All Stories

  1. Pathways from socioeconomic values to natural resource management practices to ecological change: A systematic review
  2. Ecosystem accounting through first nations’ lenses: Integrating the SEEA-EA and Indigenous knowledge systems
  3. Hooking recreational fishers on sustainable fishing: Consistent psycho-social determinants raise potential for broad scale interventions
  4. Protect Antarctica — or risk accelerating planetary meltdown
  5. Valuing the reciprocating services that humans can provide to ecosystems
  6. Zhengzhou 2024 EcoSummit declaration: building eco-civilization for a sustainable and desirable future
  7. Managing tourism in Antarctica: impacts, forecasts, and suitable economic instruments
  8. Zhengzhou 2024 Ecosummit declaration: Building eco-civilization for a sustainable and desirable future
  9. Valuing Human Reciprocity with the Rest of Nature
  10. How integration of socio-ecological data can shape regional environmental management decisions: an example from Australia
  11. Cascading tipping points of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean
  12. Managing forest residues for biodiversity, bioenergy, and smoke reduction: Insights from a Discrete Choice Experiment in Tasmania, Australia
  13. Governance challenges to protect globally important ecosystem services of the Antarctic and Southern Ocean
  14. Publisher Correction: The value of Antarctic and Southern Ocean ecosystem services
  15. The value of Antarctic and Southern Ocean ecosystem services
  16. How the Type of Data Used for Analysis Can Shape Environmental Management Decisions
  17. The Hetrogenity of WTP Based on Individuals Environmental Value Orentaions: Evidence from Hybrid Choice Model
  18. Integrated social-ecological data for regional natural resource management
  19. Accounting for Indigenous cultural connections to land: insights from two Indigenous groups of Australia
  20. The monetary value of 16 services protected by the Australian National Biosecurity System: Spatially explicit estimates and vulnerability to incursions
  21. Piecemeal stewardship activities miss numerous social and environmental benefits associated with culturally appropriate ways of caring for country
  22. Ecosystem health, ecosystem services, and the well‐being of humans and the rest of nature
  23. Assessing changes to ecosystem service values at large geographic scale: A case study for Australia’s Great Barrier Reef
  24. Australian Indigenous insights into ecosystem services: Beyond services towards connectedness – People, place and time
  25. Understanding feedback relationships between resources, functionings and well-being: A case study of seaweed farming and artisanal processing in Indonesia
  26. Pluralistic discounting recognizing different capital contributions: An example estimating the net present value of global ecosystem services
  27. The Learning Generated Through Indigenous Natural Resources Management Programs Increases Quality of Life for Indigenous People – Improving Numerous Contributors to Wellbeing
  28. Women's well-being and household benefits from seaweed farming in Indonesia
  29. Indigenous Land and Sea Management Programs (ILSMPs) Enhance the Wellbeing of Indigenous Australians
  30. The importance of social learning for non-market valuation
  31. A state-wide economic assessment of coastal and marine ecosystem services to inform sustainable development policies in the Northern Territory, Australia
  32. The ability of community based natural resource management to contribute to development as freedom and the role of access
  33. Using the life-satisfaction approach to quantify the complex inter-related impacts of coal mining on host communities: A case study in Shanxi, China
  34. The cost of doing nothing in the face of climate change: a case study, using the life satisfaction approach to value the tangible and intangible costs of flooding in the Philippines
  35. Correction to: Using measures of wellbeing for impact evaluation: Proof of concept developed with an Indigenous community undertaking land management programs in northern Australia
  36. Indigenous land and sea management programs: Can they promote regional development and help “close the (income) gap”?
  37. The Value of Ecosystem Services from Giant Panda Reserves
  38. Overoptimism and the undervaluation of ecosystem services: A case-study of recreational fishing in Townsville, adjacent to the Great Barrier Reef
  39. Using measures of wellbeing for impact evaluation: Proof of concept developed with an Indigenous community undertaking land management programs in northern Australia
  40. The Crowding Out of Complex Social Goods
  41. Are Indigenous land and sea management programs a pathway to Indigenous economic independence?
  42. The socio-cultural benefits and costs of the traditional hunting of dugongs Dugong dugon and green turtles Chelonia mydas in Torres Strait, Australia
  43. Socioeconomic Impacts of Changes to Marine Fisheries and Aquaculture that are Brought About Through Climate Change
  44. Exploring the impacts of coal mining on host communities in Shanxi, China – using subjective data
  45. Using Both Objective and Subjective Indicators to Investigate the Impacts of Coal Mining on Wellbeing of Host Communities: A Case-Study in Shanxi Province, China
  46. New methods for valuing, and for identifying spatial variations, in cultural services: A case study of the Great Barrier Reef
  47. Social capital as a key determinant of perceived benefits of community-based marine protected areas
  48. Using insights about key factors impacting ‘quality of life’ to inform effective on-farm conservation programs: a case study in Northern Australia
  49. Motivations for Sharing Bushmeat with an Urban Diaspora in Indigenous Australia
  50. If climate change means more intense and more frequent drought, what will that mean for agricultural production? A case study in Northern Australia
  51. Setting the Table: Indigenous Engagement on Environmental Issues in a Politicized Context
  52. Assessing the impact of price changes and extreme climatic events on sediment loads in a large river catchment near the Great Barrier Reef
  53. The impact of economic, social and environmental factors on trip satisfaction and the likelihood of visitors returning
  54. Sportfisheries, conservation and sustainable livelihoods: a multidisciplinary guide to developing best practice
  55. Co-benefits and trade-offs between agriculture and conservation: A case study in Northern Australia
  56. Marine conservation finance: The need for and scope of an emerging field
  57. Linking ecosystem services and human-values theory
  58. The significance of environmental values for destination competitiveness and sustainable tourism strategy making: insights from Australia's Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area
  59. A new approach to the problem of overlapping values: A case study in Australia׳s Great Barrier Reef
  60. Fishery benefits and stakeholder priorities associated with a coral reef fishery and their implications for management
