@article{Versace:100727,
      recid = {100727},
      author = {Versace, V.L. and Scarborough, Helen and Ierodiaconou, D.  and O'Toole, K. and Wallis, A. and Stagnitti, F.},
      title = {Quantifying the potential impacts of increasing  agricultural fragmentation on land value},
      address = {2011},
      number = {422-2016-26850},
      pages = {19},
      year = {2011},
      abstract = {Societal expectations from rural lands have traditionally  been focussed on the production of food and
fibre. Yet the  perception of rural areas is changing and they are now seen  in many instances to be
capable of delivering multiple  functions or non-commodity outputs including land  conservation and
the preservation of biodiversity,  contributing to the sustainable management of renewable  natural
resources and enhancing the socio-economic  viability of many areas (OECD, 2001). The  overall
multifunctionality is constrained or favoured by  biophysical and socio-economic drivers. As these
types of  drivers vary spatially and temporally, so does the  functionality of the landscape and
heterogeneous patterns  emerge. Associated with multiple functions at a single  location are a variety of
pressures which can manifest  themselves as conflict between interacting land uses  (Gimona and van
der Horst, 2007; Willemen et al., 2010).  One such conflict in rural zones is that between  agricultural
use and residential use.},
      url = {http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/100727},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.22004/ag.econ.100727},
}