Conserving Nature in Greater Yellowstone: Controversy and Change in an Iconic Landscape
Event Details
Swaner Forum
About the Event
Join us at NHMU on November 10 at 7 p.m. for a conversation between author Bob Keiter, Wallace Stegner Professor of Law and founding director of the Wallace Stegner Center, and Jennifer Napier-Pearce, Chief of Staff for the George S. and Dolores Dore Eccles Foundation, about Keiter's new book, Conserving Nature in Greater Yellowstone: Controversy and Change in an Iconic Landscape.
For more than 150 years, the Yellowstone region has played a prominent role in the United Statesâ nature conservation agenda. In this book, Keiter explores both the successes and controversies connected to this storied regionâs conservation â from the recovery of the grizzly bear to the reintroduction of wolves and beyond.
This event is presented by the S.J. Quinney College of Law and will be hosted at the Natural History Museum of Utah. It is free to attend with RSVP. Books will be available for purchase, and following the conversation, there will be a reception and book signing.
About the Book
The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystemâextending across three states and twenty counties and embracing more than sixteen million acres of federal land as well as private and tribal lands âcan only be characterized as a complex, jurisdictionally fragmented landscape. As Keiter makes clear, the quest for common ground among federal land managers, state officials, local communities, conservationists, ranchers, Indigenous tribes, and others is a vital, enduring task.
Keiterâs book shows how the regionâs other national parks and forests have largely followed suit of lessons learned in Yellowstone, prioritizing ecosystem-level conservation over industrial activity. Groundbreaking efforts are currently afoot to protect elk, deer, and pronghorn migration corridors and to maintain the parkâs bison population. But explosive human population growth, development pressures, and accelerating recreational activities present new and different problems.
Conserving Nature in Greater Yellowstone shows us that the lessons gleaned from Yellowstoneâs expansive nature conservation efforts are profoundly important for both the country and the world.
About the Author
Robert B. Keiter s an award-winning public lands law and policy expert. He serves on the faculty at the University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law, where he is the Wallace Stegner Professor of Law and is the founding director of the Wallace Stegner Center for Land, Resources, and the Environment. Keiter has written extensively on public land conservation and ecological management. His prior books include To Conserve Unimpaired: The Evolution of the National Park Idea (Island Press, 2013), Keeping Faith with Nature: Ecosystems, Democracy, and Americaâs Public Lands (Yale Univ. Press, 2003), Reclaiming the Native Home of Hope: Community, Ecology, and the West (Univ. of Utah Press, 1998), and The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem: Redefining Americaâs Wilderness Heritage (Yale Univ. Press, 1991). Keiter serves as a Trustee of the National Parks Conservation Association and the Foundation for Natural Resources and Energy Law, for which he served as President from 2013-2014. Previously, he served as a Senior Fulbright Scholar at Tribhuvan University in Kathmandu, Nepal. In 2008, he was named a University Distinguished Professor by the University of Utah.
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