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Grand Canyon For Sale: Public Lands versus Private Interests in the Era of Climate Change

Grand Canyon For Sale: Public Lands versus Private Interests in the Era of Climate Change

Current price: $29.95
Publication Date: September 5th, 2017
Publisher:
University of California Press
ISBN:
9780520291478
Pages:
304
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

Grand Canyon For Sale is a carefully researched investigation of the precarious future of America’s public lands: our national parks, forests, wildlife refuges, monuments, and wildernesses. Taking the Grand Canyon as his key example, and using on-the-ground reporting as well as scientific research, Stephen Nash shows how accelerating climate change will dislocate wildlife populations and vegetation across hundreds of thousands of square miles of the national landscape.
 
In addition, a growing political movement, well financed and occasionally violent, is fighting to break up these federal lands and return them to state, local, and private control. That scheme would foreclose the future for many wild species, which are part of our irreplaceable natural heritage, and also would devastate our national parks, forests, and other public lands.
 
To safeguard wildlife and their habitats, it is essential to consolidate protected areas and prioritize natural systems over mining, grazing, drilling, and logging. Grand Canyon For Sale provides an excellent overview of the physical and biological challenges facing public lands. The book also exposes and shows how to combat the political activity that threatens these places in the U.S. today.

About the Author

Stephen Nash is the author of two award-winning books on science and the environment, and his reporting has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, BioScience, Archaeology, and the New Republic. He is Visiting Senior Research Scholar at the University of Richmond.

Praise for Grand Canyon For Sale: Public Lands versus Private Interests in the Era of Climate Change

"Like a Romantic poet of the fossil fuel era, Nash uses Canyon trail hikes as a way to frame the various destructive forces playing on the park. With elegant, readable prose, elegant, readable prose, Nash scales mountains of research to show how these concerns are not unique to the Grand Canyon."
— SIERRA Magazine

“A wake-up call for anyone who cares about public lands, especially the U.S. national parks.”
 

— Science

“A nuanced, comprehensive, surprisingly up-to-date review of the threats facing the United States' 2.5 million square kilometres of publicly owned land.”

— Nature

"Evocative and passionate, this examination of invasive species, climate change, and public land use will appeal to both politically minded outdoors enthusiasts and members of the ranching community."
— Foreword Reviews

"...offers insight into how our public lands were created — and what that means as we fight to protect them today and in the future."
— The Revelator