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The Next West: Public Lands, Community, and Economy in the American West
 
 
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The Next West: Public Lands, Community, and Economy in the American West [Hardcover]

John A. Baden (Editor), Donald Snow (Editor)


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Book Description

1559634596 978-1559634595 July 1997

In The Next West, nearly a dozen leading thinkers and writers including Karl Hess, Jr., Mark Sagoff, Ed Marston, Thomas Michael Power, and Stephen Bodio, offer an insightful vision of the future of the American West. Their essays comprise a cogent matrix of reflections on what has gone wrong in the region, and, as Donald Snow explains in his lively introduction, point the way not to a "New West" of cappuccino cowboys, fiber optics, and some ambient, simpering sense of "the public's willingness to embrace environmental issues", but to a Next West based on the renewal of Jeffersonian democracy, experiments in local and supra-local control of public lands, and the use of markets to replace the political allocation of natural resources.

The first half of the book presents an enlightening view of what it is to live in the West and practice environmental awareness. From the Sangre de Cristo Range, to the forests of the Pacific Northwest, to a single valley in Wyoming, the contributors describe their experiences with environmental endeavors ranging from the birth of the recycling industry on the streets of Seattle to the leasing of federal coal. In the second half of the book, contributors address the mythologies that have set the tone for life in the West for more than a century, challenging "the demons that command center stage in the politics and economy of the region." They dissect and debunk much of the West's gospel: that environmentally damaging extractive industries are essential for economic survival; that conservation is best handled by the government; that some day soon great leader will arrive to once and for all solve their most pressing problems.

The Next West is a spirited and compelling work that presents a fresh and thought-provoking approach to Western issues. It is essential reading for anyone who lives in or cares about the vast and complex region known as the West.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 284 pages
  • Publisher: Island Press (July 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1559634596
  • ISBN-13: 978-1559634595
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,922,712 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Rocky Barker is the author of Scorched Earth: How the Fires of Yellowstone Changed America (Island Press, 2005). The book was a finalist for the Western Writers of America's Spur Award in nonfiction.

The story inspired a television movie, Firestorm: Last Stand at Yellowstone on A&E Network in 2006 starring Scott Foley and Richard Burgi and co-produced by Barker. His first book, Saving All the Parts, Reconciling Economics and the Endangered Species Act, was published in 1993 also by Island Press. The book was cited for "excellence in achievement," by the Sigurd F. Olson Nature Writing Award judges. He co-authored the Flyfisher's Guide to Idaho and the Wingshooter's Guide to Idaho with Ken Retallic.

He is environmental reporter for the Idaho Statesman, where he was part of a team that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2007 for the its reports on Larry Craig. He also was the primary researcher for an award-winning series of editorials calling for the breaching of four Snake River dams to save salmon. The series team was the first winners of the Dolly Connelly Environmental Journalism Award in 1998. The National Wildlife Federation awarded him with its National Conservation Achievement Award in 1999.

The newspaper also won the first Wallace Stegner Award along with nine other newspapers for coverage of western issues with Barker's work cited in its report. His unique approach to journalism was examined in the report released at the same time. "When you care about education, you're not accused of being pro-education or pro-children," Barker said. "But when you care about the environment, you become a lightning rod."

Barker has long been viewed as a maverick in the newsroom.

"Journalists are taught to write objectively, or at least to have objectivity as a goal," Barker said. "A separate set of journalism ethics has been developed to help journalists reach that goal and to keep themselves outsiders -- flies on the wall -- to the events and institutions we cover.

"I reject the erection of these false walls between the writer and his subjects. The ethics I follow are the same ethics I follow in life -- basically respect of human dignity and of the entire life community. The balance I use is the knowledge that no matter how comprehensively I have researched a subject, I may not understand the real truth. I may be wrong, so I have a responsibility to show my readers plausible alternative realities to those I present."

In 1996 he co-founded Writers on the Range, a syndicated news service of western writers that grew under High Country News to more than 80 newspapers. Barker is a regular contributor.

Barker also was the lead reporter for the Idaho Falls Post Register's award winning coverage of the Yellowstone fires in 1988. His moment in time came at Old Faithful.

"I shall never forget the sight of Barker bounding out of the forest in front of Old Faithful as a dense canopy of lodgepole pine erupted in flame behind him," wrote Todd Wilkinson, a Montana journalist and author.

His first big break in journalism came in 1977, when he was working at the Washburn (WI) Times, and covering a house-moving across the ice of Lake Superior to Madeline Island in the Apostle Islands. The house and truck broke through the ice and Barker's pictures of the event ran worldwide.

He has covered environmental issues ranging from mining in Wisconsin, acid rain in Canada, rain forest protection in Hawaii, village-based conservation in Africa to budding environmentalism in 1990s Russia.

The Sandwich, Illinois native holds a bachelor's degree in environmental studies from Northland College in Ashland, WI., which awarded him an alumni award for environmental achievement in 1994.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
A Canadian journalist recently wrote that people like me-"male writers and artists"-live in the West mainly because things stay the same there, because what you loved one day you could be forgiven for loving the next. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
new resource economists, new resource economics, mainstream environmental economics, alluvial valley floor, recreation fees, public land managers, wise users, new forestry, federal land managers, recycling strategy, economic instruments, hundredth meridian, progressive faith, water agencies, recycling industry, community conservation
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Forest Service, Cotton Creek, United States, New York, Whitney Benefits, American West, John Wesley Powell, Next West, Pacific Northwest, Bureau of Land Management, Rito Alto, Rocky Mountain, Poncha Pass, Civil War, Karl Hess, Bureau of Reclamation, Cotton Canyon, Tedd Mann, British Columbia, Cotton Lake, Department of the Interior, Geological Survey, New Mexico, San Luis Valley, Wallace Stegner
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