of Idaho Prospector Silver King II
Hyperextraction,
path dependence and
community: social
transformation and land
use change in Western
Kansas
Laszlo J Kulcsar and Eric A.
Bernard, Kansas State University Agricultural change
at the rural-urban
interface: policy, social
infrastructure and
adaptation in 7 U.S.
counties
Jeff S Sharp, Ohio State Univ.;
Doug Jackson-Smith, Utah State
Univ.; Shoshanah Inwood, Ohio
State Univ.; Lori Porreca, Utah
State Univ.; Jill Clark, Ohio State
Univ.
Treating the land:
Tennessee farmers’
adoption of conventional
and alternative soil
amendments
Angela G Mertig, Middle Tennessee State Univ.; P. Wesley
Schultz, California State Univ.,
San Marcos; H. Paul Denton
and Richard Buggeln, Univ. of
Tennessee, Knoxville; Jessica
Lendon, Middle Tennessee State
Univ. Obstacles to BMP
Implementation and
Maintenance in Federally
Funded Conservation
Programs
Michael Halling, Douglas
Jackson-Smith, Ernesto de la
Hoz, Lorien R. Belton and Jeff
Horsburgh, Utah State University
Indigenous and
traditional knowledge of
fire use and management
in the US
Carol B Raish, USDA Forest
Service, Rocky Mountain
Research Station; Wade E Martin
and Ingrid M Martin, California
State University, Long Beach;
Holly W Bender, Integrated
Resource Solutions, LLC; Thomas
Merlan, Consultant in History,
Ethnography and Historic
Preservation
Institutional
arrangements for
collaborative resource
management and the role
of traditional ecological
knowledge
Ellen M Donoghue, USDA
Forest Service, PNW Research
Station; John Bliss, Oregon State
University, Sara Thompson Tobacco-free park policies
in Minnesota
Elizabeth G Klein, University of
Minnesota
I13: Integrating Local
and Traditional
Ecological Knowledge
in Resource
Management
Prospector Silver King III
Organizers: Ellen M.
Donoghue and Susan
Charnley, USDA Forest Service,
PNW Research Station
Integrating Traditional
and Local Ecological
Knowledge into Forest
Biodiversity Conservation
in the U.S. Pacific
Northwest
Susan Charnley, USDA Forest
Service; Paige Fischer, Oregon
State University; Eric T. Jones,
Institue for Culture and Ecology
Integrating ecological
knowledge in communitybased forestry: lessons
from seven organizations
in the USA
Heidi L Ballard, University of
California, Davis
I14: Social and Health
Benefits of Natural
Resources I: Outdoor
Experiences
Visitor perceptions of
importance of on-site
recreational experiences
related to health benefits
Sonja Wilhelm Stanis, Dorothy
H Anderson, and Ingrid E.
Schneider, University of
Minnesota; Jessica E. Leahy,
University of Maine The exploration on the
progression of users’
benefits in a forest
setting: a qualitative
perspective
Mei-Fen Lee and Sheng-Jung Ou,
National Chung Hsing University The Influence of Forest
Experience on Depression
Won Sop Shin, Chungbuk
National University; Hyun Joong
Kim and Jin Soon Joo, Korea
National Arboretum; Sie Kyeong
Kim and Poung Sik Yeoun,
Chungbuk National University Enhancing adaptive
capacity in natural
resource management
organizations
Nancy P Goucher School of
Planning University of Waterloo
Sarah Michaels School of
Planning University of Waterloo Triple bottom line
reporting in irrigation:
Evaluating its outcomes
Michael S Mitchell, Allan Curtis
and Penny Davidson, Charles
Sturt University Beyond gridlock: A crossdisciplinary review of
approaches to natural
resource governance
Jamey L Pavey Lynchburg
College David Ostermeier
Prospector Silver King IV
Organizers: M.A. Townsend,
Deakin University; L. O’Brien,
Forestry UK; D. Anderson, Univ.
of Minnesota
I15: Sustainability,
Insitutional Innovation,
and Natural Resource
Management
Prospector Celebrity Theater
55
• Wednesday,
- Monday, June
June
18 20
- 8:30
- 3:30
- 10:00
- 5:00Session
Session- •
J1: Wheels of Fortune:
Managing Mechanized
Recreation in Wildlands
Off-Highway Vehicles on
National Forest System
Lands in Appalachia:
Management Perceptions Katherine A Thompson and
Chad D Pierskalla, West Virginia
University
Using segmentation to
develop an off-highway
vehicle route system
in the Colville National
Forest
Nick Sanyal, Sarah Warneke, and
Troy E Hall, University of Idaho Investigating Offroad Vehicle use in
the dry-wet tropics,
Northern Australia:
User Perceptions of
Environmental Impacts
and Management Actions
Martin E Randall, Jim Macbeth,
and David Newsome, Murdoch
University Expanding the
environmental justice
framework for natural
resource conflicts through
alternative ways of
knowing nature
Jennifer S Carrera, University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Treadmill of Destruction
and Monticello, UT: A Case
Study of Uranium Milling,
Popular Epidemiology,
and Community
Empowerment
Stephanie A Malin and Peggy
Petrzelka, Utah State University
Protected areas
as a ‘sustainable
developement’ project:
Protected areas in densely
populated Western
Europe (case Belgium)
Hans Bruyninckx, Catholic
University,
Leuven, Belgium Is Smokey Obsolete?
Symbolic Meanings of
Wildland fire in the Minds
of WUI Residents
Travis B Paveglio and Matthew
S Carroll, Washington State
University; Jim Absher, USDA
Forest Service
Homeowners’ beliefs,
shared values and trust
as predictors of their
opinions about the
effectiveness of wildland
fire defensible space
activities.
James Absher, US Forest
Service; Gerard Kyle, Texas A&M
University; Gene Theodori, Texas
A&M University
Using residents’
attachment to home
and community as
segmentation base for
exploring their propensity
to engage in protection
activities
Gerard T Kyle, Texas A&M
University; James Absher, USDA
Forest Service; Gene Theodori,
Texas A&M University Marriott Ballroom IV
A moose hunting story:
conflicts and informal
institutions in relation to
hunting business
Bjørn E Flø, Norwegian University
of Science and Technology
The Southwestern Market
for Big Game Hunting
Permits and Services: A
Hedonic Pricing Analysis.
