In 1979 the Nevada state legislature passed a bill providing for state control of certain lands within the state boundaries under the administration of the Bureau of Land Management. Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming immediately followed suit. Public land users reacted swiftly and the Sagebrush Rebellion was on.
Westerners, driven by the sheer size of the federal estate (99 percent of BLM lands are located in twelve western states) and angered by what they perceived as undue influence by the environmental movement on federal policies, sought to protect and control the resource and recreational use of public lands that they deemed essential to their state economies.
In this book, R. McGreggor Cawley objectively investigates the Rebellion, looking at the driving force behind the movement, the strategies used by the Rebels, and the consequences of the controversy. He examines how the definitions of key federal land management concepts, such as conservation, influenced policymaking and explores tensions that pitted the West against other regions and the federal government.
In the process, he analyzes James Watt's beleaguered tenure as secretary of the interior and the Reagan administration's proposal to sell federal lands and shows how the conflict created an unexpected division within the environmental movement.
Going beyond the Rebellion, Cawley offers provocative interpretation of events in federal land policy from the 1960s to the 1990s and establishes a framework for assessing future developments in federal land policy.
McClure's support for wolf recovery surprised many people, while a number of environmentalists were downright suspicious. An experienced politician, McClure knew that wolves, like those in Browning a few years earlier, would eventually ...
This is the first comprehensive history of the Bureau of Land Management, the federal agency that manages a vast assortment of nameless lands in the American West.
Issues like clearcutting, wilderness preservation, and economic development have dominated debates over public lands for years, yet we seem no closer to resolving these matters than we ever were. ...
The essays in Land in the American West deal with complex, troublesome, and interrelated questions regarding land: Who owns it? Who has access to it?
Watch the book trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jsq-6LAeYKk
... recreation had value and was a legitimate use of public lands immediately brought into conflict those wedded to the traditional vision of conservation. The old clash of visions reemerged. The preservationists now 26 Battle for the Big Sky.
Cubbage, Frederick W., Jay O'Laughlin, and Charles S. Bullock III. 1993. Forest Resource Policy. New York: John Wiley & Sons. Culhane, Paul. 1981. Public Lands Politics. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Cushman, John. 1994.
Craig E. Colten and Geoffrey Buckley (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2014); Paul F. Starrs, Let the Cowboy Ride: Cattle Ranching the American West (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000). 2. The same text appears in S.Res.
That evening, Hodel appeared on McNeil-Lehrer, a must watch program for Washington insiders. Robert McNeil was in New York and Jim Lehrer was in Washington, D.C. Hodel appeared with Jim Lehrer who had each of Iacocca's questions played ...
Wahl , Richard W. Markets for Federal Water : Subsidies , Property Rights , and the Bureau of Reclamation . Washington , D.C .: Resources for the Future , 1989 . Walton , John . Western Times and Water Wars : State , Culture , and ...