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The national parks of North America are great public treasures, visited by 300 million people each year. Set aside to be kept in relatively natural condition, these remarkable places of forests, rivers, mountains, and wildlife still inspire our "capacity for wonder." Today, however, the parks are threatened by increasingly difficult problems from both inside and outside their borders.
This book, enriched with personal anecdotes of the author's trips throughout the parks of North America, examines changes in the park services of the United States and Canada over the past fifteen years. William Lowry describes the many challenges facing the parks - such as rising crime, tourism and overcrowding, pollution, eroding funding for environmental research, and the contentious debate over preservation versus use - and the abilities of the agencies to deal with them.
The Capacity for Wonder provides a revealing comparison of the U.S. National Park Service (NPS) and the Canadian Parks Service (CPS). The author explains that, while the services are similar in many ways, the priorities of these two agencies have changed dramatically in recent years.
Lowry shows how increasing conflicts over agency goals and decreasing institutional support have made the NPS vulnerable to interagency disputes, reluctant to take any risks in its operations, and extremely responsive to political pressures. As a result, U.S. national parks are now managed mainly to serve political purposes. Lowry illustrates how in the 1980s politicians pushed the NPS to expand private uses of national parks through development, timber harvesting, grazing, and mining, while environmental groups pushed the NPS in the other direction. Over the same period, the CPS enjoyed a clarification of goals and increased institutional support.
As a result, the CPS has been able to decentralize its structure, empower its employees, and renew its commitment to preservation as the highest priority.
Lowry considers several proposals to change the institutions governing the parks. His own recommendations are more in line with proposals to revitalize public agencies than with those that suggest replacing them with private enterprise, state agencies, or endowment boards. Lowry concludes that preserving nature should be the primary, explicit goal of the park services, and he calls for a stronger commitment to that goal in the United States.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Canadian Parks Service, Government policy, History, National parks and reserves, Nature conservation, United States, United States National Park Service, Parks Canada, United States. National Park Service, Umweltpolitik, Parcs Canada, Histoire, Politique publique, Nature, Conservation of natural resources, Conservation, Geschichte, Nationalpark, Politique gouvernementale, Parcs nationaux, Etats-Unis. National Park Service, Etats-Unis, Environmental policy, political aspectsPlaces
Canada, United StatesShowing 2 featured editions. View all 2 editions?
Edition | Availability |
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1
The Capacity for Wonder: Preserving National Parks
August 1995, Brookings Institution Press
Paperback
in English
- New Ed edition
0815752970 9780815752974
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2
The capacity for wonder: preserving national parks
1994, Brookings Institution
in English
0815752989 9780815752981
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Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 243-267) and index.
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