Joseph M Little, University
of Alaska, Fairbanks; Robert
P Berrens, University of New
Mexico Differences in behaviors
and views of black bear
hunters in North Carolina
based on hunting method Dain R Palmer, North Carolina
Wildlife Resources Commission;
David T Cobb, North Carolina
Wildlife Resources Commission
Factors influencing
satisfaction of hunters on
private hunting preserves
Hans G Vogelsong and Thomas A
Grandy, East Carolina University
J5: It’s Not Easy Being
Green: Institutional
Responses to
Environmental
Problems
Greening the ISSRM:
adventures in creating a
sustainable meeting
Mark W Brunson, Lorien Belton,
Douglas Jackson-Smith, Utah
State University Green Roofs in Hawaii:
Examining Honolulu’s
Exiting Rooftops and the
Attitudes of Residents and
Visitors
Linda J Cox, Andrew Kaufman,
and Tomoaki Muira, University
of Hawaii; Dawn Easterday, Belt
Collins
Beer, Soda, and Climate
Change: Carbon Dioxide
Mitigation Strategies for
the Beverage Industries
Adam J Smargon, The University
of New Hampshire Nations’ Security and
the Environment: A Case
Study of Intensive Military
Training Activities in India
Murali P Panta, Indian Institute of
Technology; Kanpur Narasimha N
Kyathsandra, Indian Army
Marriott Ballroom I
J2: Environmental and
Anti-Environmental
Movements II
Marriott Ballroom II
Organizers: David B. Tindall,
Univ. of British Columbia, and
J. William Gibson, California
State Univ., Long Beach J3: Wildfire
Management in the
WUI III: Community
and Landowners
Perceptions of Wildfire
Marriott Ballroom III
Organizer: Yvonne Everett,
Humboldt State University J4: Eats, Shoots, and
Leaves: Hunting and
Society
Marriott Uinta I & II
56
The Science of Mountain
Biking Impacts – A Review
of Recent Research
Mike J Vandeman, World Without
Cars • Wednesday,
- Monday, June
June
18 20
- 8:30
- 3:30
- 10:00
- 5:00Session
Session- •
J6: Cove Hydroelectric
Project Decomissioning
Marriott Grill Room
J7: Evaluating Visual
Experience: Is What You
Get What You See?
Prospector Coalition I
J8: The Sound and the
Fury: Considering Noise
and Light in Recreation
Management
Prospector Coalition II
J9: Generating
Ownership and Trust
through CommunityBased Ecosystem
Restoration
Prospector Coalition III
Organizer: Mae A. Davenport,
Southern Illinois University J10: Community
Attachment in High
Amenity Places
Prospector Coalition IV
Organizers
Eve Davies and Mark J.
Stenberg, Rocky Mountain
Power (formerly PacifiCorp)
Video Presentation and
Discussion
Ecological visions
of successful river
restorations – are they
also aesthetically pleasing
to the public?
Berit Junker and Matthias
Buchecker, Swiss Federal
Institute for Forest, Snow
and Landscape Research
(WSL) Visitor evaluation of
the night sky in Bryce
Canyon National Park and
Cedar Breaks National
Monument
Britton L Mace and Jocelyn
McDaniel, Southern Utah
University; Chad Moore Bryce,
Canyon National Park
Experiencing the
landscape through a rose
tinted lens
Keith B Marshall and Katrina M
Brown, Macaulay Institute
Confounding influences of
scale and methodological
choices in GIS analyses of
noise externalities
Michael T Most, Southern Illinois
University Acceptability of
Social Conditions in
Zion National Park:
Incorporating Auditory
Elements into a Visual
Crowding Research
Method
Kara L Grau and Wayne A
Freimund, University of Montana
Aircraft Noise
Impacts: research and
management in New
Zealand National Parks
and Protected Natural
Areas
Gordon R Cessford, Michael
Harbrow, and Bronek
Kazmierow; Department
of
Conservation
Environmental education
and outreach as a
component of successful
ecosystem restoration in
the Cache River Wetlands
Jean C Mangun and Mae A
Davenport; Southern Illinois
University Carbondale
Community Collective
Action in Ecosystem
Restoration of the Cache
River Wetlands
Christopher A Bridges, Mae A
Davenport, Jean C Mangun ,
and Andrew D Carver, Southern
Illinois University Carbondale Community-based
ecosystem restoration:
Guiding principles, future
outlook and the role of
community capacity
Mae A Davenport and
Christopher A Bridges, Southern
Illinois University Carbondale
Examining the natural
environment dimension
of community attachment
in an amenity rich locale
Brian M Jennings and Richard S
Krannich, Utah State University Exploring the relationship
between recreational
activity, leisure
involvement, and place
attachment
Christopher J Wynveen and
Gerard T Kyle Texas A&M
University; James D Absher,
USDA Forest Service Second Homes and
Community Attachment
Rebecca Schewe, University of
Wisconsin-Madison
Overnight Recreationist
Attitudes Toward Light
Pollution and Starscape
Visibility: A call for action
in Parks and Protected
Areas
Brandi L Smith, University of
Alabama at Birmingham Using the Classroom
Setting to Empower
Students as Citizens
in a Participatory
Planning Effort: The
Sherburne County Green
Infrastructure Planning
Process
Dorothy H Anderson and Jeremy
Bruskotter, Univ. of Minnesota;
David Fulton, USGS; Univ. of
Minnesota
57
• Wednesday,
- Monday, June
June
18 20
- 8:30
- 3:30
- 10:00
-5:00Session
Session- •
J11: Dig It! Social and
Cultural Impacts of
Extractive Resource
Development
Prospector Silver King I
Views from the
Field: Insights from
Qualitative Research
with Agriculturalists
Prospector Silver King II
J13: Field social
science and resource
management in Alaska:
subsistence harvesting
and traditional land
use.
Prospector Silver King III
Organizer: Robert Schroeder
USDA Forest Service J14: Social and Health
Benefits of Natural
Resources II:
Conservation
Volunteerism
Prospector Silver King IV
Organizers: M.A. Townsend,
Deakin Univ., L. O’Brien,
Forestry UK, and D. Anderson,
Univ. of Minnesota
Substance abuse and
boomtowns: A case study
of social and economic
risk factors
John R Parkins and Angela
C Angell, Natural Resources
Canada The New Boomtown:
County Officials’
Responses to Energy
Development in the
Barnett Shale
Brooklynn J Anderson, Texas
A&M University
Métis Communities,
Natural Resource
Development, and Boreal
Forest Management:
Key Concerns from an
Indigenous Perspective
Bryn A Politylo and Naomi T
Krogman, University of Alberta;
Samantha J Song, Environment
Canada Knowing the Land: a
review of local land
knowledge revealed in
ranch memoirs
Corrie N Knapp, Colorado State
University Decision making and
satisfaction levels
associated with
alternative dairy farm
strategies in Wisconsin
Caroline C Brock, University of
Wisconsin - Madison PATS Framing Farming:
Wisconsin Dairy Farmers
As Stewards of the Land
Sarah E Lloyd, Michael M Bell,
George W Stevenson,and Tom S
Kriegl, University of WisconsinMadison Changes in traditional
territorial use and
perceptions by the Huna
Tlingit in Southeast
Alaska
Mary Beth Moss, Hoonah Indian
Association; Robert Schroeder
U.S. Forest Service Subsistence Deer Hunting
on Prince of Wales Island:
From Conflict toward
Resolution
Robert Schroeder, USDA Forest
Service R10 Understanding the
Changes in Traditional
Activities on the Land
in Northern Indigenous
Communities
Amanda D Boyd and Cynthia G
Jardine, University of Alberta;
Chris Furgal, Science Gzowski
College Trent University
Capitalizing on
management of natural
environments: evidence
from Australian studies
of health and social
benefits associated
with engagement in
conservation group
activities
Mardie A Townsend, Matthew
Ebden, and Megan Moore,
Deakin Univ.
