Reforming Federal Land Management

Cutting the Gordian Knot

By (author) Allan K. Fitzsimmons

Hardback - £75.00

Publication date:

15 March 2012

Length of book:

188 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Dimensions:

237x166mm
7x9"

ISBN-13: 9781442215962

For over a century, American have created laws, processes, objectives, priorities, and rules for federal land management that often conflict, contradict, and undermine each other. We now find ourselves with inconsistent laws, unclear priorities, procedural mazes, and an antiquated bureaucratic structure. Processes and procedures often impede rather than aid management actions and prevent good stewardship. The overall result is a loss of public benefits and undesirable impact on natural resources. Allan Fitzsimmons presents a clear argument for major changes and offers new ideas for how those changes can be accomplished. Students and professionals interested in public policy, resource management, and environmental studies will find this book to be particularly interesting.

To anyone concerned with federal lands—covering 28 percent of the United States—it is obvious that competing and overlapping laws, agencies, courts, and interest groups have made coherent management impossible. The great achievement of this book is to make the obvious inescapable and to propose politically practicable policies for reforming the administration of these lands.