John Copeland Nagle Shows How Our Reliance On Environmental Law Affects The Natural Environment Through An Examination Of Five Diverse Places In The American Landscape: Alaska's Adak Island; The Susquehanna River; Colton In California's Inland Empire; Theodore Roosevelt National Park In The Badlands Of North Dakota; And Alamogordo In New Mexico. Nagle Asks Why Some Places Are Preserved By The Law While Others Are Not, And He Finds That Environmental Laws Often Have Unexpected Results While Other Laws Have Surprising Effects On The Environment. Nagle Argues That Sound Environmental Policy Requires Better Coordination Among The Many Laws, Regulations, And Social Norms That Determine The Values And Uses Of Our Scarce Lands And Waters. The End Of The Earth : Adak Island, Alaska, -- The Mayor's Oversized Flyswatter : Colton, California, -- Heaven Or Hell? : The Badlands Of Western North Dakota -- River Enigma : The Susquehanna River -- Lights Out : Alamogordo, New Mexico. John Copeland Nagle. Bibliographic Level Mode Of Issuance: Monograph Includes Bibliographical References (p. 253-283) And Index. English
show more...Just click on START button on Telegram Bot