Preface
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
1. Governmental Roles in Collaborative Environmental Management
Part I: Government as Follower
2. Citizen-Initiated Collaboration:The Applegate Partnership
3. Nonprofit Facilitation:The Darby Partnership
Part II: Government as Encourager
4. Encouragement through Carrots and Sticks : Habitat Conservation
Planning and the Endangered Species Act
5. Encouragement through Grants: Ohio‘s Farmland Preservation Task
Forces
Part III: Government as Leader
6. Science-Based Collaborative Management: The Albemarle Pamlico
Estuarine Study
7. Government-Led Community Collaboration: The Animas River
Stakeholder Group
Part IV: Reconsidering Governmental Roles
8. Government as Actor and as Institution
9. Envisioning the Roles of Government
Methodological Appendix
Notes
References
Index
Tomas M. Koontz is an associate professor of environmental and natural resource policy in the School of Natural Resources at The Ohio State University. Toddi A. Steelman is an assistant professor of environmental and natural resource policy in North Carolina State University's Department of Forestry. JoAnn Carmin is an assistant professor of environmental policy and planning in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Katrina Smith Korfmacher is Community Outreach Coordinator at the University of Rochester's Environmental Health Sciences Center. Cassandra Moseley is a research associate in the Institute for a Sustainable Environment and an adjunct assistant professor of planning, public, policy and management at the University of Oregon. Craig W. Thomas is an associate professor of political science at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where he is also on faculty with the Center for Public Policy and Administration.
'A welcome addition to the growing collaboration literature . . . A
useful resource for practitioners and students in environmental
policy, planning, and public administration.'
Journal of the American Planning Association 'A terrific book that
expands our understanding of new forms of environmental governance.
The authors bring a wealth of experience to provide a balanced,
insightful, and highly readable account of a diverse set of cases
involving collaboration for natural resource and environmental
stewardship.'
Peter J. May, University of Washington
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