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Land, Volume 10, Issue 11

November 2021 - 175 articles

Cover Story: The increased urbanization of recent decades has resulted in the loss of urban green spaces. One policy used to prevent the loss is ecological compensation, where compensating can be done at different spatial scales. However, spatial relocation of green space will, most likely, also result in distributional welfare effects. Some individuals will lose, while others will benefit. We present an easy-to-use tool that can be used to evaluate the welfare effects of ecological compensation. In a case study, we used recreational values as a measure of welfare. The results showed that the differences in the valuation of urban green space among different groups of individuals had a fairly small impact on aggregate welfare. Aggregate welfare was mainly affected by the number of individuals that had access to urban green space. View this paper
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Land - ISSN 2073-445X