This paper attempts to illustrate the use of a structured social psychology methodology, the Theory of Planned Behaviour, in explaining how and more crucially why farmers manage the existing wildlife and landscape features on their holdings. The hedge management behaviour of Bedfordshire farmers is
Why do corporations contribute to the Nature Conservancy?
โ Scribed by James J. Griffith; Charles R. Knoeber
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 499 KB
- Volume
- 49
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0048-5829
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Treating corporate contributions as purchases of valuable inputs, we hypothesize that firms for which genetic diversity, advertizing, and reputations of environmental responsibility are more valuable and firms for which the cost of contributing is less will be more likely contributors to the Nature Conservancy. These hypotheses are supported by logit estimations which find firms in industries where biological inputs are important, firms with high advertizing expenditures, firms in industries with high costs of meeting environmental regulations, and large firms are more likely to contribute and so become Corporate Associates of the Nature Conservancy.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Chronic rhinosinusitis is a common disease whose underlying aetiopathogenesis has not been completely understood. Amongst a range of other potential environmental triggers in this disease, a role has recently been proposed for bacterial biofilms. Adopting the biofilm paradigm to explain
As a student of cardiac reperfusion 1 , I was intrigued by Fig. in the article by Seko et al. about the expression and the role of sialyl Lewis X antigen (SLe X ) in heart reperfusion injury. Their photograph visualizes not only the expression of SLe X , but also the extensive destruction and disa