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2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/2001.htm[5/25/12 9:17:32 AM]
Proceedings of the 2001 Northeastern Recreation Research Symposium
Todd, Sharon, comp., ed. 2002. Proceedings of the 2001 Northeastern Recreation Research Symposium; 2001April 1-3; Bolton Landing, NY. Gen. Tech. Rep. NE-(forthcoming). Newton Square, PA: U.S. Department ofAgriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Research Station.
Symposium Topics:
Keynote Address
Crowding Issues in Resource Management
The Role of Information in Travel Planning Decisions
Demographic Trends in Outdoor Recreation Participation & Travel
Methodology in Outdoor Recreation Research I: Interventions
Leisure Motivations of Outdoor Recreationists
Resource Management & International Tourism Development
User Satisfaction in Outdoor Recreation
Environmental Knowledge, Concern, Behavior & Education
Leisure Constraints of Outdoor Recreationists
Urban Recreation & Development Issues
Economic Impacts & Non-economic Benefits of Tourism
2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/2001.htm[5/25/12 9:17:32 AM]
Management Decision-making & Planning for Outdoor Recreation
Impacts of Wildlife Viewing
Methodology in Outdoor Recreation Research II: Instruments & Methods
Personal Relevance, Involvement & Loyalty in Outdoor Recreation
Gender Issues in Outdoor Recreation & Resource Management
Trails over Land & Water: Issues of Multiple Use & Conflict
Attachments to Places & Activities in Outdoor Recreation
Poster Session
Management Presentation
Roundtable Discussions
Complete List
Other Years: 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Home
Keynote 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/keynote_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:17:36 AM]
HomeUp
Keynote Address
Making research more relevant: Give it a try!
David W. Lime
Crowd 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/crowd_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:17:41 AM]
HomeUp
Crowding Issues in Resource Management
Balancing tradeoffs in the Denali Wilderness: An expanded approach to normativeresearch using stated choice analysis.
Steven R. Lawson and Robert Manning
Coping, crowding and satisfaction: A study of Adirondack wilderness hikers.
Andrew K. Johnson and Chad Dawson
Perceived crowding at Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area.
Megha Budruk, Robert E. Manning, William A. Valliere, and Benjamin Wang
Transportation planning and social carrying capacity in the National Parks.
William Valliere, Robert Manning, Megha Budruk, Steven Lawson, and BenjaminWang
Info 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/info_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:17:47 AM]
HomeUp
The Role of Information in Travel Planning Decisions
Assessing information needs and communication behaviors of National Forest summervisitors.
James D. Absher, Brijesh Thapa, and Alan R. Graefe
The commodification process of extreme sports: The diffusion of the X-Games byESPN.
Chang Huh, Byoung Kwan Lee, and Euidong Yoo
Marketing National Parks: Oxymoron or opportunity?
Alan K. Hogenauer
Demo 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/demo_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:17:52 AM]
HomeUp
Demographic Trends in Outdoor Recreation Participation &Travel
Wildlife-associated recreation in the North Central Region: Participation patterns andmanagement implications.
Allan Marsinko and John Dwyer
The New England travel market: Generational travel patterns, 1979 to 1996.
Rod Warnick
Welcome center research: How valuable is secondary research?
Lousia Meyer, Tara Patterson, Lori Pennington-Gray, Andrew Holdnak, andBrijesh Thapa
MethI 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/methi_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:17:57 AM]
HomeUp
Methodology in Outdoor Recreation Research I: Interventions
Unique programming: An examination of the benefits of a free choice program.
Dorothy L. Schmalz, Deborah L. Kerstetter, and Harry C. Zinn
Outdoor experiential-based training: Motivational and environmental influencesaffecting outcomes.
Teresa (Birdie) High and Alan R. Graefe
Use of experience sampling method to understand the wilderness experience.
Lynn Anderson
Encounters and the guided group trip: Going “on-the-scene” to examine the situationalinterpretation of encounters.
Erin K. Sharpe
Leisure 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/leisure_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:03 AM]
HomeUp
Leisure Motivations of Outdoor Recreationists
Differences in SCUBA diver motivations based on level of development.