The health and social
benefits of woodlands:
examples from Britain
of community use and
engagement
Elizabeth A O’Brien, Forest
Research Impacts of an adult
conservation education
and volunteerism
program on wildlife
management: an
evaluation of the
Michigan Conservation
Stewards Program
Heather A Van Den Berg, Cornell
Univ; Shari L Dann and Shawn J
Riley, Michigan State Univ. Moderator
Toddi A. Steelman, North
Carolina State University
Panelists
Rabel J. Burdge, Western Washington University
Donald R. Field, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Richard Krannich, Utah State University
Matthew Carroll, Washington State University
Steve Hollenhorst, University of Idaho J15: Twenty Years of Society and Natural
Resources
Prospector Celebrity Theater
Organizer: Toddi A. Steelman, North Carolina State
University, and Troy Hall, University of Idaho
58
Ocean Pollution as a
Result of Offshore and
Onshore Petroleum
Activities in the African
Gulf of Guinea Region
Babagana Abubakar, Nigeria • Thursday,
Monday, June
June1821Overview
Overview• •
8:30 am - 10:00 am
K1: K2: K3: K4: K5: K6: K7: K8: Show Me the Money: Estimating the Economic Impacts of Natural Resources, Marriott Ballroom I
Comparative Studies of Trust, Norms and Environmental Concern, Marriott Ballroom II
You Wash My Back, I’ll Wash Yours: Collaborative Watershed Management, Marriott Ballroom III
Is This Seat Taken? Crowding and Perceptions of Overuse, Marriott Ballroom IV
Behaving Badly: Attitude-Behavior Theory and Research, Prospector Coalition I & II
Step on It: Human Impacts on Biodiversity, Prospector Coalition III
Plumb This! Challenges of Urban Water Management, Prospector Silver King I & II
Who are These People & What Do They Want? Ecotourism Visitor Profiles and Motivations, Prospector Silver King III & IV
10:00 am - 10:30 am BREAK
10:30 am - Noon
L1: L2: L3: L4: L5: L6: L7: Applied Economic Methods for Natural Resource Policy Development, Marriott Ballroom I
Save the (insert your issue here): Factors Influencing Environmental Activism and Advocacy, Marriott Ballroom II
Understanding Recreation Experience Choices, Marriott Ballroom IV
Tenure and Property Rights in Natural Resource Management, Prospector Coalition I & II
Sign Language: Environmental Education and Interpretation, Prospector Coalition III
Amenity Development, Second Homes and Community Responses, Prospector Silver King I & II
I Can’t Get No, Satisfaction: Measuring Quality in Tourism Experiences, Prospector Silver King III & IV
12:15 - 2:00 pm LUNCH
IASNR Business Meeting and Lunch
Marriott Ballroom III & IV
(Free lunch for pre-registered attendees only)
59
• Thursday, June 21 - 8:30 - 10:00 Session •
K1: Show Me the
Money: Estimating the
Economic Impacts of
Natural Resources
Marriott Ballroom I
K2: Comparative
Studies of Trust, Norms
and Environmental
Concern
Marriott Ballroom II
K3: You Wash My
Back, I’ll Wash
Yours: Collaborative
Watershed
Management
Assessing the Economic
Benefits and Economic
Impacts of Recreational
Boating on the Atlantic
Intracoastal Waterway in
North Carolina
James H Herstine, UNC
Wilmington; John Whitehead,
Appalachian State University;
Chris Dumas, UNC Wilmington Dollars for Hoodoos:
Spending Characteristics
and Personal Benefits
Obtained for Visitors
to the Grand StaircaseEscalante National
Monument
Douglas K Reiter, and Steven W
Burr, Utah State University Economic impacts of
Taroko National Park,
Taiwan
Yann-Jou Lin, Ting-Ju Lin, and
Bau-Show Lin, National Taiwan
University; Wen-Chin Huang,
Construction and Planning
Agency Ministry of the Interior
Are the Determinants
of Trust Similar Across
Contexts?
Sandy T Marquart-Pyatt, and
Peggy Petrzelka, Utah State
University One Size Does Not Fit
All: The Importance
of Recontextualizing
Environment Concern
Across Levels of Analysis
in Southern Appalachia
Sean T Huss, Arkansas Tech
University; Robert E Jones,
University of Tennessee,
Knoxville To Adopt or Not to
Adopt? Policy Diffusion
and the Role of Norms in
Environmental Policy
Andrea H Olive, Purdue
University Communication and
transformation: Using
authentic arenas to build
conservation partnerships
Fiona Nagle, University of
Minnesota-Twin Cities
The challenge
of democracy in
watershed governance: Participatory democracy
meets representative
government
Jonathan W King and Sarah
Michaels, University of Waterloo
Michigan State Watershed
Management Policies and
Local Watershed Groups
Gerald K Greer and Kathleen
E Halvorsen, Michigan
Technological University; Julia A
Kalloz, Villanova University; Alex
S. Mayer, Michigan Technological
University Multiple Manifestations
of Crowding in Outdoor
Recreation: A Study of
the Relative Importance
of Crowding-related
Indicators Using
Indifference Curve
Analysis William A Valliere
and Robert E Manning, The Univ.
