The United States and the Canadian province of Ontario have enacted endangered species laws that regulate private land. The rationale for this is that the vast majority of endangered species in the two countries rely on private lands for survival. However, from a landowner perspective the law is deemed unfair. This paper presents analysis from 141 interviews with landowners in three U.S. states and Ontario. In recognition of distributive justice claims, both the U.S. government and the Ontario government have enacted programs aimed at increasing financial incentives for participation and compliance with the law. However, the law is still perceived as unfair. The central argument of this paper is that future amendments and new policies for e...
This the published version of an article published by the University of New Mexico, School of Law.“A...
While intended to increase the habitat available to endangered species, the restrictions of the Enda...
This the published version of an article published by the University of New Mexico, School of Law.“A...
This is the published version of an article published by Resilience Alliance.The United States and t...
This is the published version of an article published by Resilience Alliance.The United States and t...
The Endangered Species Act (ESA) has come in for a lot of inflammatory rhetoric in recent years, pri...
Although both Canada and the US have seen the need to introduce endangered species legislation, the ...
This paper analyzes surveys of private landowners to identify factors that determine landowner engag...
Open access article. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0) appliesPrev...
The purpose of this study is to examine the impacts that legislation protecting endangered species w...
Editors\u27 Summary: The ESA is simultaneously the most popular and most hated of environmental stat...
Several recent empirical studies have indicated that the Endangered Specifies Act (ESA) discourages ...
Preventing the extinction of species will require limiting human activities in key areas, but it is ...
While a significant body of international and regional agreements now addresses habitat preservation...
Preserving endangered species on private land benefits the public, but may confer cost on landowners...
This the published version of an article published by the University of New Mexico, School of Law.“A...
While intended to increase the habitat available to endangered species, the restrictions of the Enda...
This the published version of an article published by the University of New Mexico, School of Law.“A...
This is the published version of an article published by Resilience Alliance.The United States and t...
This is the published version of an article published by Resilience Alliance.The United States and t...
The Endangered Species Act (ESA) has come in for a lot of inflammatory rhetoric in recent years, pri...
Although both Canada and the US have seen the need to introduce endangered species legislation, the ...
This paper analyzes surveys of private landowners to identify factors that determine landowner engag...
Open access article. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0) appliesPrev...
The purpose of this study is to examine the impacts that legislation protecting endangered species w...
Editors\u27 Summary: The ESA is simultaneously the most popular and most hated of environmental stat...
Several recent empirical studies have indicated that the Endangered Specifies Act (ESA) discourages ...
Preventing the extinction of species will require limiting human activities in key areas, but it is ...
While a significant body of international and regional agreements now addresses habitat preservation...
Preserving endangered species on private land benefits the public, but may confer cost on landowners...
This the published version of an article published by the University of New Mexico, School of Law.“A...
While intended to increase the habitat available to endangered species, the restrictions of the Enda...
This the published version of an article published by the University of New Mexico, School of Law.“A...