Culture and the forested landscape : inter and intra-cultural perceptions of modified forest landscapes

A key feature of the current policy environment in which decisions about landscape management are made is its increasing complexity. In the past, relatively few interests commanded attention in decisions about forest management, today a host of values demand consideration in decision-making. There i...

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Main Author: Lewis, John Llewellyn
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/18265
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spelling ftunivbritcolcir:oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/18265 2023-05-15T16:15:54+02:00 Culture and the forested landscape : inter and intra-cultural perceptions of modified forest landscapes Lewis, John Llewellyn 2006 http://hdl.handle.net/2429/18265 eng eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. Text Thesis/Dissertation 2006 ftunivbritcolcir 2019-10-15T17:53:30Z A key feature of the current policy environment in which decisions about landscape management are made is its increasing complexity. In the past, relatively few interests commanded attention in decisions about forest management, today a host of values demand consideration in decision-making. There is a need to consider how this increasingly varied spectrum of interests can be taken into account, particularly where these interests are unfamiliar to land managers such as the preferences of A key feature of the current policy environment in which decisions about landscape management are made is its increasing complexity. First Nations communities. Two central questions underlie this aspect of preference: (1) What is the range of dimensions that local stakeholders consider in their evaluation of modified forest landscapes? (2) How and why do preferences for modified forest landscapes differ between and among First Nations and Euro-Canadians? A sample of First Nations and Euro-Canadian residents of the upper Skeena Valley in Northwest British Columbia were interviewed using a photoelicitation technique for landscape preference evaluation. Photo-realistic simulations of alternative landscape changes in the upper Skeena Valley were presented to the participants, who ranked the landscape treatments and commented at length on the rationale for their rankings. Based on the pattern of results from the participant interviews, I have reached four main conclusions: (1) Landscape preference evaluations are based on a complex and simultaneous weighting of alternative perceived consequences, the degree to which disturbances demonstrate care for natural processes and future needs, as well as physical site characteristics. (2) Ethnic and other sociodemographic characteristics only partially account for differences in landscape preference. People tend to evaluate the landscape from a user perspective and, with a few exceptions; forest-based uses often transcend distinctions of ethnicity, age and gender. (3) People are willing to accept modified or human-influenced landscapes, but the degree to which the treatment visibly demonstrates ’care’ is a salient factor in the participants’ preference evaluations. (4) Environmental value orientations can be conceptualized in terms of a two-dimensional matrix with the New Environmental Paradigm-Dominant Social Paradigm scale configured along one axis, and an additional axis that I have termed the ’hierarchy-interdependence’ dimension. Forestry, Faculty of Graduate Thesis First Nations University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository Skeena ENVELOPE(-130.198,-130.198,53.646,53.646)
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description A key feature of the current policy environment in which decisions about landscape management are made is its increasing complexity. In the past, relatively few interests commanded attention in decisions about forest management, today a host of values demand consideration in decision-making. There is a need to consider how this increasingly varied spectrum of interests can be taken into account, particularly where these interests are unfamiliar to land managers such as the preferences of A key feature of the current policy environment in which decisions about landscape management are made is its increasing complexity. First Nations communities. Two central questions underlie this aspect of preference: (1) What is the range of dimensions that local stakeholders consider in their evaluation of modified forest landscapes? (2) How and why do preferences for modified forest landscapes differ between and among First Nations and Euro-Canadians? A sample of First Nations and Euro-Canadian residents of the upper Skeena Valley in Northwest British Columbia were interviewed using a photoelicitation technique for landscape preference evaluation. Photo-realistic simulations of alternative landscape changes in the upper Skeena Valley were presented to the participants, who ranked the landscape treatments and commented at length on the rationale for their rankings. Based on the pattern of results from the participant interviews, I have reached four main conclusions: (1) Landscape preference evaluations are based on a complex and simultaneous weighting of alternative perceived consequences, the degree to which disturbances demonstrate care for natural processes and future needs, as well as physical site characteristics. (2) Ethnic and other sociodemographic characteristics only partially account for differences in landscape preference. People tend to evaluate the landscape from a user perspective and, with a few exceptions; forest-based uses often transcend distinctions of ethnicity, age and gender. (3) People are willing to accept modified or human-influenced landscapes, but the degree to which the treatment visibly demonstrates ’care’ is a salient factor in the participants’ preference evaluations. (4) Environmental value orientations can be conceptualized in terms of a two-dimensional matrix with the New Environmental Paradigm-Dominant Social Paradigm scale configured along one axis, and an additional axis that I have termed the ’hierarchy-interdependence’ dimension. Forestry, Faculty of Graduate
format Thesis
author Lewis, John Llewellyn
spellingShingle Lewis, John Llewellyn
Culture and the forested landscape : inter and intra-cultural perceptions of modified forest landscapes
author_facet Lewis, John Llewellyn
author_sort Lewis, John Llewellyn
title Culture and the forested landscape : inter and intra-cultural perceptions of modified forest landscapes
title_short Culture and the forested landscape : inter and intra-cultural perceptions of modified forest landscapes
title_full Culture and the forested landscape : inter and intra-cultural perceptions of modified forest landscapes
title_fullStr Culture and the forested landscape : inter and intra-cultural perceptions of modified forest landscapes
title_full_unstemmed Culture and the forested landscape : inter and intra-cultural perceptions of modified forest landscapes
title_sort culture and the forested landscape : inter and intra-cultural perceptions of modified forest landscapes
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/18265
long_lat ENVELOPE(-130.198,-130.198,53.646,53.646)
geographic Skeena
geographic_facet Skeena
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_rights For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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