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Private forest owners’ sense of landownership: Motives, influential factors and landscape context (CROSBI ID 298425)

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Andabaka Marijana., Teslak Krunoslav., Ficko Andrej Private forest owners’ sense of landownership: Motives, influential factors and landscape context // Landscape and urban planning, 215 (2021), 104200, 12. doi: 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2021.104200

Podaci o odgovornosti

Andabaka Marijana., Teslak Krunoslav., Ficko Andrej

engleski

Private forest owners’ sense of landownership: Motives, influential factors and landscape context

Legal ownership of land defines the formal relationship between a landowner and land. Besides legal ownership, there is also psychological ownership which landowners can develop toward land. Despite the abundant literature on the relationships between landowners and land, it remains unclear under which circumstances a sense of ownership over land occurs and what impacts individual feelings may have on landscape dynamics if aggregated or scaled up. Building upon the psychological ownership theory, we interviewed 442 private forest owners in Croatia about the benefits of landownership. By using a Multiple Indicators Multiple Causes (MIMIC) structural equation model and local spatial autocorrelation statistics, we 1) analyzed whether landownership benefits correlate to three motives for psychological ownership, i.e. having a place, efficacy and effectance, and self-identity ; 2) analyzed the factors stimulating the motives ; and 3) located the areas of spatial concentration of psychological landownership (i.e. hotspots/coldspots). Landownership benefits showed a strong association with the corresponding motives indicating that private forest owners experience landownership as a connection between the self and forest. Physical work in the forest and tending young forests increase psychological landownership. The land tenure system and duration of ownership plays no role. The biggest hotspot appeared in the most developed area, possibly preventing land transfer. Coldspots, in contrast, emerged across the country, pointing to land which could potentially change ownership after the land market regulation expires in 2023. The findings expand the understanding of land possession beyond the dis(investment) paradigm and help predict hotspots of land transfers at local to regional scales.

Psychological ownership Place attachment Landowners Relational values Structural equation modeling Spatial autocorrelation

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Podaci o izdanju

215

2021.

104200

12

objavljeno

0169-2046

1872-6062

10.1016/j.landurbplan.2021.104200

Povezanost rada

Šumarstvo

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