1989
DOI: 10.1111/j.1536-7150.1989.tb02116.x
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The Changing View of Property Rights in Natural Resources Management

Abstract: Abstract. The social, demographic, technological, and ecological circumstances in the United States have changed since its beginning. Society's view of property rights—i.e., the way resources are to be used—has evolved accordingly. Resource owners’virtually unrestricted right to use their property as they wished disappeared along with the western frontier, pristine wilderness, and abundant natural resources. There is now a strong commitment to preserve what little nature and resource are left. To overcome the… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…first introduced the idea of humans providing legal personhood to non-human objects and particularly to natural elements, such as trees. According to Stone, legal rights could be used by guardians to claim redress and restitution for environmental damages on behalf of nature and/or nature's non-human objects (see also Chan, 1988Chan, , 1989Hogan, 2007;Morris & Ruru, 2010). Stone instigated the development of scholarship pursuant to the outcome of the US Supreme Court case Sierra Club v. Morton (405 [1972] US Supreme Court 727, paras.…”
Section: The Undermined Economic Activity Of the Whanganui Māori Commmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…first introduced the idea of humans providing legal personhood to non-human objects and particularly to natural elements, such as trees. According to Stone, legal rights could be used by guardians to claim redress and restitution for environmental damages on behalf of nature and/or nature's non-human objects (see also Chan, 1988Chan, , 1989Hogan, 2007;Morris & Ruru, 2010). Stone instigated the development of scholarship pursuant to the outcome of the US Supreme Court case Sierra Club v. Morton (405 [1972] US Supreme Court 727, paras.…”
Section: The Undermined Economic Activity Of the Whanganui Māori Commmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on the Māori historic, cultural and religious background, humans and nature (particularly the river) are intertwined (Chan, 1988(Chan, , 1989Mathews, 2018;Morris & Ruru, 2010;Tomas, 2011). The Act recognizes the close relationship of the Māori to the river by acknowledging the principle of ko au te awa, ko te awa ko au (I am the river and the river is me), as well as their aspiration to be actively involved in the management and protection of the river.…”
Section: Humans and Nature In An Intertwined Economymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Prior to 1970, wetlands were considered more of a nuisance than an important natural resource, and farmers were encouraged to drain their “swampland” to develop a more economically useful landscape. Not until Rachel Carson wrote her book Silent Spring did society at large truly begin to develop an environmental awareness (Chan :1944). Environmental organizations were so successful at articulating the need to safeguard the environment that one result was a bevy of wetland regulations.…”
Section: The Conflictmentioning
confidence: 99%