American Forests
Nature, Culture, and Politics
Edited by Char Miller
288 pages, 6 x 9
Development of Western Resources
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0848-5, $35.00
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0849-2, $19.95
Endangered ecosystem or renewable
resource? How we feel about forests has to do with more than
trees.
This interdisciplinary collection of essays examines the history
of forestry in the United States, exploring the impact of the
discipline on natural and human landscapes since the mid-nineteenth
century. Through important articles that have helped define the
field, it assesses the development of the forestry profession
and the U.S. Forest Service, analyzes the political and scientific
controversies that have marked forestry's evolution, and discloses
the transformations in America's commitment to its forested estate.
American Forests highlights the intersection of the
political, social, and environmental forces that have determined
the use and abuse of American forests. It examines changes both
in the assumptions that have defined forest management and in
the scientific approach to--and political justification for--timber
harvesting in our national forests. It sheds light on the ongoing
debate between utilization and conservation, addressing arguments
from environmentalists, the timber industry, sportsmen, and politicians
while exploring the interaction between public opinion and public
policy. It provides sharp insights into the most important players
in the politics of forestry, from George Perkins Marsh and Berhard
Fernow to Gifford Pinchot and Teddy Roosevelt. And it addresses
issues as wide-ranging as budgeting, clearcutting, and the regulation
of livestock grazing on national forest lands.
This multifaceted volume draws on the insights of scholars
in conservation and ecology, economics, history, law, and political
science to make a definitive contribution to the study and practice
of forestry. By both clarifying and extending recent debate about
the political purpose, scientific character, and environmental
rationales of forestry in America, it will help define the place
of forests in our future.
"There is great value to bringing these peices together.
The line-up of authors is impressive indeed."--Thomas
Cox, author of The Park Builders and This Well-Wooded
Land
CHAR MILLER is professor of history at Trinity University.
He has published extensively on U.S. forestry and is the author
of Gifford Pinchot: The Evolution of An American Conservationist.
CONTRIBUTORS: Thomas G. Alexander, Arnold W. Bolle,
David Clary, Richard L. Clow, Stephen Haycox, Nancy Langston,
Char Miller, Donald J. Pisani, John Reiger, William G. Robbins,
Dennis Roth, Hal K. Rothman, Susan Schrepfer, Harold K. Steen,
Robert E. Wolfe
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