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Quantitative, qualitative, and collaborative methods: approaching indigenous ecological knowledge heterogeneity Ecology and Society
Spoon, Jeremy; Portland State University; jspoon@pdx.edu.
I discuss the use of quantitative, qualitative, and collaborative methods to document and operationalize Indigenous ecological knowledge, using case studies from the Nepalese Himalaya and Great Basin. Both case studies applied results to natural and cultural resource management and interpretation for the public. These approaches attempt to reposition the interview subjects to serve as active contributors to the research and its outcomes. I argue that the study of any body of Indigenous knowledge requires a context-specific methodology and mutually agreed upon processes and outcomes. In the Nepalese Himalaya, I utilized linked quantitative and qualitative methods to understand how tourism influenced Sherpa place-based spiritual concepts, species, and...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Collaborative methods; Great Basin; Himalayas; Indigenous ecological knowledge; Linked quantitative and qualitative methods; Numic peoples (Southern Paiute and Western Shoshone); Sherpa.
Ano: 2014
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Revised chronology for late Pleistocene Mono Lake sediments based on paleointensity correlation to the global reference curve ArchiMer
Zimmerman, Susan H.; Hemming, Sidney R.; Kent, Dennis V.; Searle, Stephanie Y..
Lakes are highly sensitive recorders of climate processes, but are extremely difficult to correlate precisely to ice-core and marine records, especially in the absence of reliable radiocarbon dates. Relative paleointensity (RPI) of Earth's magnetic field is an independent method of correlating high-resolution climate records, and can be applied to both marine and terrestrial sediments, as well as (inversely) correlated to the cosmogenic nuclide records preserved in ice cores. Here we present the correlation of an RPI record from Mono Lake, California to GLOPIS, the Global PaleoIntensity Stack, which increases the age estimation of the basal Mono Lake sediments by > 20000 yr (20 kyr), from similar to 40 ka (kyr before present) to 67 ka. The Mono Lake...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Paleointensity; GLOPIS; Argon; Great Basin; Mono Lake excursion; Laschamp.
Ano: 2006 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00234/34500/33454.pdf
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Sensitivity of WTP Estimates to Definition of ‘Yes’: Reinterpreting Expressed Response Intensity AgEcon
Kobayashi, Mimako; Rollins, Kimberly S.; Evans, M.D.R..
Willingness to pay (WTP) estimation typically involves some strategy for mapping nondichotomous contingent valuation (CV) responses onto a dichotomous yes/no dependent variable. We propose a new approach to selecting which responses qualify as ‘yes.’ We apply the proposed method to polychotomous CV data for preventative land management programs in the Great Basin. We also estimate WTP using other methods of response recoding found in the literature. By contrasting the results under different approaches, we demonstrate how and why WTP point estimates vary across recoding methods and discuss the comparative advantages of our more generalized recoding approach that is based on predicted probabilities of ‘yes’ responses.
Tipo: Journal Article Palavras-chave: Contingent valuation; Great Basin; Invasive weeds; Land management; Polychotomous format; Response intensity; Response mapping; Wildfire; Environmental Economics and Policy.
Ano: 2010 URL: http://purl.umn.edu/59332
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