Sharon L. Todd, Alan R. Graefe, and Walter Mann
Skier motivations: Do they change over time?
Erin White and Lori Pennington-Gray
Sociocultural perspectives of trapping revisited: A comparative analysis of activities andmotives 1994 and 2000.
Rodney R. Zwick, Ron Glass, Kim Royar, and Tom Decker
Internat 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/internat_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:08 AM]
HomeUp
Resource Management & International Tourism Development
The impact of potential political security level on international tourism.
Young-Rae Kim, Chang Huh, and Seung Hyun Kim
Future of the Korea National Parks: A preliminary Delphi study of key experts.
Byung-kyu Lee and Wilbur F. LaPage
User Sat 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/user_sat_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:13 AM]
HomeUp
User Satisfaction in Outdoor Recreation
A preliminary analysis of Florida State Park satisfaction survey data.
Andrew Holdnak, Stephen Holland, and Erin Parks
Recreationists in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area: A survey of usercharacteristics, behaviors, and attitudes.
Robert C. Burns and Alan R. Graefe
Visitor satisfactions: Backcountry and wilderness users in the White Mountain NationalForest.
Chad P. Dawson, Rebecca Oreskes, Frederick Kacprzynski, and Tom More
Participants’ perceptions of the 1997-1998 Missouri State Parks Passport Program.
Yi-Jin Ye and Jaclyn Card
Env Ed 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/env_ed_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:19 AM]
HomeUp
Environmental Knowledge, Concern, Behavior & Education
An evaluation of Appalachian Trail hikers’ knowledge of minimum impact skills andpractices.
Peter Newman, Robert Manning, Jim Bacon, Alan Graefe, and Gerard Kyle
Who cares and who acts? Different types of outdoor recreationists exhibit different levelsof environmental concern and behavior.
Mario F. Teisl and Kelly O’Brien
Visitor behavior and resource impacts at Cadillac Mountain, Acadia National Park.
Rex Turner and Wilbur LaPage
LeisureII 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/leisureii_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:24 AM]
HomeUp
Leisure Constraints of Outdoor Recreationists
The effects of perceived leisure constraints among Korean university students.
Sae-Sook Oh, Sei-Yi Oh, and Linda L. Caldwell
Exploration of the influence of self-efficacy on recreation participation levels ofindividuals with visual impairments who use dog guides.
Laurlyn K. Harmon and Linda L. Caldwell
Urban 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/urban_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:29 AM]
HomeUp
Urban Recreation & Development Issues
An integrative concept for visitor monitoring in a heavily used conservation area in thevicinity of a large city: The Danube Floodplains National Park, Vienna.
Arne Arnberger, Christiane Brandenburg, and Andreas Muhar
Linkages in the use of recreation environments across the urban to ex-urban spectrum byurban residents.
John F. Dwyer and Susan C. Barro
The role, use and benefits of natural recreation areas within and near residentialsubdivisions.
Christine A. Vogt and Robert W. Marans
Econ Imp 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/econ_imp_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:35 AM]
HomeUp
Economic Impacts & Non-economic Benefits of Tourism
New York State’s 1999 agritourism business study.
Diane Kuehn and Duncan Hilchey
Rail-trails and special events: Community and economic benefits.
Charles Nelson, Christine Vogt, Joel Lynch, and Daniel Stynes
Private business perceptions of transportation issues and the Island Explorer Bus systemat Acadia National Park, Maine.
Rea Brennan, Marc Edwards, and John J. Daigle
Mgt DM 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/mgt_dm_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:40 AM]
HomeUp
Management Decision-making & Planning for OutdoorRecreation
Integrating resource, social and managerial indicators of quality into carrying capacitydecision making.
Peter Newman, Robert Manning, and Bill Valliere
Redefining roles of science in planning and management: Ecology as a planning andmanagement tool.
Greg Mason and Stephen Murphy
Imp Peeping 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/imp_peeping_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:45 AM]
HomeUp
Impacts of Wildlife Viewing
Elk viewing in Pennsylvania: An evolving eco-tourism system.
