Register      Login
International Journal of Wildland Fire International Journal of Wildland Fire Society
Journal of the International Association of Wildland Fire

Articles citing this paper

Factors in United States Forest Service district rangers’ decision to manage a fire for resource benefit

Martha A. Williamson A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Department of Forest Management, College of Forestry and Conservation, University of Montana. Email: marthaawilliamson@yahoo.com

International Journal of Wildland Fire 16(6) 755-762 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF06019
Submitted: 15 February 2006  Accepted: 30 April 2007   Published: 17 December 2007



27 articles found in Crossref database.

Private landowner interest in prescribed fire in California: findings from workshops in the Sierra Nevada
Wilkin Kate M., Stasiewicz Amanda M., Kocher Susan D.
Fire Ecology. 2024 20(1).
Measuring Initial Attack Suppression Effectiveness through Burn Probability
Reimer Jonathan, Thompson Dan K., Povak Nicholas
Fire. 2019 2(4). p.60
Mulching fuels treatments promote understory plant communities in three Colorado, USA, coniferous forest types
Fornwalt Paula J., Rocca Monique E., Battaglia Mike A., Rhoades Charles C., Ryan Michael G.
Forest Ecology and Management. 2017 385 p.214
Effects of policy change on wildland fire management strategies: evidence for a paradigm shift in the western US?
Young Jesse D., Evans Alexander M., Iniguez Jose M., Thode Andrea, Meyer Marc D., Hedwall Shaula J., McCaffrey Sarah, Shin Patrick, Huang Ching-Hsun
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2020 29(10). p.857
Coconstruction of Ecosystem Services Management in Tribal Lands: Elicit Expert Opinion Approach
Tarancón Alicia Azpeleta, Kim Yeon-Su, Padilla Thora, Fulé Peter Z., Sánchez Meador Andrew J.
Weather, Climate, and Society. 2020 12(3). p.487
Voices from the Field: Wildland Fire Managers and High-Reliability Organizing Mindfulness
Thomas David, Fox Rebekah, Miller Carol
Society & Natural Resources. 2015 28(8). p.825
Managed Wildfire: A Strategy Facilitated by Civil Society Partnerships and Interagency Cooperation
Davis Emily Jane, Huber-Stearns H., Caggiano M., McAvoy D., Cheng A. S., Deak A., Evans A.
Society & Natural Resources. 2022 35(8). p.914
Rethinking the maps: A case study of knowledge incorporation in Canadian wildfire risk management and planning
Sherry Jennifer, Neale Timothy, McGee Tara K., Sharpe Maria
Journal of Environmental Management. 2019 234 p.494
Evaluating and monitoring forest fuel treatments using remote sensing applications in Arizona, U.S.A.
Petrakis Roy E., Villarreal Miguel L., Wu Zhuoting, Hetzler Robert, Middleton Barry R., Norman Laura M.
Forest Ecology and Management. 2018 413 p.48
Social, Institutional, and Psychological Factors Affecting Wildfire Incident Decision Making
Thompson Matthew P.
Society & Natural Resources. 2014 27(6). p.636
Wildfire Management Strategy and Its Relation to Operational Risk
Noonan-Wright Erin, Seielstad Carl
Journal of Forestry. 2024 122(4). p.352
Managing Wildfire Events: Risk‐Based Decision Making Among a Group of Federal Fire Managers
Wilson Robyn S., Winter Patricia L., Maguire Lynn A., Ascher Timothy
Risk Analysis. 2011 31(5). p.805
Factors Influencing Risk during Wildfires: Contrasting Divergent Regions in the US
Noonan-Wright Erin, Seielstad Carl
Fire. 2022 5(5). p.131
Impediments to prescribed fire across agency, landscape and manager: an example from northern California
Quinn-Davidson Lenya N., Varner J. Morgan
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2012 21(3). p.210
Use of Science and Modeling by Practitioners in Landscape-Scale Management Decisions
White Eric M, Lindberg Kreg, Davis Emily Jane, Spies Thomas A
Journal of Forestry. 2019 117(3). p.267
Evaluating the ecological benefits of wildfire by integrating fire and ecosystem simulation models
Keane Robert E., Karau Eva
Ecological Modelling. 2010 221(8). p.1162
Risk Preferences in Strategic Wildfire Decision Making: A Choice Experiment with U.S. Wildfire Managers
Wibbenmeyer Matthew J., Hand Michael S., Calkin David E., Venn Tyron J., Thompson Matthew P.
Risk Analysis. 2013 33(6). p.1021
Progress towards and barriers to implementation of a risk framework for US federal wildland fire policy and decision making
Calkin David C., Finney Mark A., Ager Alan A., Thompson Matthew P., Gebert Krista M.
Forest Policy and Economics. 2011 13(5). p.378
Social science research related to wildfire management: an overview of recent findings and future research needs
McCaffrey Sarah, Toman Eric, Stidham Melanie, Shindler Bruce
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2013 22(1). p.15
Comparing Geography and Severity of Managed Wildfires in California and the Southwest USA before and after the Implementation of the 2009 Policy Guidance
Iniguez Jose M., Evans Alexander M., Dadashi Sepideh, Young Jesse D., Meyer Marc D., Thode Andrea E., Hedwall Shaula J., McCaffrey Sarah M., Fillmore Stephen D., Bean Rachel
Forests. 2022 13(5). p.793
Patterns of wildfire risk in the United States from systematic operational risk assessments: how risk is characterised by land managers
Noonan-Wright Erin, Seielstad Carl A.
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 2021 30(8). p.569
The Role of Communication in Preparation for Wildland Fire: A Literature Review
Remenick Lauren
Environmental Communication. 2018 12(2). p.164
Private Forestlands in South Carolina: Motivations for Implementing Conservation Practices
Clay Lucas, Perkins Katharine, Motallebi Marzieh
Small-scale Forestry. 2022 21(4). p.581
A Qualitative Study on the US Forest Service’s Risk Management Assistance Efforts to Improve Wildfire Decision-Making
Schultz Courtney A., Miller Lauren F., Greiner Sarah Michelle, Kooistra Chad
Forests. 2021 12(3). p.344
The scientific value of fire in wilderness
Kreider Mark R., Jaffe Melissa R., Berkey Julia K., Parks Sean A., Larson Andrew J.
Fire Ecology. 2023 19(1).
The Ecological Importance of Mixed-Severity Fires (2015)
Ingalsbee Timothy, Raja Urooj

Committee on Publication Ethics


Abstract Export Citation Get Permission