沿海居民对自然环境和人造环境的情感参与

IF 4.2 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Tomas Buitendijk, Elisabeth S. Morris‐Webb, Jeneen Hadj‐Hammou, Stuart R. Jenkins, T. Crowe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

沿海社区及其景观不断变化,如今又面临着气候变化和可持续能源转型带来的新挑战。为了确保沿海社区能够适应自然和人造环境的持续变化,规划者和其他决策者必须了解当地场所对居民的重要性。 我们采用跨学科的混合方法研究了爱尔兰威克洛郡南部沿海居民与地方之间的关系。我们引入了 "情感参与 "的概念。该术语以新唯物主义理论(特别是行为者网络理论)为基础,将居民从与沿海地区的关系中获得的意义("情感")与他们的物质互动程度("参与")联系起来。情感 "是通过对访谈和开放式问卷回答的主题分析以及问卷中的地方依恋量表确定的。描述居民与沿海地方之间关系强度的指标被用作 "参与度 "的替代指标。 为了了解经验意义和物质互动之间的相互联系,我们使用了主成分分析法(PCA)来连接和直观地探索 "影响 "和 "参与 "的不同测量方法。研究人员还使用 permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) 分析了可能起中介作用的社会人口变量。 大多数自我选择的研究参与者对他们最常去的地方表现出强烈的地方依恋。我们发现,情感参与并不因年龄、性别或场所类型而异。参与者对自然场所和人造场所的喜爱程度相当。这意味着,人造场所因其对不同个体的不同功能而具有很高的价值,而景观改造如果导致功能的改变,则可能会对沿岸居民产生影响。 我们发现,情感参与有两个领域,无法仅通过定量或定性数据来衡量。其中第一个领域是由对地方的依恋所驱动的,另一个领域是由地方所提供的与个人或社会成就相关的意义所驱动的。 我们的研究结果可以帮助规划者更好地理解当地人支持(或反对)景观改造背后的意义,以及居民的情感参与如何受到拟议干预措施的影响。 在期刊博客上免费阅读本文的通俗语言摘要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Coastal residents' affective engagement with the natural and constructed environment
Coastal communities and their landscapes are subject to constant change, and today face new challenges as a result of climate change and the sustainable energy transition. To ensure the resilience of coastal communities to ongoing changes in the natural and constructed environment, it is imperative that planners and other decision‐makers understand the importance of local places to residents. We used an interdisciplinary, mixed‐methods approach to study relationships between coastal residents and places in south Co. Wicklow, Ireland, introducing the concept of ‘affective engagement’. Grounded in new materialist theory (notably actor–network theory), this term connects the meaning derived by residents from their relationships with coastal places (‘affect’) to the extent of their material interactions (‘engagement’). ‘Affect’ was determined from thematic analysis of interviews and open questionnaire responses, as well as place attachment scales included in the questionnaire. Measures describing the strength of the relationship between residents and coastal places were used as a proxy for ‘engagement’. To understand how experienced meaning and material interaction interlink, principal component analysis (PCA) was used to join and visually explore the different measures of ‘affect’ and ‘engagement’. Potentially mediating sociodemographic variables were investigated using a permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA). The majority of self‐selected study participants displayed strong place attachment to their most frequently visited places. We found that affective engagement does not vary with age, gender or type of place. Participants favoured natural and constructed places in equal measure. This implies that constructed places can be of high value due to their different functions for different individuals, and that landscape transformations may impact on coastal residents if they cause a change in functionality. We found two domains comprising affective engagement that are not measurable by quantitative or qualitative data alone. The first of these domains is driven by attachments to places, and the other by meanings relating to either personal or social fulfilment afforded by a place. Our findings may help planners better understand the meanings behind local support for (or resistance against) landscape transformations, and how residents' affective engagement might be impacted by proposed interventions. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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来源期刊
People and Nature
People and Nature Multiple-
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
9.80%
发文量
103
审稿时长
12 weeks
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