R
Romy Greiner
Researcher at Charles Darwin University
Publications - 78
Citations - 2082
Romy Greiner is an academic researcher from Charles Darwin University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Natural resource management & Incentive. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 77 publications receiving 1880 citations. Previous affiliations of Romy Greiner include University of New England (Australia) & James Cook University.
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Motivations, risk perceptions and adoption of conservation practices by farmers
TL;DR: In this paper, a suite of grazing BMPs were developed for the Burdekin River catchment in Australia, which drains into the Great Barrier Reef lagoon, without explicit consideration of key factors that influence adoption, in particular farmers' goals and risk perceptions.
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Farmers’ intrinsic motivations, barriers to the adoption of conservation practices and effectiveness of policy instruments: Empirical evidence from northern Australia
Romy Greiner,Daniel Gregg +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, surveys were conducted of farmers in three regions within the tropical savannas of northern Australia, where land-use systems are characterized by large-scale broad-acre beef grazing enterprises.
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Motivations and attitudes influence farmers' willingness to participate in biodiversity conservation contracts
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors employed the theory of planned behaviour to help explain attitudinal and motivational influences on farmers' choices to participate in conservation contracts, which can be an effective and efficient way of complementing the formal nature reserve system, provided they attract sufficient participation.
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Design considerations of a choice experiment to estimate likely participation by north Australian pastoralists in contractual biodiversity conservation.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report on the experimental design process and considerations of a choice experiment conducted in collaboration with farmers in northern Australia to estimate farmers' preference heterogeneity for supplying ecosystem services, specifically their willingness to accept remuneration for the on-farm conservation of biodiversity.
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The Tourism Futures Simulator: a systems thinking approach
TL;DR: Progress in developing the Tourism Futures Project framework for mapping and summarizing key social, economic and environmental outcomes of various development scenarios in annual steps to the year 2020 is described.