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Mountain Resorts: Ecology and the Law [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 490 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 1020 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Feb-2009
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0754623157
  • ISBN-13: 9780754623151
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 490 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 1020 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Feb-2009
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0754623157
  • ISBN-13: 9780754623151
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Mountains are the home of significant ecological resources - wildlife habitat, higher elevation plant systems, steep slopes, delicate soils and water systems. These resources are subject to very visible and growing pressures, most of which are caused by the unique features of mountains. Using as case studies four mountain resorts in the US and Canada, this book analyzes the extent to which the law protects the ecological systems of mountains from the adverse impacts associated with the development, operation and expansion of resorts. In order to examine these issues, Mountain Resorts takes an interdisciplinary approach, with contributions from ecologists and lawyers who focus on ski-related activities, increasing four-season use of the mountains and expanding residential, commercial and recreational development at the mountains' base. Its analysis of an array of US and Canadian federal, state and local laws provides a multifaceted exploration of the intersection of ecology and the law at mountain resorts.

Recenzijos

'Reading this book has made me want to read others in the Ecology and the Law in Modern Society series...' Mountain Research and Development 'A lucid analysis of the effects of mountain ski resorts on the environment. Applying the ecosystem concept - analyzing the movements of organisms, materials and water between landscape positions - to case studies in New England and Canada, Milne et al. provide an important critique of how ecology can work with the law to protect mountain ecosystems.' William H. Schlesinger, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, USA 'Ski resorts are often focal points of conflict, with lawyers and ecologists in opposing camps. This fascinating book shows that their perspectives are complementary, and that such an interdisciplinary approach is required to understand and move forward with the management of mountain areas in a complex and increasingly uncertain world.' Martin Price, University of the Highlands and Islands, UK 'As a boy my friends and I skied at Killington in Vermont every chance we got. We didn't ski a collection of trails; we skied "the mountain" . The authors of Mountain Resorts challenge environmental law to do the same thing - to manage mountain resort areas not as a forest here, a stream there, a meadow there, but as ecosystems. Using four mountain resort case studies, including my boyhood slopes at Killington, the book meticulously evaluates existing approaches and finds them lacking. The authors chart a clear path for the evolution of legal regimes and scientific research. The result is a book that offers lessons in ecosystem management law going far beyond mountain resorts.' J.B. Ruhl, Florida State University, USA

List of Figures ix
List of Tables xi
List of Contributors xiii
Preface xvii
Acknowledgments xix
List of Abbreviations xxi
1 The Landscape of This Book 1
Janet E. Milne
PART I THE MOUNTAIN ECOSYSTEM
2 An Ecosystem Approach to Mountain Resorts
23
Ross A. Virginia
3 Plant Communities and Vegetation Processes in the Mountain Landscape
39
G. Richard Strimbeck
4 Water Quantity and Quality in the Mountain Environment
65
James B. Shanley and Beverley Wemple
5 Effects of Mountain Resorts on Wildlife
99
Allan M Strong, Christopher C. Rimmer, Kent P McFarland and Kimberly Hagen
PART II LOON MOUNTAIN, NEW HAMPSHIRE, United States Federal Law and Mountain Resort Development in the National Forest
Roger Fleming
6 An Introduction to Loon Mountain and the Loon Resort
129
7 The Legal Foundation for the South Mountain Expansion Proposal: The Early Permits and the Forest Management Planning Regime
145
8 The South Mountain Expansion: Did the National Forest Planning and Environmental Impact Statement Framework Cause Decision-Makers to Take an Ecosystem-Based Approach?
159
9 Can Other Federal Laws Contribute to an Ecosystem-Based Approach to Resort Development?
191
10 Conclusions from the Loon Resort Experience
201
PART III WHITEFACE MOUNTAIN SKI CENTER, NEW YORK, Olympic Legacies and Adirondack Park Plans
John S. Banta
11 An Introduction to the Whiteface Mountain Ski Center and the Legal Framework
211
12 The Legal Regime Affecting Whiteface Mountain: Does It Take an Ecological Approach?
227
13 The Legal Regime Affecting Private Lands Around Whiteface: Does It Take an Ecological Approach?
253
14 Conclusion
265
PART IV KILLINGTON RESORT, VERMONT, Can a Mountain Ecosystem be Protected When the Law Protects its Parts? The Case of Act 250 and Killington Resort
Julia LeMense and Jonathan Ishain
15 An Introduction to Killington Resort, Its Expansion Plans, and the Issues
271
16 Vermont's Act 250 and the Early Battles at Parker's Gore East
279
17 Expansion in the Wake of Parker's Gore East: The Interconnect the Woodward Reservoir, and the Resort Village
301
18 Conclusion
323
PART V MONT TREMBLANT, QUEBEC, Canadian Law and the Ecological Footprint of a Four-Season Resort
Jane Matthews Glenn
19 An Introduction to Mont Tremblant and the Issues
331
20 Intrawest's Development of the Skiable Domain
347
21 Base Camps, Golf Courses and Land Protection at the Mountain's Base
373
22 Legal Diversity and Legal Ecosystems
411
PART VI A VISION FOR THE MOUNTAINS
23 The Challenges of Joining Ecology with the Law: A Vision for the Mountains
419
Janet E. Milne and Ross A. Virginia
Index 447
Janet E Milne is a Professor of law at Vermont Law School, USA.