Bruce E. Lord, Charles H. Strauss, and Michael J. Powell
Competing values: A case study of Pennsylvania’s elk herd as a tourism attraction.
Jeffrey A. Walsh and Leonard K. Long
Impacts of wildlife viewing at Dixville Notch Wildlife Viewing Area.
Judith K. Silverberg, Peter J. Pekins, and Robert A. Robertson
MethII 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/methii_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:51 AM]
HomeUp
Methodology in Outdoor Recreation Research II: Instruments& Methods
Effects of pretesting with the adventure recreation model instrument.
Anderson Young, Lynn Anderson, and Dale Anderson
Modeling nonlinear preferences.
Donald F. Dennis
Personal 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/personal_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:18:56 AM]
HomeUp
Personal Relevance, Involvement & Loyalty in OutdoorRecreation
Psychological commitment as a mediator of the relationship between involvement andloyalty.
Joohyun Lee and Alan Graefe
Gender 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/gender_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:01 AM]
HomeUp
Gender Issues in Outdoor Recreation & Resource Management
Older Chinese women immigrants and their leisure experiences: Before and afteremigration to the United States.
Ching-Hua Ho and Jaclyn A. Card
Towards an understanding of gender differences with respect to whitewater raftingpreferences.
Duarte B. Morais, Traci Zillifro, and Susanne Dubrouillet
Trails 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/trails_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:07 AM]
HomeUp
Trails over Land & Water: Issues of Multiple Use & Conflict
Use and user patterns among Michigan licensed Off-Highway Vehicles ownershiptypes.
Joel A. Lynch and Charles M. Nelson
Recreation conflict of riparian landowners with personal watercraft and motorboat usealong the New York’s Great Lakes.
Cheng-Ping Wang and Chad P. Dawson
User preferences for social conditions on the St. Croix International Waterway.
Jamie Hannon, John J. Daigle, and Cynthia Stacey
Security along the Appalachian Trail.
James J. Bacon, Robert E. Manning, Alan R. Graefe, Gerard Kyle, Robert D. Lee,Robert C. Burns, Rita Hennessy, and Robert Gray
Trails research: Where do we go from here?
Michael A. Schuett and Patricia Seiser
Attach 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/attach_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:12 AM]
HomeUp
Attachments to Places & Activities in Outdoor Recreation
Visitor meanings of place: Using computer content analysis to examine visitor meaningsat three National Capitol sites.
Wei-Li Jasmine Chen, Chad L. Pierskalla, Theresa L. Goldman, and David L.Larsen
The importance of visitors’ knowledge of the cultural and natural history of theAdirondacks in influencing sense of place in the High Peaks Region.
Laura Fredrickson
Attachments to places and activities: The relationship of psychological constructs tocustomer satisfaction attributes.
Thomas D. Wickham and Alan R. Graefe
An exploration of human territoriality in forest recreation.
Harry C. Zinn, Laurlyn K. Harmon, Brijesh Thapa, Deborah L. Kerstetter, andAlan R. Graefe
Community attachment and resource harvesting in rural Denmark.
Rodney R. Zwick and David Solan
Posters 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/posters_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:17 AM]
HomeUp
Poster Session
The political economy of wilderness designation in Nova Scotia.
Glyn Bissix, Leah Levac, and Peter Horvath
The Westfield River Watershed Interactive Atlas: Mapping recreation data on the Web.
Robert S. Bristow and Steven Riberdy
Park resources as an essential to urban societies.
Kristin Dion, Doug Stefancik, Serena Hawkins, and Robert Bristow
Parks and recreation employment status: Implications from a civil service perspective.
Joel Frater and Arthur Graham
Natural resources interpretation: The role of researchers – A new-old approach.
Mark Gleason
Mountain bike trail compaction relation to selected physical parameters.
Jeff Hale and Rodney R. Zwick
Internet & branding: A perfect match or a fatal attraction? Analysis of fifty states of theU.S. official tourism websites.
