The influence of cultural identity on willingness to pay values in contingent valuation surveys. Awatere, S. IDEAS Working Paper Series from RePEc, 2005. abstract bibtex Current New Zealand resource management legislation requires local government actively recognise and take into account Maori values in resource management planning. This means the decision process and participants must interact with evidence based on Maori epistemologies. The Maori world-view is holistic in nature in that it embodies historical, environmental, and spiritual values, as well as modern experiences. Concerns arise for Maori communities when planners and developers utilise economic tools such as willingness to pay surveys to determine the total value of a proposed project. Other concerns are caused by surveys that ask a participant "are you Maori" and fail to recognise the diverse realities that exist for Maori. This paper draws from a survey of 700 respondents to identify the extent to which current conventional Contingent Valuation methodologies can measure changes in the environment where the response is culturally influenced. The influence of culture on willingness to pay decisions will be investigated using a measure of Maori identity. These cultural indicators involve assessing an individual's commitment and involvement in Maori cultural issues including: Te Reo (Maori language), whanau, other Maori, whakapapa (genealogy) and tikanga (Maori world view).
@article{awatere_influence_2005,
title = {The influence of cultural identity on willingness to pay values in contingent valuation surveys},
abstract = {Current New Zealand resource management legislation requires local government actively recognise and take into account Maori values in resource management planning. This means the decision process and participants must interact with evidence based on Maori epistemologies. The Maori world-view is holistic in nature in that it embodies historical, environmental, and spiritual values, as well as modern experiences. Concerns arise for Maori communities when planners and developers utilise economic tools such as willingness to pay surveys to determine the total value of a proposed project. Other concerns are caused by surveys that ask a participant "are you Maori" and fail to recognise the diverse realities that exist for Maori. This paper draws from a survey of 700 respondents to identify the extent to which current conventional Contingent Valuation methodologies can measure changes in the environment where the response is culturally influenced. The influence of culture on willingness to pay decisions will be investigated using a measure of Maori identity. These cultural indicators involve assessing an individual's commitment and involvement in Maori cultural issues including: Te Reo (Maori language), whanau, other Maori, whakapapa (genealogy) and tikanga (Maori world view).},
language = {eng},
journal = {IDEAS Working Paper Series from RePEc},
author = {Awatere, Shaun},
year = {2005},
keywords = {Ideas.Repec.Org/P/Ags/Nzar05/98522.Html},
}
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