of Vermont; Steven R Lawson,
Virginia Tech Univ. Proximity for Hot Spring
Visitors in Taroko National
Park, Taiwan
Chih-Peng Fang National
Taiwan University Yi-Chung Hsu
National Dong Hwa University
Chih-Kuei Yeh National Dong
Hwa University
Crowding in National
Parks: Results from 30
years of research
Jerry J Vaske and Lori B Shelby,
Colorado State University; Robert
E Manning and William A Valliere,
The University of Vermont Situational and
Behaviorist Approaches
to Conservation Behavior
Dawn Hill, University of Arizona
The Environmental
Attitude-Behavior
Connection: An
Alternative Explanation-Environmentally
Desirable Responding
Alan W Ewert, Indiana University;
Graeme Galloway, La Trobe
University, Bendigo Campus,
Victoria, Australia
Do steering efforts
actually influence
outdoor-recreation
behavior? Results of
social-psychological
intervention experiments
Marcel Hunziker and Benjamin
Freuler, Swiss Federal Institute
of Forest, Snow and Landscape
Research
Marriott Ballroom III
K4: Is This Seat
Taken? Crowding and
Perceptions of Overuse
Marriott Ballroom IV
K5: Behaving Badly:
Attitude-Behavior
Theory and Research
Prospector Coalition I & II
60
What Environmental
Information Programs
Can Learn from Health
Communication: Social
Science Theory, Research
and Strategic Applications
Garrett J O’Keefe, Colorado State
University; Robin L Shepard,
University of Wisconsin-Madision Quantitative evaluation
of crowding and conflict
perception in an urban
forest park, Japan
Taro Mieno, Tetuya Aikoh,
and Yasushi Shoji, Hokkaido
University
• Thursday, June 21 - 8:30 - 10:00 Session •
K6: Step on It: Human
Impacts on Biodiversity
Prospector Coalition III
K7: Plumb This! Challenges of Urban
Water Management
Prospector Silver King I & II
K8: Who are These
People, and What Do
They Want? Ecotourism
Visitor Profiles and
Motivations
Prospector Silver King III & IV
Linking social and
biophysical conservation
perspectives in an
endangered ecosystem:
the Palouse as a model Chris Looney, Shannon Donovan, Yaniria Sanchez de Leon,
Thor Hanson, J.D. Wulhorst,
Sanford Eigenbrode, Michael
Jennings, Jodi Johnson-Maynard, Nilsa Bosque-Perez,
University of Idaho
Sustainability and wildplant harvesting: using
the “rapid vulnerability
assessment” approach in
Huitzilac, Mexico
Kate E Turner, and Thomas
Meredith, McGill University;
David A Turner Roots Returning? Change
and continuity in Andean
Agrobiodiversity
Kristine Skarbo, University of
Georgia The impacts of tourism
on biodiversity hotspots:
research opportunities
and dilemmas.
Sally M Mason, Susan M, David
Newsome, and Richard J Hobbs,
Murdoch University
Demand for water in
Queretaro, Mexico: A
study of the willingness
to pay for piped water
services
Gustavo Mendoza, University
of Alberta (Alumni); Sean Cash,
and Vic Adamowicz, University
of Alberta
Exploring the Meaning
of Urban Waterscape
Preferences
Hwang-Lin Hsu and Su-Hsin
Lee, Feng-Chia University Analysis of on-site storm
water BMP use and the
resulting trends in social
perception of water
quality concerns
Malgorzata Rycewicz-Borecki,
Utah State University Knowledge as a niche: independent retail garden
centers and the market
for waterwise plants and
landscaping
Megan Guenter, Central Utah
Water Conservancy District;
Joanna Endter-Wada and Roger
Kjelgren, Utah State University
Influences on coastal zone
eco-tourism within the
U.S. Gulf of Mexico Region
Kellen A Smith, Louisiana State
University Visitor profile and
management at naturebased attractions in
Barbados
Mechelle N Best and Brijesh
Thapa, University of Florida Analysis of recreation
impacts and satisfaction
in ecotourism areas
Hsiao-Chang Huang and ChunYen Chang, National Taiwan
University Comparison of Expressed
Tourism Demand and
Industry Perception
of Market Demand in
Northwestern Ontario
Michael Yuan, Lakehead
University 61
• Thursday, June 21 - 10:30 - Noon Session •
L1: Applied Economic
Methods for Natural
Resource Policy
Development
Marriott Ballroom I
L2: Save the (insert
your issue here):
Factors Influencing
Environmental Activism
and Advocacy
The Opportunities
for Land Trusts
in Water Quality
Trading Programs
Todd M Doley and
Michael Smith, U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency
Agricultural Landowners’ Preferences
for Conservation
Easements and Conserving Amenities
Ashley D Miller, Christopher T. Bastian & Donald
M. McLeod, U. of Wyoming;
Catherine M. Keske and
Dana L. Hoag, Colorado
State. Univ.
Marriott Ballroom IV
L4: Tenure and Property
Rights in Natural
Resource Management
Prospector Coalition I & II
L5: Sign Language:
Environmental
Education and
Interpretation
Prospector Coalition III
62
Preferences for
Public Health
Policies
with Jointly
Estimated Rates of
Time Preference
Ryan C. Bosworth,
North Carolina St. Univ.;
Trudy A Cameron,
Univ. of Oregon; J.R.
DeShazo, UCLA
Full cost pricing: How much did that
lead cost?
James R Triplett, Pittsburg
State University; Thomas
Simpson, Missouri
Southern State University
Environmental Advocacy
Among Birdwatchers:
Strategies for Increasing
Participation Madeline Slowik, Nazareth
College
What matters for
Collective Action? A Case
Study of the American
West
Robert M Fawson, Randy T
Simmons, Chris Fawson, and
Roberta Q Herzberg, Utah State
University
Sense of place: A case
study of the Buckeye
Forest Council
Nancy J Manring, Ohio
University; Maeve R Mason,
South Carolina Department
of Health and Environmental
Control
Politic action and
philanthropy for lake
protection: Do outdoor
recreation participation
and place attachment
predict intention to
conserve Minnesota
lakes? Susan A Schroeder,
Univ. of Minnesota; David C
Fulton, Minnesota Coop. Fish and
Wildlife Research Unit Review of studies on the
recreational carrying
capacity in Japan
Tetsuya Aikoh, Hokkaido
University
Ethnic minority groups
and urban outdoor
recreation in Norway
– management
challenges for increased
participation
Hanne Haaland, Norwegian
Institute for Nature Research The Influence of Site
Quality Attributes on
Choice of Mountain
Biking Trails in the
Research Triangle, North
Carolina
Michael D Naber, Yu-Fai Leung,
Aram Attarian, and Christos
Siderelis, North Carolina State
University
On the edge, peering in:
Indicators for managing
the near-wilderness
experience of visitors on
the Denali National Park
Road
Jeffrey C Hallo and Robert E
Manning, University of Vermont
Land Restitution in
Protected Areas: The
Challenge of Restricted
“Ownership” in KwaZuluNatal, South Africa.