Gyehee Lee, Liping A. Cai, Everette Mills, and Joseph T. O’Leary
Job satisfaction among recreation practitioners.
Posters 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/posters_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:17 AM]
Erin Parks and Andrew Holdnak
Extensity and intensity of grants usage in obtaining funding for recreation services andcapital improvement projects among park and recreation agencies in the state ofMichigan.
Jerry L. Ricciardo
Resident camp directors, spirituality, and wilderness.
Michael Rule and Edward Udd
Social groups preferences relation to motivations and ability levels of whitewaterkayakers.
Seth Turner and Rod Zwick
Mgt Pres 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/mgt_pres_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:23 AM]
HomeUp
Management Presentation
Human preferences for ecological units: Patterns of dispersed campsites within landtypeassociations on the Chippewa National Forest.
Lisa Whitcomb, Dennis Parker, Bob Carr, Paul Gobster, and Herb Schroeder
Roundtable 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/roundtable_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:28 AM]
HomeUp
Roundtable Discussions
Creating recreation partnerships on private agricultural and forest land in the urbanNortheast: A case study from the Great Meadows of the Connecticut River.
Robert L. Ryan and Juliet Hansel
Applied research opportunities in developed campgrounds.
Carl P. Wiedemann
Adapting the Recreation Opportunity Spectrum (ROS) for states lands planning.
Susan Bulmer, Linda Henzel, Ann Mates, Matt Moore, and Thomas A. More
It’s time to put the C.A.R.T. before the H.O.R.S.E. or Putting Critical, Analytical, andReflective Thinking before “Handyman” Oriented Recreation Student Education.
David L. Jewell
cl 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/cl_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:34 AM]
HomeUp
Keynote Address
Making research more relevant: Give it a try!
David W. Lime
Crowding Issues in Resource Management
Balancing tradeoffs in the Denali Wilderness: An expanded approach to normativeresearch using stated choice analysis.
Steven R. Lawson and Robert Manning
Coping, crowding and satisfaction: A study of Adirondack wilderness hikers.
Andrew K. Johnson and Chad Dawson
Perceived crowding at Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area.
Megha Budruk, Robert E. Manning, William A. Valliere, and Benjamin Wang
Transportation planning and social carrying capacity in the National Parks.
William Valliere, Robert Manning, Megha Budruk, Steven Lawson, and BenjaminWang
The Role of Information in Travel Planning Decisions
cl 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/cl_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:34 AM]
Assessing information needs and communication behaviors of National Forest summervisitors.
James D. Absher, Brijesh Thapa, and Alan R. Graefe
The commodification process of extreme sports: The diffusion of the X-Games byESPN.
Chang Huh, Byoung Kwan Lee, and Euidong Yoo
Marketing National Parks: Oxymoron or opportunity?
Alan K. Hogenauer
Demographic Trends in Outdoor Recreation Participation &Travel
Wildlife-associated recreation in the North Central Region: Participation patterns andmanagement implications.
Allan Marsinko and John Dwyer
The New England travel market: Generational travel patterns, 1979 to 1996.
Rod Warnick
Welcome center research: How valuable is secondary research?
Lousia Meyer, Tara Patterson, Lori Pennington-Gray, Andrew Holdnak, andBrijesh Thapa
Methodology in Outdoor Recreation Research I: Interventions
Unique programming: An examination of the benefits of a free choice program.
cl 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/cl_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:34 AM]
Dorothy L. Schmalz, Deborah L. Kerstetter, and Harry C. Zinn
Outdoor experiential-based training: Motivational and environmental influencesaffecting outcomes.
Teresa (Birdie) High and Alan R. Graefe
Use of experience sampling method to understand the wilderness experience.
Lynn Anderson
Encounters and the guided group trip: Going “on-the-scene” to examine the situationalinterpretation of encounters.
Erin K. Sharpe
Leisure Motivations of Outdoor Recreationists
Differences in SCUBA diver motivations based on level of development.
Sharon L. Todd, Alan R. Graefe, and Walter Mann
Skier motivations: Do they change over time?
