Getting Environmental Regulation Right

What we can all learn from the late Ronald Coase about protecting wetlands and wildlife. The recent death of Ronald Coase has given rise to an outpouring of praise about his contributions to the field of economics and his influence on the complex world of institutional politics. In my interactions with Coase, he was always cautious and diffident about […]

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 You Called, We Came: Fighting the Fires of 1988

You Called, We Came: Fighting the Fires of 1988

This is a story of thankfulness.  This is a story that makes me proud to be an American. The West Yellowstone Economic Development Council celebrated the 25th Anniversary of the 1988 Fires on September 2nd 2013, the day 25 years ago when farmers from southern Idaho trucked their irrigation pipes to “West” and helped set […]

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Harvest the Earth?

Introduction by John Baden, Chairman, FREE My friend and colleague, professor Jerry Johnson of Montana State University, just returned from two inspiring trips.  One was to Lake Iliamna, the largest lake in Alaska.  The other was the Greater Yellowstone Coalition’s (GYC) first 400-mile bike trip through the Greater Yellowstone area.  Jerry’s essay below focuses on the […]

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Maui and Montana

Maui and Montana Ramona and I just returned from an academic meeting in Maui.  We found new confirmation that economics is really a sub-set of behavioral ecology (or evolutionary biology if you prefer).  Here’s an example.  After an all night flight, we awoke at our ranch this morning with 3″ of snow and a large […]

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Looking Forward to a FREE Summer

I’m writing this on Groundhogs Day, February 2.   Ramona and I are seven miles east of Ashton, Idaho near the Yellowstone Park border.  YNP is an excellent place to explore parables of environmental stewardship so FREE’s work naturally features Yellowstone.  Our July 15-19 conference, “Harmonizing Ecology, Prosperity, and Liberty”, will include a day in Yellowstone […]

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 The Political Wolf

The Political Wolf

David Parker has done a commendable job lately of covering the impact of big money in the Tester/Rehberg race. I fully expect a variation of Gresham’s law to apply as negative ads funded by outside groups drive away a civil discussion on issues important to Montana and the west. Here is one version of how […]

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Wolves

Here’s a true, empirical, universal generalization; issues involving environmental policy are both scientifically complex and highly emotional. These are ingredients for error and acrimony. The reintroduction of wolves in Yellowstone National Park offers a dramatic illustration of my point. It is the most contentious environmental subject I have observed in 50-plus years of involvement. This […]

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 Open Season on Wolves

Open Season on Wolves

I lived in Seattle during the academic years of the early 1990s. Ramona and I had sold our half band of breeding ewes (A band of sheep is 1,000 animals.), but ran a few dozen horses on our winter range. A good neighbor fed and monitored the horses while another friend lived in the manager’s […]

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 Wolves, “Tribes,” and Property Rights

Wolves, “Tribes,” and Property Rights

America’s experiences with Indian tribes should alert us to consequences of changes in rights, especially when imposed from higher authority. When rights to land or valuable resources that flow from it are unclear and changing, conflict naturally follows. A sense of ownership can come from traditional uses that engender psychological entitlement. Leigh Anderson and Dick […]

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