Laurie A Ashley, The University of
Montana
The evolution of property
rights: implications for
conservancies in South
Africa
Nelly C Mwango, Robert
Fincham, and Charles Breen,
University of KwaZulu-Natal Investigating land
tenure relationships and
community organization
in the northern Bolivian
Amazon
Georgina D Cullman, University
of Florida
Measuring the
effectiveness of Parks
Canada learning
experiences: designing a
universal measurement
tool
Tracy L Bowman, Parks Canada
Interpreting significant
vegetation communities
in a regional context: a
case study of the Victorian
Box-Ironbark Forests,
Australia
Rosemary S. Black and Rik
Thwaites, Charles Sturt
University
Assessment of four
management goals in
selected NPS interpretive
programs
Gregory M Benton, Indiana
University Marriott Ballroom II
L3: Understanding
Recreation Experience
Choices
Regional Impact
Analysis of
Ranchland Open
Space in Routt
County, Colorado
Lindsey J Ellingson and
Andrew Seidl, Colorado
State University
• Thursday, June 21 - 10:30 - Noon Session •
L6: Amenity
Development, Second
Homes and Community
Responses
Prospector Silver King I & II
L7: I Can’t Get No,
Satisfaction: Measuring
Quality in Tourism
Experiences
Prospector Silver King III & IV
Destination development:
An analysis of population
growth and rural
community well-being
Richelle L Winkler, University of
Wisconsin- Madison The performance
evaluation of agri-tourism
development in Taiwan
Hung-Hsu Yen, National
Formosa University; ShengJung Ou, National Chung-Hsing
University; Nai-Kung Yang,
Michigan State University;YenHsi Lee Chung-Chou, Institute
of Technology; Chin-Hsing Hou,
National Formosa University
Second home owner
profiles and implications
for future second home
development in Finland
Jaakko Suvantola, Kati Pitkänen,
Mia Vepsäläinen, and Mervi
Hiltunen, University of Joensuu
Visitors’ satisfaction in
whale watching industry
in Taiwan: The application
of importanceperformance analysis
Homer C Wu, National Taichung
University
The Place for ‘Place’ in
Public Policy
Shaun A Golding, University of
Wisconsin Madison, Oregon
State University; Paul M Van
Auken; University of Wisconsin
The use of importance
performance analysis in
tourism: Helpful tool or
flawed technique?
Jennifer O Farnum, United
States Forest Service; Troy E. Hall,
University of Idaho
63
- Notes -
64
- Notes -
65
- Notes -
66
- Notes -
67
• Index of First Authors •
KEY
A# through L# (Regular Paper and Panel
Sessions – see daily schedule
overviews)
MP# (Miniplenary Sessions, Tuesday
June 19th, 1:30-3:30 pm)
PA# through PI# (Poster Session; Monday
June 18th, 5:30-7:30 pm)
Aadland, David M.
Absher, James
Abubakar, Babagana Ackerman, Sarah
Adams, Bruce
Aikoh, Tetsuya Albritton, Rachel
Allen, John
Allen, Roy L.
Allen, Stewart D.
Amberg, Shannon M.
Anderies, John M.
Anderson, Brooklynn J.
Anderson, Dorothy H.
Aquino, Jessica
Archibald, Tammie
Aryal, Netra
Ashley, Laurie A.
Ashton, Sarah
Aslin, Heather J.
Backlund, Erik A.
Bagley, Verl
Baker, Douglas C. Baldwin, Elizabeth D.
Balint, Peter J.
Ballard, Heidi L.
Barry, Janice M.
Bartram, Paul
Baumer, Michele D.
Baumflek, Michelle J.
Bear, Smokey the Becker, Dennis R. Beckley, Thomas Belton, Lorien
Bengston, David N.
Benton, Gregory M Berninger, Kati
Berrens, Robert P. Best, Mechelle N. Black, Rosemary S. Blahna, Dale J.
Bloom, K.C.
Bloom, Kelly S.
Blount, Benjamin G Bogdan, Eva
Boglioli, Marc A.
Bond, Ivan
Bostedt, Göran K. Bosworth, Ryan C. Bowker, J.M.
Bowman, Tracy L. Boyd, Amanda D.
Brabec, Elizabeth
Braun, Clait
Bridges, Christopher A.
Brock, Caroline C. Brown, Greg
Brown, Thomas C. 68
C11
J3
J11
PH01
F4
L3
B13
E9, F4
G3
A3
D8
I5
J11
I14, J9, J14
PH02
F4
PC08
L4
G11
F1, I9
A5
G2
H12
H12, PB03
C5
I13, PC07
H9
B2
C4
E1
Z1
F7
D7, MP2
G2
A3
L5, PB05
A8
B3
K8
L5
A12
G4
B1
D11
PF02
H2
C5
C11
L1
A3, B11, PG01
L5
J13
A10
G2
J9
J12
A3, I7
C11
Brummel, Rachel F. Brunson, Mark W. Bruskotter, Jeremy T.
Bruyninckx, Hans Buck, Eunice M.
Budruk, Megha S. Buijs, Arjen Buman, Thomas J. Burchfield, Jim
Burdge, Rabel J.
Burke, Caitlin
Burns, Robert C.
Burr, Steven W.
Burtz, Randall T.
Busch, Glen A.
Cable, Ted
Caine, Ken J.
Carena J van Riper Carrera, Jennifer S. Carroll, Matthew S.
Cash, Jennifer A.
Cessford, Gordon R .
Champ, Patricia A.
Champ,Joseph G. Chang, Chih-Yao Chang, Chun-Yen
Charnley, Susan
Chavez, Deborah Chen, Bixia Chen, Hsiang Ling Chen, W.Jasmine
Cheng, Jen-Son
Cheng, Judith Chen-Hsuan Cheng, Tony Chilman, Kenneth C.
Choo, Hyungsuk Chowdhury, Mohammad
Christtoffel, Rebecca A.
Chun, Jung Nam
Connell, Jamie
Conway, Flaxen
Coppock, D.Layne Corzo, M.Ruiz
Cottam, Brian
Cottrell, Stuart P. Covelli, Elizabeth A.
Cox, Linda J.
Creighton, Janean H.
Cullman, Georgina D.
Curtis, Allan L.
Cutts, Bethany
Daab, Michael T.
Dahal, Smriti
Dale, Lisa
Dalle-Molle, Lois Dalton, Shawn E. Daniel, Terry C.
Daniels, Steve
Danks, Cecilia
Dare, Melanie
Davenport, Mae A.
Davidson, Penny A.
Davies, Eve
Davis, Jason Davis, Miriam L.
Dear, Chad E.
Deb, Apurba K.
