To mitigate the adverse effects of reduced access to public forage, ranchers may require financial or other forms of "compensation." In this paper, we use results from a survey of Nevada ranchers to examine their willingness to sell grazing permits and participate in other schemes that enable them to continue ranching in spite of declining access to public forage. On average, ranchers demand $255 per animal unit month to sell grazing permits, while support for other programs, some of which are performance based, depends on whether respondents trust public agencies and intend to pass their ranch onto an hei
Policy analysis and planning requires that we know what the likely responses of affected parties to ...
Grazing permit value supposedly arises as a cost advantage for permit holders. Yet, ranches are over...
Despite large efforts to generate and extend management innovations for rangeland operators, little ...
To mitigate the adverse effects of reduced access to public forage, ranchers may require financial o...
In response to environmental pressure, public land agencies in Nevada have reduced animal unit month...
Since the late 1960s, the Nevada ranch community has come under increasing pressure from environment...
This study investigated the role that a public land grazing permit buyout would have on ranching ope...
The value of public land forage has been of key interest since grazing fees were first established o...
Recent rangeland reform attempts have increased ranchers'Â’ uncertainty of retaining grazing permits...
Federal land grazing fees have been set by a formula that uses a base rate developed from a 1966 stu...
Results from a 2002 survey of Nevada ranchers that asked about willingness to pay for public forage ...
Abstract: Livestock grazing on public lands continues to be a source of intense conflict and debate....
For nearly a century, the federal government has authorized ranchers to graze livestock on large are...
Past analysis of the impacts of higher federal grazing fees on ranch values have been purely specula...
Net returns to investment on western ranches are often low or negative. Ranchers who graze cattle on...
Policy analysis and planning requires that we know what the likely responses of affected parties to ...
Grazing permit value supposedly arises as a cost advantage for permit holders. Yet, ranches are over...
Despite large efforts to generate and extend management innovations for rangeland operators, little ...
To mitigate the adverse effects of reduced access to public forage, ranchers may require financial o...
In response to environmental pressure, public land agencies in Nevada have reduced animal unit month...
Since the late 1960s, the Nevada ranch community has come under increasing pressure from environment...
This study investigated the role that a public land grazing permit buyout would have on ranching ope...
The value of public land forage has been of key interest since grazing fees were first established o...
Recent rangeland reform attempts have increased ranchers'Â’ uncertainty of retaining grazing permits...
Federal land grazing fees have been set by a formula that uses a base rate developed from a 1966 stu...
Results from a 2002 survey of Nevada ranchers that asked about willingness to pay for public forage ...
Abstract: Livestock grazing on public lands continues to be a source of intense conflict and debate....
For nearly a century, the federal government has authorized ranchers to graze livestock on large are...
Past analysis of the impacts of higher federal grazing fees on ranch values have been purely specula...
Net returns to investment on western ranches are often low or negative. Ranchers who graze cattle on...
Policy analysis and planning requires that we know what the likely responses of affected parties to ...
Grazing permit value supposedly arises as a cost advantage for permit holders. Yet, ranches are over...
Despite large efforts to generate and extend management innovations for rangeland operators, little ...