Conflict in the Great Outdoors

Toward Understanding and Managing for Diverse Sportsmen Preferences

Publication Date:  
Oct 2008

9780817355234

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Addresses the different orientations and behaviors within sportsmen categories. This work deals with a major problem of outdoor recreation management, which is the difficulty in identifying sportsmen subgroups having distinctive preferences and expectations as to the composition of the 'quality' outdoor experience.

Conflict in the Great Outdoors addresses the different orientations and behaviors within sportsmen categories. A major problem of outdoor recreation management addressed in Hobson Bryan's work is the difficulty in identifying sportsmen subgroups having distinctive preferences and expectations as to the composition of the 'quality' outdoor experience. Land-use managers and planners are faced with the problem of matching resources with more users having increasingly specific motivations. Bryan applies his theory of variations within a leisure activity by addressing what sportsmen do and why they do it in various activities such as mountain climbing, hunting, canoeing, skiing, and backpacking.

C. Hobson Bryan Jr. is Professor, Department of Geography, Urban and Regional Planning, University of Alabama. He is co-author of Social Assessment: Theory, Process & Techniques. David Scott is Professor, Department of Recreation, Park and Tourism Sciences, Texas A&M University, and editor of the Journal of Leisure Research.
IllustrationsIllustrations
Pages112
Date Published02 Oct 2008
PublisherThe University of Alabama Press
LanguageEnglish
Dimensions223 x 149 x 12