Degiorgio, Joan
Dennis, Donald F. H3
F3, J5
F9
J2
C7
B10
F9
I10
H15
I6, J15, PB04
PE01
A5
F10
C9
D10
PD02
I9
I8
J2, PC09
B4, F11, J15
D5
H8, J8
D9
C9
H1
H6, PA14
I13
PG02
H7, PA15
PC02
A1
PH09
C7
G10
F10
H6
A7
B7
A11
C3
C2, PC01
C5
A4
F4
D12
G9
J5
C9, G11
L4
F6
PD04
D6
A9
B3
D3
B2
E11
E4, F4
G5
PC03
J9
B1
G7
H7
C8
B5
C2
G7
B10
Deverre, Christian Di Vittorio, Sarah A.
Dickson, Barney
Didier, Elizabeth A.
Dixon, Bryan
Doley,Todd M.
Dolsen, Dana E.
Donoghue, Ellen M.
Donovan, Shannon M.
Dow, Robert R.
Drill, Sabrina
Dumaresq, David
DuMond, Melissa E.
Dunk, Thomas
Dustin, Dan
Earl, Gillian E.
Egan, Andrew
Ellingson, Lindsey J.
Ellis, Chris
Elmendorf, William F.
Emborg, Jens Emery, Marla R.
Emm, Staci K.
Endter-Wada, Joanna
English, Eric P.
Ericsson, Göran C. Estoque, Ronald C.
Evans, James
Everett, Yvonne
Ewert, Alan W.
Fang, Chih-Peng Farnum, Jennifer O.
Fawson, Robert M. Field, Donald R.
Finley, Jim C.
Fischer, Alexandra Paige Fischer, Anke Fish, Thomas E.
Fisher, Dana R.
Fisher, Wendy
Fitzpatrick, Josh Fix, Peter J.
Flint, Courtney G.
Flø, Bjørn E.
Flood, Joseph P.
Floyd, Myron
Ford, Rebecca M. Forrest, Suzanne Forster, Craig Foster, Sam
Frauman, Eric D Freudenburg, William Fu, Regina Hoi Yee Fuller, Michelle M. Gale,Trace E.
Gathright, John R. Geertsema, Karen A.
Geniaux, Ghislain Genskow, Ken Gervich, Curt D.
Gibson, J.William Gibson, James W. Glaspell, Brian
Gobster, Paul
Goldhor-Wilcock, Ashley
Golding, Shaun A.
Gold-Kreuck, Hansje
Gordon, Jason S. Gore, Meredith L. H14
I9
B5
I1
G7
L1
F7, MP2
I13
I9
F7
PB06
F1
B4
H2
H5
C6
A8
L1
A2
B13
E2, F8
F2
F7
E9
G9
H2
C4
MP1
H3, I3, J3
C1, K5
K4
L7
L2
I6, J15
C8
C8
D6
A2, B2, MP2, PB8
G1
G8
PE03
D3
B4, F4
J4
B13
D2
H13
PG03
E10
E3
H11
F11
H10
I3
D12
C7
H10
H7
G6
I3
I2, J2
I2
D3
D2, E11
A3
L6
MP2
D9
E8
• Index of First Authors (cont.) •
Gosnell, Hannah Goucher, Nancy P. Graefe, Alan R.
Gramman, Jim
Grau, Kara L.
Grayzeck, Stephanie A.
Greene, John L.
Greer, Gerald K.
Grice, Tammy Gruver, Joshua B.
Guenter, Megan Guth, Jordy D.
Gyawali, Buddhi R.
Haaland, Hanne Haglund, Brent
Haider, Wolfgang Haight, Robert G. Hall, Troy Halling, Michael N. Hallo,Jeffrey C.
Halls, Joanne
Halvorsen, Kathleen E.
Hammitt, Bill
Hammitt, William E.
Harshaw, Howie W Hart, Zachary H.
Hartsfield, Angela N.
Healy, Noel P.
Henderson, Karla A.
Hendricks, William
Henegar, Erin K.
Henry, Lucy
Herstine, James H. Hess, George
Hill, Dawn Hill, Jeffery M.
Hilliard, Mark
Hodges, Donald G. Hoffmann, Scott L. Hohl, Anna E.
Hollstedt, Chris
Hoover, Anne
Hronek, Bruce
Hsu, Hwang-Lin Hsu, Yi-Chung
Huang, Chang-Chan Huang, Hsiao-Chang Huddart-Kennedy, Emily Hunt, Fen
Hunt, Len M.
Huntsinger, Lynn Hunziker, Marcel Hurley, Patrick T.
Huss, Sean T.
Hyun, Woo-Yong J.D.Wulfhorst
Jackson-Smith, Douglas
Jacquet, Jeffrey
Jakes, Pamela J.
Jakus, Paul M.
Jatta, Kabiro Jellum, Carla M.
Jennings, Brian M. Jerome, Kristine P. Jett, John S.
Johnson, Cassandra Y.
Jones, Matthew K.
Jorgenson, Lisa L. Joubert, Brian A.
E10, F3, PD05
I15
H1
D2
J8
H3
E4
K3
H7
C4
K7
B8
A1
L3
Keynote
B11
F2
J15
I12
L3
PA08
D1
H5
B1
D13
A2
C10
H8
D2
PG04
E8
PF03
K1
G8
K5
B2
G2
C10, D10
E9
B3
G11
E3
C1
K7
B11
E5
K8
I5
E3
H1
F3
K5
A10
K2
PH08
I12
MP1, MP2
G3
B9
I1
H10
A13
J10
I5
A7
A1
A13
G1
A9
Judkins, Gabriel L.
Julyk, Kiyoko
Jun, Jinhee Junker, Berit
Kaetzel, Brandon R.
Kail, Carmel
Kaise, Mao
Kangas, Katja M.
Kaufman, Andrew
Keiter Robert B.
Kelly, Erin C.
Kepe, Thembela Kerins, Andrew J.
Kernan, Bruce S.
Keul, Adam.
Kil, Namyun (Sunny)
Kilgore, Michael
Kim, Min Kook
King, Jonathan W. Kirschner, Annabel R.
Klein, Elizabeth G.
Knapp, Corrie N.
Knopf, Rick
Ko, Chia-Chun
Koontz, Lynne M.
Krange, Olve
Krannich, Richard Kretschmer, Holger Kreuter, Urs P.
Krishnaswamy, Ajit
Krogman, Naomi T.
Kruger, Linda E.
Kuentzel, Walter F.
Kulcsar, Laszlo J. Kumble, Peter A.
Kwon, Gyo
Kyle, Gerard T.
