ABSTRACT:
Respondents in a 1979 survey of Iowa farm operators were divided in their attitudes on several land use planning issues, including whether or not government should undertake land use planning, what levels of government might be most appropriately involved in different planning activities, and the attractiveness of various programs for reducing the conversion of agricultural land to nonfarm uses. Presumably, respondents' attitudes on land use planning would correlate with some of their background and situational characteristics, specifically, age, education, income, and farm size. Age and education proved to be significantly related to several of the farmers' attitudes, but the other characteristics, overall, had little relevance to how farmers feel about land use planning issues.
Footnotes
Gordon Bultena is a professor, Peter Nowak is an assitant professor, Eric Hoiberg is an associate professor, and Don Albrecht is a graduate research assistant in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Iowa State University, Ames, 50011. Journal Paper No. J-9940 of the Iowa Agriculture and Home Economics Experiment Station. Project No. 2303.
- Copyright 1981 by the Soil and Water Conservation Society
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