This paper maintains that the Forest Service (FS), as an institution, is in deep trouble. It argues that the FS today is an agency without a unique mission and without a supporting constituency. For the FS to be viable in the future it needs a distinct well-defined mission and a committed constituency. The distinct mission needs to be generally supported, or at least not opposed, by most of the American people. The constituency needs to be committed to the FS to the extent that it will provide major support in the Congress for FS budgets. The paper identifies some potential candidates for a mission for the National Forest System (NFS), e.g., as a biological reserve or as a provider of forest recreation. Another potential paradigm could be t...
Throughout the globe, forestry faces predictable trends associated with the transition from reliance...
Problem: Forest certification systems are now at a “crossroads” as they face uncertainty as a conser...
The Forest Service has evolved to a new land ethic: preservation of the function, health, and produc...
The Forest Service is in transition. Change is everywhere. The agencyknows where it has been but has...
During the history of the Forest Service, human activity has been the dominant influence on climate ...
The authors recommend that all National Forest Service land be transferred to the states except thos...
There are two prevailing views today about our forests and natural resources. Both views are conside...
The United States Forest Service was established as a federal agency to oversee the nation’s timber ...
Nearly onequarter of America is covered with forests—almost 800 million acres. There are 151 nationa...
This paper first provides a brief overview of what are and what represent forest ecosystem services....
This paper argues that state trust land management experience is potentially a source of valuable in...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75358/1/j.1541-0072.1995.tb01747.x.pd
The Forest Service, the largest agency in the U.S. Department of Agriculture, has traditionally used...
Over the past several decades, the element of management most common to the 155 national forests acr...
People who live in the western United States have long considered the United States Forest Service t...
Throughout the globe, forestry faces predictable trends associated with the transition from reliance...
Problem: Forest certification systems are now at a “crossroads” as they face uncertainty as a conser...
The Forest Service has evolved to a new land ethic: preservation of the function, health, and produc...
The Forest Service is in transition. Change is everywhere. The agencyknows where it has been but has...
During the history of the Forest Service, human activity has been the dominant influence on climate ...
The authors recommend that all National Forest Service land be transferred to the states except thos...
There are two prevailing views today about our forests and natural resources. Both views are conside...
The United States Forest Service was established as a federal agency to oversee the nation’s timber ...
Nearly onequarter of America is covered with forests—almost 800 million acres. There are 151 nationa...
This paper first provides a brief overview of what are and what represent forest ecosystem services....
This paper argues that state trust land management experience is potentially a source of valuable in...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75358/1/j.1541-0072.1995.tb01747.x.pd
The Forest Service, the largest agency in the U.S. Department of Agriculture, has traditionally used...
Over the past several decades, the element of management most common to the 155 national forests acr...
People who live in the western United States have long considered the United States Forest Service t...
Throughout the globe, forestry faces predictable trends associated with the transition from reliance...
Problem: Forest certification systems are now at a “crossroads” as they face uncertainty as a conser...
The Forest Service has evolved to a new land ethic: preservation of the function, health, and produc...