Abbie A. Rogers
University of Western Australia
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Featured researches published by Abbie A. Rogers.
Land Economics | 2013
Abbie A. Rogers
This study investigates whether public and expert preferences diverge in a valuation of two marine reserves in Western Australia. Identical choice experiments are applied to a sample of marine scientists and the Western Australian community. Evidence of both divergence and convergence between public and expert values is found, with public awareness factors helping to explain differences of opinion. This result implies that, in instances of divergence, it may be preferable to support potential environmental policies through community awareness campaigns, rather than using uninformed public preferences in policy design. (JEL Q51, Q58)
Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics | 2017
Michael Burton; Abbie A. Rogers; Claire Richert
This study of the communitys acceptance of biodiversity offsets in Australia provides insights relevant to future revisions of offset policies of both State and Commonwealth Governments. A choice experiment was used to measure preferences for the general acceptability of offsetting, and for a number of attributes that define how an offset can be implemented. Based on a sample of 204 respondents from Perth, WA, we found that the majority of respondents did not object to the practice of biodiversity offsetting in general. A minority of respondents preferred that offset actions be direct, but most accepted a combination of direct and indirect actions. Individuals generally preferred that the offset be located near the site of impact, and it became more unacceptable the further away that it was located. However, there was heterogeneity in preferences for protecting the impacted species or a more endangered one.
Conservation Biology | 2017
Abbie A. Rogers; Michael Burton
Understanding the social acceptability of biodiversity offsets is important to the design of offset policy. We used a discrete choice experiment to quantify preferences of Australians for a migratory shorebird offset in the context of an oil and gas development project. We surveyed a nationally representative sample of 1371 respondents on their preferences for current and prospective offset-policy characteristics via an online questionnaire to inform policy design of the social dimensions related to offset acceptability. The majority of respondents accepted offsetting as a means to allow economic development; the option to reject development (and an offset) was selected in 13% of possible offset scenarios. Substituting protection of a species affected by the development with protection of a more endangered species was a desirable policy characteristic, as was having the offset implemented by a third party or the government rather than the company responsible for the development. Direct offset activities (e.g., improving degraded habitat) were preferred over indirect activities (e.g., a research program), and respondents were strongly against locating the offset at a site other than where the impact occurred. Positive and negative characteristics of offsets could be traded off by changing the number of birds protected by the offset. Our results show that Australians are likely to support increased flexibility in biodiversity-offset policies, particularly when undesirable policy characteristics are compensated for.
Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics | 2015
Abbie A. Rogers; Marit E. Kragt; Fiona L. Gibson; Michael Burton; Elizabeth H. Petersen; David J. Pannell
Resource and Energy Economics | 2015
Chunbo Ma; Abbie A. Rogers; Marit E. Kragt; Fan Zhang; Maksym Polyakov; Fiona L. Gibson; Morteza Chalak; Ram Pandit; Sorada Tapsuwan
Resources Policy | 2015
Claire Richert; Abbie A. Rogers; Michael Burton
Biological Conservation | 2013
Abbie A. Rogers; Jonelle Cleland; Michael Burton
Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics-revue Canadienne D Agroeconomie | 2013
Abbie A. Rogers
Environmental Science & Policy | 2017
Fiona L. Gibson; Abbie A. Rogers; Anthony D.M. Smith; Anna M. Roberts; Hugh P. Possingham; Michael A. McCarthy; David J. Pannell
The research reports | 2010
Abbie A. Rogers; Jonelle Cleland