Managing the Commons

Managing the Commons

Second Edition, Indiana University Press, 1998, John A. Baden, contributing author and editor (with Douglas S. Noonan). This is a new edition of a pioneering work on the origins, developments, and recent innovations in the debate on managing commonly-owned lands and resources. It includes both new and updated essays which focus on alternate institutional approaches […]

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 Economy   and Ecology in the Next West

Economy and Ecology in the Next West

The West has long considered natural resource industries – logging, mining, and ranching – as economic keystones. Westerners have relied upon the federal “landlord” for substantial economic benefits. The world’s largest system of water diversions and network of forest access roads (eight times the mileage of the U.S. interstate highway system) testify to their success. […]

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 Natural Landscapes Key to Region’s Economic Health

Natural Landscapes Key to Region’s Economic Health

“The data is overwhelming,” said University of Montana professor Paul Polzin. “There is no correlation between growth and amenities.” Economist Myles Watts of Montana State University laments that mining, factory, and timber jobs are “the sort of jobs that will lift the standard of living for a county or even an entire state.” These comments […]

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 Lack   of Public Trust Thwarts Sound Forest Management

Lack of Public Trust Thwarts Sound Forest Management

Forest conservationists have a love-hate relationship with the Forest Service. Created to protect Western forests from the dangers of irresponsible private sector management, the Forest Service promised an efficient, responsive, and scientific approach. But things didn’t turn out that way. Despite the rhetoric of “multiple use”, political planning prevailed. That process encouraged, and often forced, […]

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 Repost: Lack   of Public Trust Thwarts Sound Forest Management

Repost: Lack of Public Trust Thwarts Sound Forest Management

Forest conservationists have a love-hate relationship with the Forest Service. Created to protect Western forests from the dangers of irresponsible private sector management, the Forest Service promised an efficient, responsive, and scientific approach. But things didn’t turn out that way. Despite the rhetoric of “multiple use”, political planning prevailed. That process encouraged, and often forced, […]

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 Saving Commercial Fisheries

Saving Commercial Fisheries

Fisheries Management Fisheries are complex environments in which fish are just a single inhabitant. Other species, climate change, habitat modification, fishermen, consumers, and bureaucrats all impact fisheries. Economics, as much as ecology, define fisheries. The success or failure of a fishery can hinge on small changes in the composition of local fishermen, in the policies […]

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 Migrating Species

Migrating Species

Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me.   -Emma Lazarus Environmentalists have long held that environmental problems come down to one issue: population. All of our environmental woes, from species extinction to global warming, can […]

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 This Predator Eats Pork, Saves Dough

This Predator Eats Pork, Saves Dough

When the route to immortality is to become a government program, how can wasteful, dysfunctional bureaucracies be weeded out? Try a “predatory bureaucracy.” A predator is an organism that captures and extracts its sustenance from other animals. We can learn a great deal about the federal budget by, as a simple thought experiment, introducing a […]

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 Using ‘Green Scissors’ to Cut Government Waste

Using ‘Green Scissors’ to Cut Government Waste

“Strange bedfellows make interesting children.” This observation from Don Snow, Arts and Literary Director of Gallatin Institute, applies to the recently released “Green Scissors” report. The report originated from a hitherto latent coalition of environmentalists and pro-market advocates. On the one side, we have Rep. Kasich (R-OH), a “Gingrich acolyte.” On the other is Ralph […]

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 Resurrection   of Hyalite Sale Betrays Agency Bias

Resurrection of Hyalite Sale Betrays Agency Bias

Like a zombie in a second-rate horror movie, the Hyalite timber sale is once again rising from the grave. Reaction is predictable: already on the defensive, the Forest Service promises a “kinder, gentler” project, while environmentalists scramble for silver bullets, trying desperately to send this beast to its grave. Resurrection of the Hyalite sale guarantees […]

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