A Rediscovered Frontier: Land Use and Resource Issues in the New West
Autor Philip L. Jackson, Robert Kuhlkenen Limba Engleză Hardback – 3 ian 2006
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780742526167
ISBN-10: 074252616X
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 176 x 235 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 074252616X
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 176 x 235 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter 1 LAND USE AND RESOURCE ISSUES IN THE NEW WEST
Chapter 2 DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS AND PROTOTYPES
Chapter 3 A GEOGRAPHIC LAND USE DIGEST
Chapter 4 CONVERGENT PROBLEMS, DIVERGENT SOLUTIONS
Chapter 5 THE TAKINGS ISSUE AS A CHALLENGE TO GROWTH MANAGEMENT
Chapter 6 A RATIONAL MODEL FOR COMPREHENSIVE LAND USE PLANNING
Chapter 2 DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS AND PROTOTYPES
Chapter 3 A GEOGRAPHIC LAND USE DIGEST
Chapter 4 CONVERGENT PROBLEMS, DIVERGENT SOLUTIONS
Chapter 5 THE TAKINGS ISSUE AS A CHALLENGE TO GROWTH MANAGEMENT
Chapter 6 A RATIONAL MODEL FOR COMPREHENSIVE LAND USE PLANNING
Recenzii
A Rediscovered Frontier provides an excellent and sweeping 'digest' of the state of land use planning in the rapidly changing New West. This fine volume is essential reading on contemporary planning issues, emerging development patterns, and the convergent resource conflicts that come with landscape transformation. A significant contribution.
Read this book if you want to know to what the New West is, where it is, and how it is changing the contemporary landscape of the American West. Jackson and Kuhlken describe both larger trends and the changes taking place in specific places, large and small, and make recommendations citizens and planners should seriously consider.
Geographers Phillip Jackson and Robert Kuhlken take us on a tour of the small-town and rural West, where rapid population growth and land development are changing the social and physical landscape. From Bend, Oregon, to Ruidoso, New Mexico, they track the New West, and take the measure of challenges faced by local leaders and residents, many of whom want to fight growth, or at least channel it in ways that maintain their communities' identity and sense of place. This book will help those communities.
This is a fresh look at land use trends in the rural West. The authors examine these trends in the context of controversies over growth management in rural communities, and the likely consequences of the 2004 vote on Measure 37 in the State of Oregon that challenges that state's progressive growth management legislation. They urge a return to values prevalent earlier in the settlement of the region, in which individual opportunity was balanced with common-property needs-a strong challenge to Westerner's boxed in to a growing extent by population growth.
This fine book should be required reading for every resident of the New West. Philip Jackson and Robert Kuhlken provide a sweeping reconnaissance of one of America's fastest changing regions. From Bozeman, Montana to Prescott, Arizona we see the emerging land use issues and conflicts of the New West through the eyes of a pair of veteran observers. The solutions they propose will be of interest not only to planners, developers, and local government officials, but to every westerner, both New and Old, who calls the region home."
An essential resource for thinking about western problems, A Rediscovered Frontier provides explanations and solutions for a troubled region. It'll hold a prominent place on my bookshelf.
A Rediscovered Frontier is a great introduction to land use policy and development issues in the New West. Jackson and Kuhlken examine shifting land use planning and resource development issues that have emerged as the Old West resource extraction economy is transformed into the New West economy of tourism, outdoor recreation, and scenic amenities. This book is a great guide to the New West for land use planners and policy analysts. It helps the reader understand how the rural West and local communities can better adapt to this new settlement frontier.
This volume is primarily aimed at professionals and policy makers involved in contemporary land use planning debates in the American West. Recommended.
Read this book if you want to know to what the New West is, where it is, and how it is changing the contemporary landscape of the American West. Jackson and Kuhlken describe both larger trends and the changes taking place in specific places, large and small, and make recommendations citizens and planners should seriously consider.
Geographers Phillip Jackson and Robert Kuhlken take us on a tour of the small-town and rural West, where rapid population growth and land development are changing the social and physical landscape. From Bend, Oregon, to Ruidoso, New Mexico, they track the New West, and take the measure of challenges faced by local leaders and residents, many of whom want to fight growth, or at least channel it in ways that maintain their communities' identity and sense of place. This book will help those communities.
This is a fresh look at land use trends in the rural West. The authors examine these trends in the context of controversies over growth management in rural communities, and the likely consequences of the 2004 vote on Measure 37 in the State of Oregon that challenges that state's progressive growth management legislation. They urge a return to values prevalent earlier in the settlement of the region, in which individual opportunity was balanced with common-property needs-a strong challenge to Westerner's boxed in to a growing extent by population growth.
This fine book should be required reading for every resident of the New West. Philip Jackson and Robert Kuhlken provide a sweeping reconnaissance of one of America's fastest changing regions. From Bozeman, Montana to Prescott, Arizona we see the emerging land use issues and conflicts of the New West through the eyes of a pair of veteran observers. The solutions they propose will be of interest not only to planners, developers, and local government officials, but to every westerner, both New and Old, who calls the region home."
An essential resource for thinking about western problems, A Rediscovered Frontier provides explanations and solutions for a troubled region. It'll hold a prominent place on my bookshelf.
A Rediscovered Frontier is a great introduction to land use policy and development issues in the New West. Jackson and Kuhlken examine shifting land use planning and resource development issues that have emerged as the Old West resource extraction economy is transformed into the New West economy of tourism, outdoor recreation, and scenic amenities. This book is a great guide to the New West for land use planners and policy analysts. It helps the reader understand how the rural West and local communities can better adapt to this new settlement frontier.
This volume is primarily aimed at professionals and policy makers involved in contemporary land use planning debates in the American West. Recommended.