Article

Motivations matter: Behavioural determinants of preferences for remote and unfamiliar environmental goods

Details

Citation

Börger T & Hattam C (2017) Motivations matter: Behavioural determinants of preferences for remote and unfamiliar environmental goods. Ecological Economics, 131, pp. 64-74. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2016.08.021

Abstract
Discrete choice experiments (DCE) are one of the main methods for the valuation of non-market environmental goods. However, concerns regarding the validity of choice responses obtained in such surveys remain, particularly in surveys dealing with environmental goods remote from and unfamiliar to respondents. This study assesses behavioural determinants of preferences for conservation benefits of a marine protected area on the Dogger Bank, a shallow sandbank in the southern North Sea in an attempt to assess construct validity of survey responses. The Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) and the Norm Activation Model (NAM) are employed to empirically measure constructs that predict stated choices. The study finds that identified protest respondents score significantly lower on most TPB and NAM components than non-protesters. Results further show that components of both the TPB and the NAM robustly predict choice behaviour. The inclusion of the TPB components improves the predictive power of the estimation model more than the NAM components. In an additional latent class logit model, TPB and NAM components plausibly explain different patterns of WTP for conservation benefits of an offshore marine protected area. These findings support construct validity of stated choice data regarding the valuation of remote and unfamiliar environmental goods.

Keywords
Environmental valuation; Discrete choice experiment; Theory of Planned behavior; Norm Activation Model; Latent class model; Error component model

Journal
Ecological Economics: Volume 131

StatusPublished
FundersEuropean Commission (Horizon 2020)
Publication date31/01/2017
Publication date online30/08/2016
Date accepted by journal12/08/2016
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/30345
ISSN0921-8009
eISSN1873-6106