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Parks and Carrying Capacity: Commons Without Tragedy
Parks and Carrying Capacity: Commons Without Tragedy

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Author: Robert E. Manning
Publisher: Island Press
Category: Book

List Price: $35.00
Buy New: $32.94
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New (15) Used (7) from $25.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 385421

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 328
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 6 x 0.7

ISBN: 1559631058
Dewey Decimal Number: 333.783140973
EAN: 9781559631051
ASIN: 1559631058

Publication Date: February 28, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: BRAND NEW

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Parks and Carrying Capacity: Commons Without Tragedy

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
How much can we use the environment without spoiling what we find so valuable about it? Determining the carrying capacity of parks and related areas is a perennial question whose urgency grows each year as the number of visits continues to increase. Parks and Carrying Capacity represents a comprehensive assessment of the issue, as it:
• offers a historical and conceptual treatment of
carrying capacity
• describes and illustrates research approaches for
assessing carrying capacity, including qualitative and quantitative
surveys, normative theory and methods, visual research approaches,
trade-off analysis, and simulation modeling
• examines management alternatives for limiting the environmental
and social impacts of visitor use
• considers the broader question of environmental management and
how the issue of carrying capacity can be applied more generally
• discusses how the theory and methods associated with managing
the carrying capacity of parks and protected areas might be extended
to other areas of environmental management
The book includes a series of case studies that describe research programsdesigned to support analysis and management of carrying capacity at eight diverse units of the U.S. National Park System, and an additional case study that explores how the foundational components of carrying capacity (formulating indicators and standards, monitoring, and adaptive management) are being applied in an increasing number of environmental and natural resources fields to address the growing urgency of sustainability.
Parks and Carrying Capacity is an important new work for faculty, graduate and undergraduate students, and researchers in outdoor recreation, park planning and management, and natural resource conservation and management, as well as for professional planners and managers involved with park and outdoor recreation related agencies and nongovernmental organizations.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Excellent Seller   February 11, 2008
The book was shipped quickly and was in excellent condition, as stated on the seller's listing


4 out of 5 stars Sound synthesis of methods and analysis in parks management   December 25, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Managing protected areas has become a complex field of academic inquiry in recent years as the number of visitors and the kinds of recreational opportunities have multiplied. This book provides the first comprehensive presentation of the challenges facing national parks with a clear set of guidelines for management of environmental and social impacts. Robert Manning has been a pioneering researcher in this field for many years and brings a wealth of experience in his writing which is clear and precise. The contrarian subtitle of the book, "commons without tragedy," challenges the common belief among social scientists that open access resources can lead to overexploitation. As Manning notes, "the purely economic rationality described by Hardin does not account for more altruistic human tendencies that can lead to constraints on individual behavior in favor of greater interest of society." However, the narrative is not predicated on normative notions of human altruism but rather on rigorous metrics of how to measure impact and use these findings to manage human behavior. The book is replete with detailed methods to assess visitor impacts from visual research tools to computer simulations. The following eight chapters present crisply crafted case studies of measuring carrying capacity in U.S National Parks and Monuments. The concluding segments of the book moves the analysis beyond the sphere of parks and considers the larger issue of measuring "sustainability." More international material could have been added to this part of the book to anchor it further in the growing global literature on sustainability metrics, but the market for this book appears to be largely within the United States. Perhaps in his next book, Dr. Manning will also reflect on some comparisons with other countries where he has worked. Nevertheless, this is an admirable work that can be of use to a wide audience, ranging in scale from an environmental management classroom to a recreational visitor to a National Park.