Document details

Is forest related decision-making in European treeline areas socially innovative? A Q-methodology enquiry into the perspectives of international experts

Author(s): Nijnik, Maria ; Nijnik, Anatoliy ; Sarkki, Simo ; Muñoz-Rojas, Jose ; Miller, David ; Kopiy, Serhiy

Date: 2018

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/23550

Origin: Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora

Subject(s): Tree-line; Sustainability; Ecosystem Services; Experts


Description

Treeline areas provide a range of ecosystem services, but there are diverging views as to how and for whose benefit, these ecosystem services are managed. Applying a Q-method, we explore experts' attitudes towards forest related decision-making and governance in treeline areas to reveal the attitudinal divergences that exist and analyse patterns of shared assumptions forming attitude-related communities. Experiences, trends, opportunities and challenges in European treeline area decision-making are considered. Our results reveal four attitude-related communities, representing four distinctive types of expert attitudes. Findings demonstrate a number of similarities in attitudes among experts indicating, for example, that treeline area decision-making is hardly socially innovative as it tends to happen in a top-down manner. However, some do and others don't see tree-line governance beneficial from an ecological perspective. The attitudinal heterogeneity identified offers insights into treeline decision-making and could, therefore, be useful to public decision-makers in addressing the opinions of each attitudinal group on a case-by-case basis. The general conclusions are that forest related decision-making in treeline areas requires social innovation and a high level of stakeholder competence and capacity-building; and that an improved knowledge of experts' attitudes, together with an emphasis on increased participation in decision-making, could be of help to policy and practice communities in triggering innovative changes locally.

Document Type Journal article
Language Portuguese
facebook logo  linkedin logo  twitter logo 
mendeley logo

Related documents

No related documents