✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
Mojave Lands: Interpretive Planning and the National Preserve (Center Books on Contemporary Landscape Design),Used
HomeStore

Mojave Lands: Interpretive Planning and the National Preserve (Center Books on Contemporary Landscape Design),Used

Mojave Lands: Interpretive Planning and the National Preserve (Center Books on Contemporary Landscape Design),Used

$28.38
Mojave Lands: Interpretive Planning and the National Preserve (Center Books on Contemporary Landscape Design),Used
$28.38

The Story

Controversy inevitably accompanies attempts at land protection, even in cases of large, uninhabited, economically marginal locations. In 1994, for example, the California Desert Protection Act created the Mojave National Preserve, the third largest national park in the lower fortyeight states. The act transferred three million acres of southern California desert from the Bureau of Land Management to the National Park Service. As a result, explains Elisabeth M. Hamin, the National Park Service became a multipleuse manager, balancing its official mission of environmental protection with oversight of such activities as hunting, ranching, and mining.In Mojave Lands: Interpretive Planning and the National Preserve, Hamin explains how this new role came about. Drawing on interviews with people on various sides of the issuefrom mining lobbyists to local ecotourism operators, legislators to gun advocatesshe shows how the differing parties argued and compromised over land protection. From their success, Hamin derives lessons for reimagining national parks to achieve broadly shared goals.Introducing the concept of "interpretive planning"a method that takes into account conflicting views of all interested partiesshe offers explicit steps for the planner and policy analyst to use. This book will appeal to scholars and students in environmental studies, planning and landscape architecture and history, as well as professionals in planning, resource management, the National Park Service, and related conservation organizations, public and private.

Description

Controversy inevitably accompanies attempts at land protection, even in cases of large, uninhabited, economically marginal locations. In 1994, for example, the California Desert Protection Act created the Mojave National Preserve, the third largest national park in the lower fortyeight states. The act transferred three million acres of southern California desert from the Bureau of Land Management to the National Park Service. As a result, explains Elisabeth M. Hamin, the National Park Service became a multipleuse manager, balancing its official mission of environmental protection with oversight of such activities as hunting, ranching, and mining.In Mojave Lands: Interpretive Planning and the National Preserve, Hamin explains how this new role came about. Drawing on interviews with people on various sides of the issuefrom mining lobbyists to local ecotourism operators, legislators to gun advocatesshe shows how the differing parties argued and compromised over land protection. From their success, Hamin derives lessons for reimagining national parks to achieve broadly shared goals.Introducing the concept of "interpretive planning"a method that takes into account conflicting views of all interested partiesshe offers explicit steps for the planner and policy analyst to use. This book will appeal to scholars and students in environmental studies, planning and landscape architecture and history, as well as professionals in planning, resource management, the National Park Service, and related conservation organizations, public and private.

Mojave Lands: Interpretive Planning and the National Preserve (Center Books on Contemporary Landscape Design),Used | Ergodebooks