The values and Objectives of Private Forest Owners and Their Influence on Forestry Behaviour: The Implications for Entrepreneurship

A. Ní Dhubháin, R. Cobanova, H. Karppinen, D. Mizaraite, Eva Ritter, B. Slee, S. Wall

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

There are many factors that determine what forestry activities forest owners carry out in their forest properties and that influence whether forest owners engage in entrepreneurial activity. This paper explores whether the values and
objectives of forest owners influence their forestry behaviour and their engagement in entrepreneurial activity. This is done through a review of the literature on private forest owners’ typologies based on owners’ objectives. The review reveals that typologies typically divide forest owners into two main groups. The primary objective of the first group of owners is production (of wood and non-wood goods and services) usually, although not exclusively, so as to generate economic activity. The primary objective of the second group is consumption (of wood and non-wood goods and services). There is a tacit assumption in the studies reviewed that goals and objectives do influence forestry behaviour but few studies have actually assessed whether this is the case. The general finding is that forest owners whose objectives are timber production and who are business-oriented are more likely to manage and harvest their stands. No research focusing on the link between owners’ objective and wider entrepreneurial activity in forests was found.
Original languageEnglish
JournalSmall-Scale Forestry
Volume6
Pages (from-to)347-357
Number of pages11
ISSN1873-7617
Publication statusPublished - 2007
Externally publishedYes

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