Lacher, Richard G. Lai, Po-Hsin
Laidlaw, Victoria S.
Lamers, Machiel
Lawrence, Kelly D.
LeBlanc, Cherie
Lee, Joohyun Lee, Junghun Lee, Mei-Fen
Legg, Michael H. Leong, Kirsten M. Lepetu, Joyce Lever, Christopher Levine, Arielle S.
Li, Chieh-Lu Li, Wei-Chen
Lilieholm, Robert J. Lin, Bau-Show Lin, Ting-Ju Lin, Yann-Jou Lin, Ying-Hsuan Lindberg, Kreg
Lischka, Stacy A.
Little, Joseph M.
Liu, Sian-Si Lloyd, Sarah E.
Longmire, Cynthia L.
Looney, Chris Lord, Daniel M.
Luloff, Al E.
Lupis, Sarah
Lupp, Gerd H14
PA07
I1
J7
C10
G3
PH06
A7
PA09
G10
I10
D5
G1
A12
I4
B11
E4
PH05
K3
E9
I14
J12
H5
B12
I4
H2
J15
B8
B5, C5
G11
A9
D3, E9, H15
A5
I11
G7
PB07
J3
B12
A1
A6
A12
D4
PA06
I8
I8
I14
B13
B7
D5
E7
B2
G4
A12
D1, E9
E5
E5
K1
C12, PD03
A5
I4
J4
D11
J12
C10
K6
F5
B4
G2
F8
Luppold, William G.
A11
Lurie, Lisa
PC14
Luttermann.Annette M.
B6
Lynne M Westphal F2
Ma, Zhong
B6
Mace, Britton L.
J7
Mae A Davenport
J9
Malin, Stephanie A.
J2
Mangun, Jean C. J9
Mangun, William R. B9
Manring, Nancy J. L2
Marcucci, Daniel J. D10
Margerum, Richard
G5
Marquart-Pyatt, Sandy .
K2, H14
Marquit, Joshua
PA10
Marshall, Keith B. J7
Martin, John
C3, MP1
Mason, Sally M.
K6
Mather, Steven R. I5
Matthews, Vincent
C3
Matzdorf, Bettina B8
Mau, Paulus F5
Mawhorter, Julie H. D10
McCaffrey, Sarah J3
McCollum, Daniel W
D3
McCown, Rebecca E Stanfield D13
McFarlane, Dan
PA04
McKeachnie, Gayle MP1
Mendham, Emily K. I10
Mendoza, Gustavo K7
Merrill, Stephanie E.
C4
Mertig, Angela G.
I12
Metcalf, Alexander L.
E1
Mieno, Taro K4
Mikelson, Teresa A.
I4
Miller, Ashley D.
L1
Miller, Craig A.
C2
Miller, Thadeus
PC10
Mitchell, Dean
G2
Mitchell, Michael S. I15
Molnarova, Kristina
PA05
Moneta, Mary D6
Monroe, Martha C. E8
Moon, Zola K.
H11
Moore, Jeff
PH04
More, Thomas A.
G9
Morgan, Mark
A13
Morse, Wayde C.
D13
Mosely, Cassandra G5
Moses-Nedd, Cynthia
C3
Moss, Mary Beth J13
Most, Michael T.
J8
Moswete, Naomi N. C12
Mwango, Nelly C.
L4
Naber, Michael D. L3
Nagle, Fiona K3
Nassauer, Joan
E11
Nelson, Kristen C. H3
Nepal, Sanjay K.
C6
Newman, Tami
PD06
Nielsen, Erik A.
A9
Nielsen-Pincus, Max I7
Norland, Eric
G11
Novick, Adam
PE05
O’Brien, Liz
I14, J14
Oh, Chi-Ok H8
O’Keefe, Garrett J. K2
Okerlund, Ralph
F4
Olive, Andrea H.
K2
69
• Index of First Authors (cont.) •
Olsen, Christine S . D6
Olson, Eric F.
F6
Ou, Sheng-Jung H12
Palmer, Dain R.
J4
Panta, Murali P.
J5
Park, Mi Sun D8
Parker, Julia D.
F9
Parker, Pete D12
Parkins, John R.
J11
Parlee, Brenda L. H9
Patriquin, Mike N.
D7
Patterson, Michael E.
B3
Paveglio, Travis B. J3
Pavey, Jamey L.
I15
Pedrosa, Fantina T. B9
Perez-Arce, Laura
A4
Perez-Verdin, Gustavo D1
Peterson, Tarla
H15
Petrzelka, Peggy E2
Pierskalla, Chad D.
F10, PA01
Pincetl, Stephanie S.
G1
Politylo, Bryn A.
J11
Poudyal, Neelam C. D10
Pridham, Gaylene J.
H14
Proebstl, Ulrike E6
Prutsch, Andrea E6
Qin, Hua
A6
Raboanarielina, Cara M.
E1
Radel, Claudia A.
A6
Raish, Carol B.
I13
Randall, Martin E. J1
Raymond, Chris I7, PB02
Reams, Margaret A.
F11
Reed, Patrick C.
A3
Reiter, Douglas K. K1
Ribe, Robert
E11, PH07
Robson, Mark H9
Rodriguez, Ariel
A10
Roe, Dilys
B5, C5
Rogers, Jennifer B. I2
Roggenbuck, Joe H5
Rollins, Kimberly S. C11
Rosenberg, Stacy E6
Roundtree, Barbara P.
H10
Ruehrwein, Joey PD01
Ruiz Corzo, Pati
Keynote
Rycewicz-Borecki, Malgorzata K7
Saeli, Emily C.
H3
Sæþórsdóttir, Anna Dóra
B12
Safford, Thomas G.
A2
Saha, Shubhayu H11
Salafsky, Nick
MP2
Sanders, Lucinda R.
G1
Sanyal, Nick J1
Schaefers, Julie E. I7
Schelhas, John
PB01
Schewe, Rebecca J10
Schively, Carissa B6
Schoenecker, Anthony H.
C13
Schorre, Gretchen
PA02
Schroeder, Herbert W.
A11
Schroeder, Robert J13
Schroeder, Susan A.
L2
Schulte, Stacey L. D9
Schultz, Courtney A.
B6
Scott, Crystal
PF01
Seekamp, Erin L. G6
Seidl, Andrew F.
A11
Selin, Steve
B10, E3
70
Sexton, Natalie
Shandas, Vivek Shapiro, Elizabeth N.
Sharp, Jeff S.
Shelby, Lori B.
Shepard, Nora
Shibasaki, Shigemitsu Shilton, Peter A Shimoura, Shinpei Shin, Won Sop
Shoung, Hou
Siebert, Rosemarie
Sierra, Selma
Sims, Charles B.
