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      A QUALITATIVE STUDY OF MOTIVATION AND INFLUENCES FOR ACADEMIC GREEN BUILDING DEVELOPMENTS IN AUSTRALIAN UNIVERSITIES

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          Abstract

          Green building projects have been adopted by many universities in Australia as part of their renovation and expansion. In order to investigate the motivations of academic decision makers to invest in green facilities, a comprehensive analysis of media articles of 24 green academic buildings approved by the Green Building Council of Australia (between 2004 and 2011) were analysed using a qualitative analytical approach based on grounded theory. Findings in this work show that the decision makers in Australian universities are more likely to be driven by the direct benefits green buildings brought to the universities, enhancing universities' reputation and meeting the specific needs for education and research. Other factors that deal with improving universities' financial conditions and environmental protection were found to be a lower significance for investments. However the connections between the motivating factors also reveal the indirect benefits of green buildings which are an enhancement in reputation by fulfilling an environmental protection responsibility and research capacity enhancement by supplying technical study opportunities for students and researchers. This paper proposes an approach to deal with the complex network of vague and subjective concepts of the green buildings comprehension. It supplies researchers with tools for analysing abstract concepts and determining their interactions.

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          Most cited references22

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          Sample size in qualitative research.

          A common misconception about sampling in qualitative research is that numbers are unimportant in ensuring the adequacy of a sampling strategy. Yet, simple sizes may be too small to support claims of having achieved either informational redundancy or theoretical saturation, or too large to permit the deep, case-oriented analysis that is the raison-d'être of qualitative inquiry. Determining adequate sample size in qualitative research is ultimately a matter of judgment and experience in evaluating the quality of the information collected against the uses to which it will be put, the particular research method and purposeful sampling strategy employed, and the research product intended.
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              Adopting sustainable innovation: what makes consumers sign up to green electricity?

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                jgrb
                Journal of Green Building
                College Publishing
                1552-6100
                1943-4618
                1943-4618
                Summer 2013
                : 8
                : 3
                : 166-183
                Author notes

                1Environmental Science, Department of Environment & Geography, Faculty of Science, Macquarie University, NSW 2109 Australia. E-mail: xiaofeng.li@ 123456mq.edu.au (Corresponding author).

                2Environmental Science, Department of Environment & Geography, Faculty of Science, Macquarie University, NSW 2109 Australia. E-mail: vladimir.strezov@ 123456mq.edu.au

                1Community Planning and Development, School of Humanities, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, La Trobe University, VIC 3552 Australia. E-mail: m.amati@ 123456latrobe.edu.au

                Article
                jgb.8.3.166
                10.3992/jgb.8.3.166
                79835a79-1af6-4df4-b2f1-9a433e8041c3
                ©2013 by College Publishing. All rights reserved.
                History
                Page count
                Pages: 18
                Categories
                RESEARCH ARTICLES

                Urban design & Planning,Civil engineering,Environmental management, Policy & Planning,Architecture,Environmental engineering
                qualitative research,grounded theory,green buildings,higher education institutions,trends,motivations

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