Backcountry Encounter Norms: Theory, Method and Empirical Evidence
- 1 July 1986
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Leisure Research
- Vol. 18 (3) , 137-153
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00222216.1986.11969653
Abstract
Efforts to understand the impacts resulting from visitors in backcountry settings have increasingly turned to normative explanations. This paper builds on earlier review articles by providing a conceptual framework for analyzing the structural characteristics of norms. Three normative characteristics—range of tolerable contacts, norms. intensity and norm crystallization—are identified and measured quantitatively using data from the Brule River to empirically illustrate the application of the model to a recreation setting. Findings from the Brule and a number of related studies reveal that despite a diversity of recreation behaviors and interests, some normative consensus can often be found. From a management perspective, these findings underscore the importance of defining the type of experience to be provided and deciding on a criterion group based on the definition of how the resource should be managed.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Crowding Norms in Backcountry Settings: A Review and SynthesisJournal of Leisure Research, 1985
- The Limits of acceptable change (LAC) system for wilderness planning /Published by Smithsonian Institution ,1985
- A conceptual framework for carrying capacity determinationLeisure Sciences, 1984
- Social carrying capacity: An integration and synthesis of twenty years of researchLeisure Sciences, 1984
- Toward a behavioral theory of crowding in outdoor recreation: An evaluation and synthesis of researchLeisure Sciences, 1982
- Encounter Norms in Backcountry Settings: Studies of Three RiversJournal of Leisure Research, 1981
- Conflict in Outdoor Recreation: A Theoretical PerspectiveJournal of Leisure Research, 1980
- Perceptions of crowding and resource quality by early and more recent visitorsLeisure Sciences, 1980
- The effect of person-group relationships on conformity processes.The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1958
- Assessing similarity between profiles.Psychological Bulletin, 1953