Erin White and Lori Pennington-Gray
Sociocultural perspectives of trapping revisited: A comparative analysis of activities andmotives 1994 and 2000.
Rodney R. Zwick, Ron Glass, Kim Royar, and Tom Decker
Resource Management & International Tourism Development
The impact of potential political security level on international tourism.
cl 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/cl_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:34 AM]
Young-Rae Kim, Chang Huh, and Seung Hyun Kim
Future of the Korea National Parks: A preliminary Delphi study of key experts.
Byung-kyu Lee and Wilbur F. LaPage
User Satisfaction in Outdoor Recreation
A preliminary analysis of Florida State Park satisfaction survey data.
Andrew Holdnak, Stephen Holland, and Erin Parks
Recreationists in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area: A survey of usercharacteristics, behaviors, and attitudes.
Robert C. Burns and Alan R. Graefe
Visitor satisfactions: Backcountry and wilderness users in the White Mountain NationalForest.
Chad P. Dawson, Rebecca Oreskes, Frederick Kacprzynski, and Tom More
Participants’ perceptions of the 1997-1998 Missouri State Parks Passport Program.
Yi-Jin Ye and Jaclyn Card
Environmental Knowledge, Concern, Behavior & Education
An evaluation of Appalachian Trail hikers’ knowledge of minimum impact skills andpractices.
Peter Newman, Robert Manning, Jim Bacon, Alan Graefe, and Gerard Kyle
Who cares and who acts? Different types of outdoor recreationists exhibit different levelsof environmental concern and behavior.
cl 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/cl_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:34 AM]
Mario F. Teisl and Kelly O’Brien
Visitor behavior and resource impacts at Cadillac Mountain, Acadia National Park.
Rex Turner and Wilbur LaPage
Leisure Constraints of Outdoor Recreationists
The effects of perceived leisure constraints among Korean university students.
Sae-Sook Oh, Sei-Yi Oh, and Linda L. Caldwell
Exploration of the influence of self-efficacy on recreation participation levels ofindividuals with visual impairments who use dog guides.
Laurlyn K. Harmon and Linda L. Caldwell
Urban Recreation & Development Issues
An integrative concept for visitor monitoring in a heavily used conservation area in thevicinity of a large city: The Danube Floodplains National Park, Vienna.
Arne Arnberger, Christiane Brandenburg, and Andreas Muhar
Linkages in the use of recreation environments across the urban to ex-urban spectrum byurban residents.
John F. Dwyer and Susan C. Barro
The role, use and benefits of natural recreation areas within and near residentialsubdivisions.
Christine A. Vogt and Robert W. Marans
Economic Impacts & Non-economic Benefits of Tourism
cl 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/cl_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:34 AM]
New York State’s 1999 agritourism business study.
Diane Kuehn and Duncan Hilchey
Rail-trails and special events: Community and economic benefits.
Charles Nelson, Christine Vogt, Joel Lynch, and Daniel Stynes
Private business perceptions of transportation issues and the Island Explorer Bus systemat Acadia National Park, Maine.
Rea Brennan, Marc Edwards, and John J. Daigle
Management Decision-making & Planning for OutdoorRecreation
Integrating resource, social and managerial indicators of quality into carrying capacitydecision making.
Peter Newman, Robert Manning, and Bill Valliere
Redefining roles of science in planning and management: Ecology as a planning andmanagement tool.
Greg Mason and Stephen Murphy
Impacts of Wildlife Viewing
Elk viewing in Pennsylvania: An evolving eco-tourism system.
Bruce E. Lord, Charles H. Strauss, and Michael J. Powell
Competing values: A case study of Pennsylvania’s elk herd as a tourism attraction.
cl 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/cl_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:34 AM]
Jeffrey A. Walsh and Leonard K. Long
Impacts of wildlife viewing at Dixville Notch Wildlife Viewing Area.
Judith K. Silverberg, Peter J. Pekins, and Robert A. Robertson
Methodology in Outdoor Recreation Research II: Instruments& Methods
Effects of pretesting with the adventure recreation model instrument.
