@article{dudney_warren_sills_jacka_2016, title={How Study Design Influences the Ranking of Medicinal Plant Importance: A Case Study from Ghana, West Africa (vol 69, pg 306, 2015 )}, volume={70}, ISSN={["1874-9364"]}, DOI={10.1007/s12231-016-9339-x}, number={2}, journal={ECONOMIC BOTANY}, author={Dudney, Katherine and Warren, Sarah and Sills, Erin and Jacka, Jerry}, year={2016}, month={Jun}, pages={212–212} } @article{dudney_warren_sills_jacka_2015, title={How Study Design Influences the Ranking of Medicinal Plant Importance: A Case Study from Ghana, West Africa}, volume={69}, ISSN={["1874-9364"]}, DOI={10.1007/s12231-015-9322-y}, number={4}, journal={ECONOMIC BOTANY}, author={Dudney, Katherine and Warren, Sarah and Sills, Erin and Jacka, Jerry}, year={2015}, month={Dec}, pages={306–317} } @article{frey_fassola_pachas_colcombet_lacorte_pérez_renkow_warren_cubbage_2012, title={Perceptions of silvopasture systems among adopters in northeast Argentina}, volume={105}, ISSN={0308-521X}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.agsy.2011.09.001}, DOI={10.1016/j.agsy.2011.09.001}, abstractNote={Farmers’ perceptions over time of an agroforestry technology can have an important impact on adoption and disadoption. Their perceptions, in turn, may be influenced by the type and scale of farm they own and the social networks they create. We examined the factors underlying producers’ perceptions of silvopasture systems at the time of adoption and perceptions following several years of experience, and the factors explaining discontinuance of systems in Argentina. We found that while most adopters indicated that other people influenced their decision about whether or not to adopt silvopasture, the type of person that influenced them (professionals vs. other farmers) did not affect adopters’ perceptions of the relative benefits and challenges of the system. However, farm scale and farm type did explain farmers’ perceptions to a good degree. Smaller-scale farmers were less likely to see costs and returns as benefits of the system, but more likely to see cash flow properties as important advantages. Farmers’ perceptions after experiencing the system were good predictors of likely discontinuance, but influential people, farm scales, farm type, and perceptions at the time of adoption were not.}, number={1}, journal={Agricultural Systems}, publisher={Elsevier BV}, author={Frey, Gregory E. and Fassola, Hugo E. and Pachas, A. Nahuel and Colcombet, Luis and Lacorte, Santiago M. and Pérez, Oscar and Renkow, Mitch and Warren, Sarah T. and Cubbage, Frederick W.}, year={2012}, month={Jan}, pages={21–32} } @article{schaberg_aruna_cubbage_hess_abt_richter_warren_gregory_snider_sherling_et al._2005, title={Economic and ecological impacts of wood chip production in North Carolina: an integrated assessment and subsequent applications}, volume={7}, ISSN={["1872-7050"]}, DOI={10.1016/S1389-9341(03)00029-7}, abstractNote={The North Carolina Wood Chip Mill Study represents an integrated assessment of the economic and ecological impacts associated with production of wood chips at satellite chip mills in the state of North Carolina (NC), USA. Mandated by the Governor of NC, the study was attended by a high degree of public scrutiny. We report principal findings, and describe the processes by which we dealt with uncertainty resulting from limited data availability, methods used to foster public involvement and efforts to reconcile public concerns over forest harvests with our narrower mandate to examine chip mills. We considered the hypotheses that chip mills fostered widespread industrial clearcutting, increased utilization of previously noncommercial timber (especially small hardwoods), depleted future growing stocks of sawtimber, and might create adverse ecological consequences or impair aesthetics important to recreational forest users. NC wood-based industries are a major component of the state's economy, but lagged the state in economic growth from 1977 to 1996. Over the same period, the nature-based tourism sector grew rapidly. Forest land losses in North Carolina from 1982 to 1997 totaled more than one million acres. We used an econometric model to adjust timber land base and project timber supply dynamics to 2020. The simulation indicated that softwood removals exceeded growth from 1990 onward. Hardwood removals exceed growth by 2005, causing inventory levels to decline slightly by the end of the projection period. Wood chip mills processed approximately 27% of the state's chipwood harvest and 12% of the state's total timber harvest. They were statistically correlated with increased timber harvests in the state, especially in the Piedmont and the Mountains. Chip mills have effective storm water management plans and do not show visible signs of adversely affecting water quality. Higher levels of timber harvest alter forest structures in the Coastal Plain and Piedmont, generally creating less habitat for bird, amphibian and reptile species of conservation concern. Fewer species are adversely affected in the Mountains. Public opinion about chip mills is polarized, and controversy exists principally in the western portion of the state. Overall, public acceptance of study findings was favorable, and selected elements of the research findings have been used to support a variety of advocacy positions.}, number={2}, journal={FOREST POLICY AND ECONOMICS}, author={Schaberg, RH and Aruna, PB and Cubbage, FW and Hess, GR and Abt, RC and Richter, DD and Warren, ST and Gregory, JD and Snider, AG and Sherling, S and et al.}, year={2005}, month={Feb}, pages={157–174} } @article{warren_2003, title={One step further: Women's access to and control over farm and forest resources in the U.S. South}, volume={19}, ISBN={0885-3436}, number={2}, journal={Southern Rural Sociology}, author={Warren, S. T.}, year={2003}, pages={94} } @article{warren_2003, title={Public interests in private property: Conflicts over wood chip mills in North Carolina}, volume={19}, ISBN={0885-3436}, number={2}, journal={Southern Rural Sociology}, author={Warren, S. T.}, year={2003}, pages={114} } @inproceedings{warren_1998, title={A framework for understanding property rights and responsibilities in forested land}, booktitle={Meeting in the middle, National Convention proceedings, Society of American Foresters: Memphis, Tennessee, October 4-8, 1997}, publisher={Bethesda, Maryland: Society of American Foresters}, author={Warren, S. T.}, year={1998} } @article{zabawa_warren_1998, title={From company to community: Agricultural community development in Macon County, Alabama, 1881 to the new deal}, volume={72}, number={2}, journal={Agricultural History}, author={Zabawa, R. E. and Warren, S. T.}, year={1998}, pages={459–486} } @article{warren_zabawa_1998, title={The origins of the Tuskegee National Forest: Nineteenth- and twentieth-century resettlement and land development programs in the black belt region of Alabama}, volume={72}, number={2}, journal={Agricultural History}, author={Warren, S. T. and Zabawa, R. E.}, year={1998}, pages={487–506} } @article{warren_1998, title={The role of assistance foresters in nonindustrial private forest management: Alabama landowners' perspectives}, volume={22}, number={2}, journal={Southern Journal of Applied Forestry}, author={Warren, S. T.}, year={1998}, pages={101–105} }