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- catalog abstract "How are the natural and cultural resource management responsibilities of the Department of Defense (DoD) changing? This report concludes that competition for federal lands in the West, regional habitat degradation in the East and on the Pacific Coast, and new scientific principles will make achievement of the core DoD resource management concerns of legal compliance and preservation of the military mission an increasingly complex issue. DoD will be required to interpret these goals in broad terms, to pay increased attention to the implications of trends in land use and land use policy outside the boundaries of the 25 million acres of DoD lands, and to develop new capabilities to cope with this complexity. Even the perspectives of the 104th Congress, with its emphasis on cost/benefit considerations and its potential willingness to consider justified exemptions, point to the need for DoD to bring additional analytic capabilities to the question of resource management. The report concludes that while issues of hazardous waste cleanup and management have dominated DoD environmental budgets, those issues are largely separable from the military mission and function under carefully scripted procedures. In contrast, resource management has a direct effect on the military mission and is likely to emerge as DoD's most fundamental environmental challenge.".
- catalog contributor b9452727.
- catalog contributor b9452728.
- catalog contributor b9452729.
- catalog contributor b9452730.
- catalog created "1996.".
- catalog date "1996".
- catalog date "1996.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1996.".
- catalog description "Ch. 1. The Briefing. Research Questions and Approach. Overarching Laws and Policies. Agency-Specific Laws and Policies. Fort Bragg. The Military-Ecology-Legal Interaction. A Fragile Program? New Science, Policies, and Problems. Ecological Islands. Conservation Biology, Legal Compliance, and the Military Mission. The Species-Area Curve. Application to a Military Base. The Requirements. The Constraints. Military Conservation Biology? The Mojave Desert Ecosystem Management Initiative. Camp Pendleton. Fort Bragg. Yakima. The Political Process for Extended Lands: Public Involvement. The Political Process for Extended Lands: Detailed Legislation -- Ch. 2. Conclusions.".
- catalog description "How are the natural and cultural resource management responsibilities of the Department of Defense (DoD) changing? This report concludes that competition for federal lands in the West, regional habitat degradation in the East and on the Pacific Coast, and new scientific principles will make achievement of the core DoD resource management concerns of legal compliance and preservation of the military mission an increasingly complex issue. DoD will be required to interpret these goals in broad terms, to pay increased attention to the implications of trends in land use and land use policy outside the boundaries of the 25 million acres of DoD lands, and to develop new capabilities to cope with this complexity. Even the perspectives of the 104th Congress, with its emphasis on cost/benefit considerations and its potential willingness to consider justified exemptions, point to the need for DoD to bring additional analytic capabilities to the question of resource management. The report concludes that while issues of hazardous waste cleanup and management have dominated DoD environmental budgets, those issues are largely separable from the military mission and function under carefully scripted procedures. In contrast, resource management has a direct effect on the military mission and is likely to emerge as DoD's most fundamental environmental challenge.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references.".
- catalog extent "xxiv, 114 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "More than 25 million acres?".
- catalog identifier "0833023632 (alk. paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "More than 25 million acres?".
- catalog issued "1996".
- catalog issued "1996.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Santa Monica, Ca. : RAND,".
- catalog relation "More than 25 million acres?".
- catalog spatial "United States".
- catalog spatial "United States.".
- catalog subject "333.7/0973 20".
- catalog subject "Cultural property Protection United States.".
- catalog subject "HC103.7 .M587 1996".
- catalog subject "Natural resources United States Management.".
- catalog subject "United States. Department of Defense.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Ch. 1. The Briefing. Research Questions and Approach. Overarching Laws and Policies. Agency-Specific Laws and Policies. Fort Bragg. The Military-Ecology-Legal Interaction. A Fragile Program? New Science, Policies, and Problems. Ecological Islands. Conservation Biology, Legal Compliance, and the Military Mission. The Species-Area Curve. Application to a Military Base. The Requirements. The Constraints. Military Conservation Biology? The Mojave Desert Ecosystem Management Initiative. Camp Pendleton. Fort Bragg. Yakima. The Political Process for Extended Lands: Public Involvement. The Political Process for Extended Lands: Detailed Legislation -- Ch. 2. Conclusions.".
- catalog title "More than 25 million acres? : DoD as a federal, natural, and cultural resource manager / David Rubenson ... [et al.].".
- catalog type "text".