Anderson Young, Lynn Anderson, and Dale Anderson
Modeling nonlinear preferences.
Donald F. Dennis
Personal Relevance, Involvement & Loyalty in OutdoorRecreation
Psychological commitment as a mediator of the relationship between involvement andloyalty.
Joohyun Lee and Alan Graefe
Gender Issues in Outdoor Recreation & Resource Management
Older Chinese women immigrants and their leisure experiences: Before and afteremigration to the United States.
Ching-Hua Ho and Jaclyn A. Card
cl 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/cl_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:34 AM]
Towards an understanding of gender differences with respect to whitewater raftingpreferences.
Duarte B. Morais, Traci Zillifro, and Susanne Dubrouillet
Trails over Land & Water: Issues of Multiple Use & Conflict
Use and user patterns among Michigan licensed Off-Highway Vehicles ownershiptypes.
Joel A. Lynch and Charles M. Nelson
Recreation conflict of riparian landowners with personal watercraft and motorboat usealong the New York’s Great Lakes.
Cheng-Ping Wang and Chad P. Dawson
User preferences for social conditions on the St. Croix International Waterway.
Jamie Hannon, John J. Daigle, and Cynthia Stacey
Security along the Appalachian Trail.
James J. Bacon, Robert E. Manning, Alan R. Graefe, Gerard Kyle, Robert D. Lee,Robert C. Burns, Rita Hennessy, and Robert Gray
Trails research: Where do we go from here?
Michael A. Schuett and Patricia Seiser
Attachments to Places & Activities in Outdoor Recreation
Visitor meanings of place: Using computer content analysis to examine visitor meaningsat three National Capitol sites.
Wei-Li Jasmine Chen, Chad L. Pierskalla, Theresa L. Goldman, and David L.
cl 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/cl_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:34 AM]
Larsen
The importance of visitors’ knowledge of the cultural and natural history of theAdirondacks in influencing sense of place in the High Peaks Region.
Laura Fredrickson
Attachments to places and activities: The relationship of psychological constructs tocustomer satisfaction attributes.
Thomas D. Wickham and Alan R. Graefe
An exploration of human territoriality in forest recreation.
Harry C. Zinn, Laurlyn K. Harmon, Brijesh Thapa, Deborah L. Kerstetter, andAlan R. Graefe
Community attachment and resource harvesting in rural Denmark.
Rodney R. Zwick and David Solan
Poster Session
The political economy of wilderness designation in Nova Scotia.
Glyn Bissix, Leah Levac, and Peter Horvath
The Westfield River Watershed Interactive Atlas: Mapping recreation data on the Web.
Robert S. Bristow and Steven Riberdy
Park resources as an essential to urban societies.
Kristin Dion, Doug Stefancik, Serena Hawkins, and Robert Bristow
Parks and recreation employment status: Implications from a civil service perspective.
Joel Frater and Arthur Graham
Natural resources interpretation: The role of researchers – A new-old approach.
cl 2001
http://www.esf.edu/nerr/previous/2001/cl_2001.htm[5/25/12 9:19:34 AM]
Mark Gleason
Mountain bike trail compaction relation to selected physical parameters.
Jeff Hale and Rodney R. Zwick
Management Presentation
Human preferences for ecological units: Patterns of dispersed campsites within landtypeassociations on the Chippewa National Forest.
Lisa Whitcomb, Dennis Parker, Bob Carr, Paul Gobster, and Herb Schroeder
Roundtable Discussions
Creating recreation partnerships on private agricultural and forest land in the urbanNortheast: A case study from the Great Meadows of the Connecticut River.
Robert L. Ryan and Juliet Hansel
Applied research opportunities in developed campgrounds.
Carl P. Wiedemann
Adapting the Recreation Opportunity Spectrum (ROS) for states lands planning.
Susan Bulmer, Linda Henzel, Ann Mates, Matt Moore, and Thomas A. More
It’s time to put the C.A.R.T. before the H.O.R.S.E. or Putting Critical, Analytical, andReflective Thinking before “Handyman” Oriented Recreation Student Education.
David L. Jewell