Carina Ober, Carolin Canessa, Fabian Frick, Johannes Sauer
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The voluntary character of agri-environmental-climate schemes (AECS) makes it essential for their design to meet farmers' expectations and stakeholders' needs. To enhance the understanding of how behavioural factors influence farmers' participation decisions and how policymakers can shape them through scheme design, we explore stakeholders' preferences for biodiversity-enhancing AECS using Q-methodology in two case studies: arable land and grassland in Bavaria (Germany). The Q-analysis revealed three perspectives on scheme design, each favouring a distinct AECS with differing levels of conservation intensity. To further investigate the interactions between behavioural patterns influencing decision-making and their influence on AECS design, we uniquely analyse the follow-up interviews from the Q-method using thematic analysis. This additional step uncovers the cognitive, social, and dispositional factors driving the Q-sorting decision, which should be considered during scheme design. These factors include knowledge requirements, perceived costs and benefits, flexibility preference, and risk aversion. While confirming the external validity of previous studies advocating a combination of both ‘broad and shallow’ and ‘deep and narrow’ approaches in scheme designs, our findings emphasize the crucial importance of considering the interaction between behavioural factors and scheme design attributes during the policy development of AECS.
期刊介绍:
Ecological Economics is concerned with extending and integrating the understanding of the interfaces and interplay between "nature''s household" (ecosystems) and "humanity''s household" (the economy). Ecological economics is an interdisciplinary field defined by a set of concrete problems or challenges related to governing economic activity in a way that promotes human well-being, sustainability, and justice. The journal thus emphasizes critical work that draws on and integrates elements of ecological science, economics, and the analysis of values, behaviors, cultural practices, institutional structures, and societal dynamics. The journal is transdisciplinary in spirit and methodologically open, drawing on the insights offered by a variety of intellectual traditions, and appealing to a diverse readership.
Specific research areas covered include: valuation of natural resources, sustainable agriculture and development, ecologically integrated technology, integrated ecologic-economic modelling at scales from local to regional to global, implications of thermodynamics for economics and ecology, renewable resource management and conservation, critical assessments of the basic assumptions underlying current economic and ecological paradigms and the implications of alternative assumptions, economic and ecological consequences of genetically engineered organisms, and gene pool inventory and management, alternative principles for valuing natural wealth, integrating natural resources and environmental services into national income and wealth accounts, methods of implementing efficient environmental policies, case studies of economic-ecologic conflict or harmony, etc. New issues in this area are rapidly emerging and will find a ready forum in Ecological Economics.