First Published in 2011. During the 1970s, land managers in the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management (BLM) often must have felt they lived in interesting times. The decade began with the first Earth Day, an event that revealed the increasing strength and militancy of the environmental movement; as it ended, western commercial users of the public lands, disaffected by environmentalist policymaking victories, had launched the "sagebrush rebellion." Those managers were expected to reconcile often sharply polarized interest group pressures with professional values, as well as with diverse federal statutes and regulations that reflected uneasy compromises among group and professional influences. Although the technical specifics of public lands management differ from those in other fields of natural resources management, the political tensions in public lands policymaking are similar to those in other natural resources fields. Thus, this description of the Forest Service’s xiii xiv PREFACE and BLM’s handling of those tensions should be of interest to many in the natural resources management community as a whole. This study should also be useful to students of public administrative politics generally.
Paul J. Culhane
Public Lands Politics [PDF ebook]
Interest Group Influence on the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management
Public Lands Politics [PDF ebook]
Interest Group Influence on the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management
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Taal Engels ● Formaat PDF ● Pagina’s 417 ● ISBN 9781135990787 ● Uitgeverij Taylor and Francis ● Gepubliceerd 2013 ● Downloadbare 6 keer ● Valuta EUR ● ID 2844865 ● Kopieerbeveiliging Adobe DRM
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