2005
DOI: 10.1080/00222216.2005.11950061
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Social Structure, Identities, and Values: A Network Approach to Understanding People's Relationships to Forests

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Cited by 90 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…For example, people that highly value recreation experiences have different attitudes toward visual quality than do people that rate economic values highly; but those that highly value recreation values have similar attitudes to people that value ecology and aesthetics highly (Tindall 2003). In a study of the role of social structure and identities in explaining the diversity of forest values, Harshaw and Tindall (2005) found that foresters had values that were less diverse than those of non-foresters, and concluded that knowing about the characteristics of socialpsychological and social structural variables can be useful for identifying stakeholder representatives.…”
Section: The Socio-demographic Bases Of Environmental Concernmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, people that highly value recreation experiences have different attitudes toward visual quality than do people that rate economic values highly; but those that highly value recreation values have similar attitudes to people that value ecology and aesthetics highly (Tindall 2003). In a study of the role of social structure and identities in explaining the diversity of forest values, Harshaw and Tindall (2005) found that foresters had values that were less diverse than those of non-foresters, and concluded that knowing about the characteristics of socialpsychological and social structural variables can be useful for identifying stakeholder representatives.…”
Section: The Socio-demographic Bases Of Environmental Concernmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This shift has been motivated by an increase in public awareness of environmental and forestry issues [52]. Forest values are thus beliefs that represent an individual's orientation toward forests [35], and these values are have been shown to be related to our social structures and identity, through our level of experience with the forest and the people we network with [53]. Forests values cannot be depicted as one-dimensional, instead the concept should be seen as multi-dimensional [54].…”
Section: Values Beliefs and Attitudes-a Hierarchical Structure Withmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Categories for these questions (acquaintance, close friend, and relative) were taken from a study by Harshaw and Tindall (2005). This question was added because social networks influence attitudes and behavior (Harshaw and Tindall, 2005).…”
Section: Surveymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Categories for these questions (acquaintance, close friend, and relative) were taken from a study by Harshaw and Tindall (2005). This question was added because social networks influence attitudes and behavior (Harshaw and Tindall, 2005). People may have different definitions of who counts as a "conservationist," but no further definition was provided because we were interested in their perceptions of their networks.…”
Section: Surveymentioning
confidence: 99%