Living with the Adirondack forest : local perspectives on land use conflicts /
In the land use controversy that has led people to pour sand in the gas tanks of logging trucks and set barns on fire, some voices have still not been heard. Catherine Henshaw Knott listened to people with divergent views of the forest: Native Americans for whom it is tribal land and visitors for wh...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Ithaca :
Cornell University Press,
1998.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- List of Photographs
- Adirondack Species Mentioned in the Text
- Organizations and Terms
- Preface
- Introduction (starting p. 1)
- The Human / Nature Relationship
- 1 The Adirondacks: A Case Study of Land Use Conflict (starting p. 19)
- 2 Wildlife: From Skins to Kin (starting p. 30)
- 3 History of Land Use Philosophies in the Adirondacks (starting p. 54)
- Woods and Woodspeople
- 4 The Woods and the People: Tupper Lake Loggers (starting p. 96)
- 5 Crafters, Trappers, Gatherers, and Guides (starting p. 120)
- 6 Tree Farmers and Maple Syrup Producers: Architects of the Forest (starting p. 137)
- Community and Conflict
- 7 Reflective Practitioners (starting p. 158)
- 8 Newcomb's Plan (starting p. 216)
- 9 Battles and Bridges (starting p. 228)
- 10 Views of the Forest (starting p. 254)
- Epilogue: Fire and Water (starting p. 279)
- Appendix National and International Examples of Regional Land Use Planning (starting p. 281)
- Bibliography (starting p. 289)
- Index (starting p. 303)