Singelmann, Joachim Skar, Margrete Skarbo, Kristine Skogen, Ketil
Slowik, Madeline Small, Robert A.
Smargon, Adam J.
Smith, Brandi L.
Smith, Kellen A.
Smith, Michael D. Smith, Ryan
Snider, Todd
Snyder, Stephanie Solomon, Barry D. Sorenson, Nancy Spain, William S. Spyce, Amanda L.
Stamm, Leah H.
Stanis, Sonja Wilhelm
Stedman, Richard C.
Steed, Brian C.
Steelman, Toddi
Stehlik, Daniela A.
Stein, Taylor V.
Stenberg, Mark J. Stephens Williams, Pat
Stern, Marc J.
Stevenson, Susan P.
Stewart, Susan
Stewart, William Stidham, Melanie Stokowski, Patricia A,
Sturtevant, Victoria
Sundstrom, Shiloh Sutton, Stephen
Suvantola, Jaakko Svendsen, Erika S. Taggart, Deryth S.
Tanguilig, Herminia C.
Tanner, Randy J.
Teeuwen, Randy Tegt, Jessica L.
Tessema, Mekbeb E.
Thompson, Jan
Thompson, Katherine A.
Timpson, Sarah
Tindall, David B.
Tocher, S.Ross
Toman, Eric Townsend, Mardie A.
Tracy, Quinn
Treiman,Thomas B. Triplett, James R Tseng, Yung-Ping Tu, Wenling B7
F6
A4
I11
H13
G8
G4
F8
H6
I14
PA13
PE04
MP1
F5
F11
C7
K6
H2
L2
C13
J5
J7
K8
G6
PH03
PA11
C13
F5
MP1
I1
E10
G4
I14
C8
E10
G8, J15
F1, PE02
B13
J6
PC12
E2
F10
PA12
H15
D1
D8
E9, I3
PC11
PC04
L6
F2
A8
E7
D5
MP1
E8
B5, D7
PA03
J1
MP2
I2, J2
H5
C9
I14, J14
D3
E1
L1
D11
E7
Turner, Kate E.
K6
Vagias, Wade M.
G9
VanGeem, Stephen
Z2
Valliere, William A.
K4
Van Den Berg, Heather A.
J14
Van Der Wiele, Cynthia F.
F6, I10
Van Wilgenburg, Hendricus A.H9
Vanclay, Frank M.
F1
Vandeman, Mike J.
J1
Vaske, Jerry J.
K4
Virden, Randy J.
A10
Vogelsong, Hans G.
J4
Voight, Alison E.
C1
Wadzinski, Les A.
C1
Wagg, Cathy A.
I11
Walkingstick, Tamara L.
G11
Wang, Mu-ning C6
Ward, Chris B.
D7
Wellman, J.Douglas
H5
Westphal, Lynne M.
F2
White, Dave D.
G6
Whitworth, Paul M. H12
Williams, Daniel R. H15
Wilson, Diane J.
A7, PC13
Winkler, Richelle L. L6
Winthrop, Robert H.
C3, G3, H4
Wishart, W.Ryan I2
Womack, Kendra G10
Wu, Homer C.
L7
Wyatt, Stephen W.
A8
Wyman, Miriam S.
A4
Wynveen, Christopher J.
J10
Yang, Joe Y.
D12
Yang, Ming Ching H6
Yang, Wen-Tsann C12
Yeh, Chih-Kuei E7
Yeh, Mei-Chih H1
Yen, Hung-Hsu L7
Yuan, Michael K8
Yuan, Yulan E5
Zhou, Lulu C12
Zhu, Yuexia D13
Zinn, Harry C.
F9, H13
Zipperer, Constance
PC05
To Hwy
224, I-80,
downtown,
grocery &
liquor
stores
Bonanza Dr.
Prospector Ave.
Kearns Blvd
Monitor Dr.
Meeting Venues
Prospector Condominiums
Restaurant or Store
Walking Path
Marriott Hotel &
Meeting Headquarters
Prospector Square Lodge
and Convention Center
Sidewinder Dr.
MAP OF MEETING
VENUES AND AREA
N
• Map of Meeting Venues and Area •
71
• Maps of Meeting Spaces •
PARK CITY
MARRIOTT
Ballrooms: Upstairs
Grill and Uinta: Downstairs
Prospector Square Lodge and Conference Center
t
u
o
y
a
L
y
t
i
l
i
c
a
F
Meeting
Board Room: Basement
PROSPECTOR
SQUARE LODGE
& CONFERENCE
CENTER
72MEETING ROOMS
Silver King 1-4 & Coalition 1-4
(Individual)
Silver King 1-4
(Combined Total)
THEATER
Celebrity
Theater
Theater
Lounge North
Theater
Lounge South
• ISSRM 2007 Sponsors •
The Organizing Committee for the ISSRM 2007 would like to thank the
following organizations for their generous sponsorship of this year’s
symposium.
MAJOR SPONSORS ($2,499 and over)
SPONSORS ($1,000-$2,498)
SUPPORTERS (Under $1,000)
• Rocky Mountain Power
- Welcoming Reception Sponsor
• UF3: Utah Faults, Fluids and Fractures
- Energy Sessions Sponsor
• US NOAA Coastal Services Center
• USU College of Natural Resources
• Simon Fraser University, School of Resource and Environmental Management
• University of Illinois Dept of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences
• USU Institute for Outdoor Recreation and Tourism
• USU College of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
- Welcoming Reception Sponsor
• Utah State University School of Graduate Studies
- Student Forum Sponsor
• Colorado State University, Dept. of Human Dimensions, Warner College of Natural Resources
• Michigan Technological University
- Environmental Policy Graduate Program
- Center for Water and Society
• Southern Illinois University, Dept. of Forestry
• USDA Rural Development Centers
- Western Rural Development Center
- North Central Regional Center for Rural Development
- Northeast Regional Center for Rural Development
- Southern Regional Center for Rural Development
• Utah State University Departments and Centers
- Sociology, Social Work, and Anthropology
- Environment and Society
- Economics
- Ecology Center
• University of Washington, College of Forest Resources
• University of Wisconsin, Dept. of Forest Ecology and Management
• Washington State University, Dept. of Natural Resource Sciences
IN KIND DONATIONS
• Caffe Ibis, Inc. , Logan, UT
- Triple Certified Coffee
• Recreational Equipment Incorporated (REI), Salt Lake City Store
- Raffle Prizes
• Outdoor Retailers Association
- Name Badge Holders
•
ISSRM 2007 Major Sponsors •
Sponsors
Supporters
In Kind