ETD Electronic Theses & Dissertations
About ETD Search the ETD Database    

 

 

Full text available full text is available online.

Document ID:FTY2008-006
Document Type:Thesis
Author:Marilynne Jones Mann
E-mail Address:
URN:
Title:"Bad Apples," Overworked Trail Workers and Landowner Relations: Meanings of ATV Riding in Maine's Clubs
Degree:m.s
Department:Forest Resources
Committee Chair:Jessica E. Leahy, Assistant Professor of Forest Resources
Chair's E-mail:
Committee Members:Elizabeth J. Allan, Associate Professor, Higher Education Leadership ; Stephen D. Reiling, Interim Director of the School of Forest Resources
Subjects:All terrain vehicle driving -- Maine; Clubs -- Maine
Date of Defense:2008
Availability:

Abstract

This research is composed of two essays employing interpretive research to study ATV riding through the perspective of ATV clubs in Maine. Manuscript I is a study of meanings and the connections ATV riders expressed for this particular recreational activity, and Manuscript II is a study of social capital from the perspective of ATV riders as members of particular ATV clubs. Manuscript I is titled, "Connections: Integrated Meanings of ATV Riding among Club Members in Maine." This interpretive research has been identified as an appropriate way to understand and examine the meanings people construct to make sense of their experiences within a leisure or recreation phenomenon. Members (n=19) of three different all-terrain vehicle (ATV) clubs in Maine were interviewed to discover the integrated meanings of ATV riding. Common themes emerged from the analysis including participants' feelings toward nature, social interaction, and an introspective connection with self. The findings have implications for individual rider's commitment and responsibility to their outdoor recreation activity, local club members, communities, and outdoor recreation planners and managers. Manuscript II is titled, "Adapting Social Capital Theory to a Recreation-based Voluntary Association Context." Interaction in voluntary associations contributes to the fomiation of social capital based on investments in social relations. This study is a search for the social capital operational in a recreation-based voluntary association. Lin's (2001) model of social capital has been modified through in-depth personal interviews of 19 club members with the goal of representing the structure and network resources operational within three ATVclubs. Qualitative, interpretive research methodologies were employed to uncover how clubs develop social capital in the natural setting and focused on the thick, descriptive quality of participants' words, allowing the emergent nature of inquiry to flow from all aspects of research using the constant comparative method. This study identified hindrances to social capital within the ATV club context including the counter-norm of "bad apples" and deviation from norms by club members. Instrumental and expressive outcomes are examined which may be useful for marketing efforts promoting ATV riding to landowners, managers and communities resistant to embracing this recreational activity. The state agencies who partially fund clubs through trail grants, may find this study useful in determining the return on investment being generated by clubs.


Access to the full text document is restricted to students and faculty at the University of Maine.

Mann, Marilynne Jones, University of Maine, FTY2008-006

 

Fogler Digital Library
How to submit your electronic thesis or dissertation
UM Graduate School Fogler Library The University of Maine