Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T09:55:02.028Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Economics of Land Use Change: Advancing the Frontiers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2016

Lori Lynch
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Maryland in College Park, Maryland, Center for Agricultural and Natural Resource Policy, University of Maryland
Jacqueline Geoghegan
Affiliation:
Department of Economics at Clark University, in Worcester, Massachusetts
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Foreword
Copyright
Copyright © 2011 Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association 

References

Albers, H.J. and Robinson, E.J.Z. 2011. “The Trees and the Bees: Using Enforcement and Income Projects to Protect Forests and Rural Livelihoods Through Spatial Joint Production.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 40(3): 424438.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arnott, R.J. and Lewis, F.D. 1979. “The Transition of Land to Urban Use.” Journal of Political Economy 87(1): 161169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bento, A.M. Franco, S.F. and Kaffine, D. 2011. “Welfare Effects of Anti-Sprawl Policies in the Presence of Urban Decline.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 40(3): 439450.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bento, A. Towe, C. and Geoghegan, J. 2007. “The Effects of Moratoria on Residential Development: Evidence from a Matching Approach.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 89(5): 12111218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bockstael, N.E. 1996. “Modeling Economics and Ecology: The Importance of a Spatial Perspective.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 78(5): 11681180.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, J. and Geoghegan, J. 2011. “Spatially Delineated Public Goods and Spatially Located Public Bads: A Hedonic Approach to Measuring Urban Revitalization.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 40(3): 360374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carrion-Flores, C. and Irwin, E.G. 2004. “Determinants of Residential Land-Use Conversion and Sprawl at the Rural-Urban Fringe.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 86(4): 889904.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caviglia-Harris, J. and Harris, D. 2011. “The Impact of Settlement Design on Tropical Deforestation Rates and Resulting Land Cover Patterns.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 40(3): 451470.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, Y. Irwin, E.G. and Jayaprakash, C. 2011. “Incorporating Spatial Complexity into Economic Models of Land Markets and Land Use Change.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 40(3): 321340.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deacon, R.T. Brookshire, D.S. Fisher, A.C. Kneese, A.V. Kolstad, C.D. Scrogin, D. Kerry Smith, V. Wared, M. and Wilen, J. 1998. “Research Trends and Opportunities in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics.” Environmental and Resource Economics 11(3/4): 383397.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Filatova, T. Parker, D.C. and van der Veen, A. 2011. “The Implications of Skewed Risk Perception for a Dutch Coastal Land Market: Insights from an Agent-Based Computational Economics Model.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 40(3): 405423.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fulton, W. Pendall, R. Nguyen, M. and Harrison, A. 2001. “Who Sprawls Most: How Growth Patterns Differ Across the United States.” Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy, the Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Geoghegan, J. 2002. “The Value of Open Spaces in Residential Land Use.” Land Use Policy 19(1): 9198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geoghegan, J. Lynch, L. and Bucholtz, S. 2003. “Capitalization of Open Spaces: Can Agricultural Easements Pay for Themselves?Agricultural and Resource Economic Review 32(1): 3345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geoghegan, J. Wainger, L. and Bockstael, N.E. 1997. “Spatial Landscape Indices in a Hedonic Framework: An Ecological Economic Analysis Using GIS.” Ecological Economics 23(3): 251264.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heimlich, R.E. and Anderson, W.D. 2001. “Development at the Urban Fringe and Beyond: Impacts on Agriculture and Rural Land.” Agricultural Economic Report No. 803, Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Irwin, E.G. Bell, K.P. and Geoghegan, J. 2003. “Modeling and Managing Urban Growth at the Rural-Urban Fringe: A Parcel-Level Model of Residential Land Use Change.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 32(1): 83102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin, E.G. and Bockstael, N.E. 2002. “Interacting Agents, Spatial Externalities and the Evolution of Residential Land Use Patterns.” Journal of Economic Geography 2(1): 3154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin, E.G. and Bockstael, N.E. 2007. “The Evolution of Urban Sprawl: Evidence of Spatial Heterogeneity and Increasing Land Fragmentation.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 104(52): 2067220677.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaza, N. Towe, C. and Ye, X. 2011. “A Hybrid Land Conversion Model Incorporating Multiple End Uses.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 40(3): 341359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klemick, H. 2011. “Constraints or Cooperation? Determinants of Secondary Forest Cover Under Shifting Cultivation.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 40(3): 471487.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, D.J. and Plantinga, A.J. 2007. “Policies for Habitat Fragmentation: Combining Econometrics with GIS-Based Landscape Simulations.” Land Economics 83(2): 109127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lichtenberg, E. 2011. “Open Space and Urban Sprawl: The Effects of Zoning and Forest Conservation Regulations in Maryland.” Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 40(3): 393404.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lynch, L. Gray, W. and Geoghegan, J. 2007Are Farmland Preservation Programs Easement Restrictions Capitalized into Farmland Prices? What Can a Propensity Score Matching Analysis Tell Us?Review of Agricultural Economics 29(3): 502509.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lynch, L. and Liu, X. 2007Impact of Designated Preservation Areas on Rate of Preservation and Rate of Conversion: Preliminary Evidence.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 89(5): 12051210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lynch, L. and Lovell, S.J. 2003. “Combining Spatial and Survey Data to Explain Participation in Agricultural Land Preservation Programs.” Land Economics 79(2): 259276.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lynch, L. and Musser, W.N. 2001. “A Relative Efficiency Analysis of Farmland Preservation Programs.” Land Economics 77(4): 577594.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newburn, D. and Berck, P. 2011. “Growth Management Policies for Exurban and Suburban Development: Theory and an Application to Sonoma County, California.Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 40(3): 375392.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paterson, R.W. and Boyle, K.J. 2002. “Out of Sight, Out of Mind? Using GIS to Incorporate Visibility in Hedonic Property Value Models.” Land Economics 78(3): 417425.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plantinga, A.J. and Miller, D.J. 2001. “Agricultural Land Values and the Value of Rights to Future Land Development.” Land Economics 77(1): 5667.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Towe, C.A. Nickerson, C.J. and Bockstael, N.E. 2008. “An Empirical Examination of the Timing of Land Conversions in the Presence of Farmland Preservation Programs.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 90(3): 613626.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wu, J. 2006. “Environmental Amenities, Urban Sprawl, and Community Characteristics.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 52(2): 527547.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wu, J. and Irwin, E.G. 2008. “Optimal Land Development with Endogenous Environmental Amenities.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 90(1): 232248.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wu, J. and Plantinga, A.J. 2003. “The Influence of Public Open Space on Urban Spatial Structure.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 46(2): 288309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar