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Book
Protected Areas and the Regional Planning Imperative in North America: Integrating Nature Conservation and Sustainable Development
(2003)
  • James Loucky
  • Gordon Nelson
  • J. C. Day
  • Lucy M. Sportza
  • Carlos Vasquez
Abstract
Regional planning is imperative if North America has any hope of retaining continental biodiversity. This timely collection of essays that presents new protected area theory, method, and practice reinforces this theme of regional planning. With a North American focus, these essays consider the history, ecology, policy, and planning of protected areas while raising awareness of their contribution to society. Contemporary understanding of protected areas are challenged as the book forces readers to move from a mentality of the past that saw protected areas as “fortresses,” to a wider understanding of where protected areas are seen as interdependent with other landscapes in the matters of biodiversity, ecological integrity,and environmental health. Public officials in resources and environmental management, NGOs concerned with parks and protected areas, and students of tourism, environment, and planning and education will find current ideology and application in this collection of essays by scholars from Canada, the United States, and Mexico.
Keywords
  • Regional planning,
  • Protected areas,
  • North America,
  • Nature conservation
Publication Date
2003
Editor
Gordon Nelson, J.C. Day, Lucy M. Sportza, James Loucky, and Carlos Vasquez
Publisher
Michigan State University Press
Series
Parks and Heritage Series
Citation Information
James Loucky, Gordon Nelson, J. C. Day, Lucy M. Sportza, et al.. Protected Areas and the Regional Planning Imperative in North America: Integrating Nature Conservation and Sustainable Development. Vol. Book 7 (2003)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/james-loucky/51/