  61. Effective marine offsets for the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area
  62. The role the Great Barrier Reef plays in resident wellbeing and implications for its management
  63. Recreational fishing and boating: Are the determinants the same?
  64. Estimating Landholders’ Probability of Participating in a Stewardship Program, and the Implications for Spatial Conservation Priorities
  65. The potential implications of environmental deterioration on business and non-business visitor expenditures in a natural setting
  66. The Importance of Water Clarity to Great Barrier Reef Tourists and Their Willingness to Pay to Improve it
  67. Navigating trade-offs in land-use planning: integrating human well-being into objective setting
  68. The non-consumptive (tourism) ‘value’ of marine species in the Northern section of the Great Barrier Reef
  69. Planning Across Freshwater and Terrestrial Realms: Cobenefits and Tradeoffs Between Conservation Actions
  70. On the use of socioeconomic typologies for improved integrated management of data-poor regions: explorations from the Australian north
  71. Tourism and Economic Growth in Australia: An Empirical Investigation of Causal Links
  72. Using resident perceptions of values associated with the Australian Tropical Rivers to identify policy and management priorities
  73. Applying econometric techniques to hydrological problems in a large basin: Quantifying the rainfall–discharge relationship in the Burdekin, Queensland, Australia
  74. DoesECOcertification deliver benefits? An empirical investigation of visitors’ perceptions of the importance ofECOcertification's attributes and of operators’ performance
  75. The great asymmetric divide: An empirical investigation of the link between indigenous and non-indigenous economic systems in Northern Australia
  76. A social–ecological approach to conservation planning: embedding social considerations
  77. ECO CERTIFICATION IN QUEENSLAND'S WET TROPICS WORLD HERITAGE AREA: IS IT GOOD FOR BUSINESS?
  78. An integrated assessment of financial, hydrological, ecological and social impacts of ‘development’ on Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in northern Australia
  79. Social factors and private benefits influence landholders' riverine restoration priorities in tropical Australia
  80. The resilience of formal and informal tourism enterprises to disasters: reef tourism in Phuket, Thailand
  81. Impacts of water demand side policies on Mongolian residential users
  82. Estimating land and conservation management costs: The first step in designing a stewardship program for the Northern Territory
  83. The efficiency of the Environmental Management Charge in the Cairns management area of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park*
  84. Quantifying the benefits of a long-lead ENSO prediction model to enhance harvest management-A case study for the Herbert sugarcane growing region, Australia
  85. The economic value of ecosystem services in the Great Barrier Reef: our state of knowledge
  86. The haves and have nots in Australia's Tropical North - New Perspectives on a Persisting Problem
  87. Comparing Multipliers from Survey and Non-Survey Based IO Models
  88. Live-Aboard Dive Boats in the Great Barrier Reef: Regional Economic Impact and the Relative Values of Their Target Marine Species
  89. The value of recreational fishing in the Great Barrier Reef, Australia: A pooled revealed preference and contingent behaviour model
  90. The Changing Value of Australian Tropical Rivers
  91. Enhancing the economic benefits of tourism at the local level.
  92. Using Surveys of Business Expenditure to Draw Inferences about the Size of Regional Multipliers: A Case-study of Tourism in Northern Australia
  93. REGIONAL EXPENDITURE PATTERNS, REMOTENESS AND TYPE OF ENTERPRISE: WHICH TOURISM BUSINESSES SPEND THE LARGEST AMOUNTS WITHIN THEIR LOCAL COMMUNITIES?
  94. Australian Wine Exports and the AUSFTA
  95. The community impacts of different types of visitors: an empirical investigation of tourism in North-west Queensland
  96. Production and consumption of wildlife icons: dolphin tourism at Monkey Mia, Western Australia.
  97. LAND RICH AND DATA POOR: MODELLING REQUIREMENTS IN AUSTRALIA'S FAR NORTH
  98. The private costs and benefits of environmental self-regulation: which firms have most to gain?
  99. Understanding Adoption of On-farm Conservation Practices in the Burdekin Dry Tropics, Queensland
  100. Value of irrigation water with uncertain future rain: A simulation case study of sugarcane irrigation in northern Australia
  101. Measurement error and functional form: implications for welfare estimates
  102. The Travel Cost Method: an Empirical Investigation of Randall’s Difficulty