2016
DOI: 10.1111/ruso.12121
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Are Population and Land Use Changes Perceived as Threats to Sense of Place in the New West? A Multilevel Modeling Approach

Abstract: The Intermountain West's rapid changes in population growth and land use may be welcome to some, but others perceive such changes as threats to sense of place. The objective of this study is to assess whether New West and Old West contextual variables predict how agricultural landowners view threats to agricultural lifestyles and sense of place. We analyze survey data collected from 2,270 agricultural landowners in Colorado and Wyoming utilizing a multilevel regression model (MLM). We posit that this analytica… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…There are few regions as evocative and symbolically powerful as the American West (hereafter, 'the West'). As the setting to countless cinematic morality tales and home to some of the world's most recognizable dryland and alpine landscapes, the West possesses a strong and enduring regional identity (Keske et al 2017). The West is also diverse, and includes rural ranching communities in grassland ecosystems, high-tech micro-urban centers in Rocky Mountain valley bottoms, extraction-dominated landscapes across the high desert, Tribal nations managing natural resources within and across sovereign borders, myriad outdoor recreation destinations from alpine to riverine, and many other centers of human-environment interactions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are few regions as evocative and symbolically powerful as the American West (hereafter, 'the West'). As the setting to countless cinematic morality tales and home to some of the world's most recognizable dryland and alpine landscapes, the West possesses a strong and enduring regional identity (Keske et al 2017). The West is also diverse, and includes rural ranching communities in grassland ecosystems, high-tech micro-urban centers in Rocky Mountain valley bottoms, extraction-dominated landscapes across the high desert, Tribal nations managing natural resources within and across sovereign borders, myriad outdoor recreation destinations from alpine to riverine, and many other centers of human-environment interactions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As global climate change continues to dynamically alter conditions, inequitable access to water will have increasingly dire consequences for all water users, but especially newer and water‐poor operators. In a state such as Colorado, where amenity‐oriented New West development such as hobby farms and exurban housing, sustainable farming, recreation, and tourism have begun to displace extractive industries, these resource conflicts often create tensions within communities (Keske et al ). Leaving water acquisition to the free market may continue to mean that smaller agricultural operators are increasingly outpriced, and that some industries, though less controversial than UOG production, may involve even higher consumptive uses.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They include nonhuman actors that dynamically respond to human influence, often in unexpected ways (Wolch andEmel 1998, Tsing 2015). Social research on community and sense of place in the US West demonstrates how sociodemographic changes manifest in struggles over belonging (Larsen et al 2007, Shumway and Jackson 2008, Keske et al 2017. Yet it is much more than the what of sociodemographic change-it is how these changes occur and why.…”
Section: Place Culture and Belongingmentioning
confidence: 99%