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Regional Environmental Policies, Environmental Science - General & Miscellaneous, Environmental Conservation & Protection Policy, Natural Resources - General & Miscellaneous
Hope for the Land by Little β€” book cover

Hope for the Land

by Little
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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

To ecology and equity, as criteria for ethical land-use decision-making, Little ( Greenways for America ) would add aesthetics. Noting that the U.S. has no permanent policy for land conservation and landscape preservation, he criticizes the conservation movement for yielding its positions to cost-benefit analyses, and charges that the cause of outdoor recreation often leads to the destruction, not the preservation, of the landscape. He examines the dire state of agriculture and the decreasing water supply on the Great Plains, and looks at proposals to return this plowed-out, dried-out land to open prairie. To the three conventional categories of land use--settlement, agriculture and wilderness--he adds ``the living landscape,'' citing three successfully managed areas: New Jersey's Pine Barrens, the Lake District in England (a national park), and Adirondack Park in New York State. These exemplify ``greenlining''--maintaining coherent landscape with outstanding public value partially owned by public and quasi-public agencies, plus unspoiled land still in private ownership. Little introduces people from around the country whose conservation efforts illustrate that his principles can work in inner-city neighborhoods as well as in open spaces. (May)

Library Journal

Combining many years of conservation work, in and out of government, with strong journalistic talents, Little has written a book that is full of insight, sadness, and hope. From topics as diverse as the disappearance of the African American farm to the lack of a recognized land ethic, he continually focuses on his key point: the land that we inhabit has utility far beyond mere economics. He argues for a new morality that recognizes this central fact. While clearly disappointed in the lack of progress toward a land ethic, Little does not dispair. He cites the ``greenlining'' concept that helped save New Jersey's Pine Barrens and New York State's Adirondacks from overdevelopment as a particularly hopeful trend. Since it lacks a notes section or index, this work is not appropriate for scholars, but it is a well-written and informative book for general readers. Recommended for general environmental collections.--Randy Dykhuis, OCLC, Dublin, Ohio

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1992
Publisher
New Brunswick, N.J. : Rutgers University Press, c1992.
Pages
240
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780813518022

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