This article examines the future of the National Park Service Organic Act in a changing climate. Managers and scholars have raised questions about whether the Organic Act gives the Park Service sufficient authority to undertake the steps necessary to adapt to climate change. This article concludes that the Organic Act and park-specific enabling acts, as interpreted by the courts, grant the Park Service wide discretion to pursue management options for adaptation to climate change impacts on national park resources. It also concludes that the Organic Act, properly understood, does impose some necessary constraints on agency decision-making, constraints that prevent inappropriate development projects and that require thoughtful decision-making...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Government seeks to manage public protected areas, such as national parks, to co...
This article examines the National Park Service\u27s past and future presence in urban America. Sch...
Climate change will affect not only natural and cultural resources within protected areas but also t...
This article examines the future of the National Park Service Organic Act in a changing climate. Man...
This article provides the first explanation of the relationship between the three overlapping source...
In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson signed an act to create the United States National Park Service (N...
As scholars debate whether climate change warrants more or less active management in wilderness, thi...
This article, published in the Environmental Law Reporter, examines how the federal agencies that ma...
This article explores the new legislative scheme as it pertains to national parklands. After outlini...
Human-caused climate change has exposed the US national park area to more severe increases in heat a...
We live in an age of disruption. “Disruptive innovations,” typically digital in nature, create new m...
Presenter: Stephen Saunders, President, The Rocky Mountain Climate Organization (Denver, CO) 40 slid...
Many protected areas may not be adequately safeguarding biodiversity from human activities on surrou...
Our goal was to assess the current level of representation and redundancy of natural features within...
In its first century, the National Park Service was transformed from an agency that managed a small ...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Government seeks to manage public protected areas, such as national parks, to co...
This article examines the National Park Service\u27s past and future presence in urban America. Sch...
Climate change will affect not only natural and cultural resources within protected areas but also t...
This article examines the future of the National Park Service Organic Act in a changing climate. Man...
This article provides the first explanation of the relationship between the three overlapping source...
In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson signed an act to create the United States National Park Service (N...
As scholars debate whether climate change warrants more or less active management in wilderness, thi...
This article, published in the Environmental Law Reporter, examines how the federal agencies that ma...
This article explores the new legislative scheme as it pertains to national parklands. After outlini...
Human-caused climate change has exposed the US national park area to more severe increases in heat a...
We live in an age of disruption. “Disruptive innovations,” typically digital in nature, create new m...
Presenter: Stephen Saunders, President, The Rocky Mountain Climate Organization (Denver, CO) 40 slid...
Many protected areas may not be adequately safeguarding biodiversity from human activities on surrou...
Our goal was to assess the current level of representation and redundancy of natural features within...
In its first century, the National Park Service was transformed from an agency that managed a small ...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Government seeks to manage public protected areas, such as national parks, to co...
This article examines the National Park Service\u27s past and future presence in urban America. Sch...
Climate change will affect not only natural and cultural resources within protected areas but also t...