R&L Logo R&L Logo
  • GENERAL
    • Browse by Subjects
    • New Releases
    • Coming Soon
    • Chases's Calendar
  • ACADEMIC
    • Textbooks
    • Browse by Course
    • Instructor's Copies
    • Monographs & Research
    • Reference
  • PROFESSIONAL
    • Education
    • Intelligence & Security
    • Library Services
    • Business & Leadership
    • Museum Studies
    • Music
    • Pastoral Resources
    • Psychotherapy
  • FREUD SET
Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
eBook
share of facebook share on twitter
Add to GoodReads eExam Copies

Making America's Public Lands

The Contested History of Conservation on Federal Lands

Adam M. Sowards

In the United States, the federal government owns more than a quarter of the nation’s landscape—nearly 640 million acres; or more than a million square miles, which, if consolidated, would make it the tenth largest nation on earth. Primarily managed by four federal agencies—the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Forest Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the National Park Service--American public lands have been central to developing the American economy, state, and identity. The history of these lands intersects with critical components of the American past—namely nature, politics, and economics. From the beginning, the concept of “public” has been the subject of controversy, from visions of homesteaders realizing the ideal of the Jeffersonian republic to western ranchers who use the open range to promote a free enterprise system, to wilderness activists who see these lands as wild places, free from human encumbrance. Environmental historian Adam Sowards synthesizes public lands history from the beginning of the republic to recent controversies. Since public lands are located everywhere, including iconic national parks like Yellowstone or the Grand Canyon, Americans at large have a stake in these lands. They are, after all, ours. In a real sense, this book is for those citizens who camp in the national forests, drive through the national parks, or admire distant wilderness landscapes. These readers will gain a greater appreciation for the long and complex history of the range of these places.

  • Details
  • Details
  • Author
  • Author
  • TOC
  • TOC
  • Reviews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Features
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 250 • Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
978-1-4422-4695-9 • Hardback • April 2022 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-5381-9993-0 • Paperback • August 2024 • $27.00 • (£19.99)
978-1-5381-2531-1 • eBook • April 2022 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
Series: American Ways
Subjects: History / United States / General, Political Science / Public Policy / Environmental Policy, History / Environmental History

Adam M. Sowards is professor of history at the University of Idaho. He is the author of United States West Coast: An Environmental History (a Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2008), The Environmental Justice: William O. Douglas and American Conservation, and An Open Pit Visible from the Moon: The Wilderness Act and the Fight to Protect Miners Ridge and the Public Interest (winner of the Western History Association's Hal K. Rothman Book Prize for 2021).

Introduction: Huckleberries around the Table

Chapter 1 Gathering

Chapter 2 Forming

Chapter 3 Managing

Chapter 4 Balancing

Chapter 5 Polarizing

Conclusion: The Promise of the Public’s Land

A Note on Sources

Before the American Revolution, the British prevented colonists' westward expansion near the Atlantic Coast via the Proclamation Line of 1763. After the Revolution, the young nation sought ways to offer new settlers the public land inherited from the new states. According to Sowards, this involved a host of scholars and a plethora of special interests and government agencies, which he highlights, but dispersal failed to be easy over time. The issue of land use is old but is as relevant as today’s news. Finding ways of conserving vast forests, mountains, wilderness, deserts, and waterways has bedeviled the nation in light of its economic and capitalistic impulses. In short, a vast number of government agencies and private organizations have attempted conservation but sometimes failed at the task. In competition with public interest, special interests often win but are sometimes thwarted in favor of the public. Recommended. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals.


— Choice Reviews


America’s public lands began in paradoxes that each generation has had to renegotiate. Adam Sowards deftly traces this complex narrative and shows the pressure points most vital today. Thoughtful, judicious, graceful, accessible – Making America’s Public Lands is a great place to begin any inquiry into the curious creation of a public estate in a country committed to private property.


— Stephen Pyne, author of Between Two Fires: A Fire History of Contemporary America


With care and discernment, historian Adam Sowards listens to the cacophonous stories of these remarkable landscapes, amplifying their legacies and lessons for all those with a stake in "the public’s land."


— Michelle Nijhuis, author of Beloved Beasts: Fighting for Life in an Age of Extinction


This book is a must-read for every aspiring land manager and every American who values their public lands. Adam Sowards takes readers on a well-written and engaging journey through the history of these lands, highlighting the sometimes glorious and sometimes complicated nature of their evolution. His depiction of them as places around which we all physically, emotionally, and spiritually gather is essential for moving us beyond thinking of our own individual relationship to these lands and considering our relationship to others and to our nation through them. Adam’s poignant and timely work reminds us how precious our public lands are and how delicate an endeavor preserving them has been and continues to be.


— Leisl Carr Childers, author of The Size of the Risk: Histories of Multiple Use in the Great Basin


Because of both its wide breadth and short length, Making America’s Public lands will be useful to many readers. It will easily avail itself to anyone interested in public lands and both undergraduate and graduate classes to introduce the complicated history of the U.S. environment, readily bringing them to the table of the topic.


— Pacific Historical Review


4/19/22, National Archives Museum: Adam Sowards engaged in a timely book talk.

Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nCF3QFpLpbc



5/19/22, Lawyers, Guns & Money Podcast: Adams Sowards was interviewed about the book.

Link: https://www.lawyersgunsmoneyblog.com/2022/05/lgm-podcast-the-public-lands



6/5/22, University of Puget Sound: Adam Sowards and his book were featured in his alma mater’s alumni magazine.

Link: https://www.pugetsound.edu/stories/complicated-history



9/15/22, Shepherd: Adam Sowards wrote about the best books for bringing the public into the public lands.

Link: https://shepherd.com/best-books/bringing-the-public-into-the-public-lands



9/25/22, Los Angeles Times: Adam Sowards wrote about America’s troubled history as stewards of public lands.

Link: https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2022-09-25/yellowstone-park-mining-land-use-act-1872



11/17/22, Library Journal: This book was highlighted as an academic bestseller in environmental science.

Link: https://www.libraryjournal.com/story/waste-into-wealth-plastic-crisis-optimists-clean-energy-future-and-more-in-environmental-science-academic-best-sellers



3/24/2023, New Books Network Podcast:

Link: https://newbooksnetwork.com/making-americas-public-lands



Making America's Public Lands

The Contested History of Conservation on Federal Lands

Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • In the United States, the federal government owns more than a quarter of the nation’s landscape—nearly 640 million acres; or more than a million square miles, which, if consolidated, would make it the tenth largest nation on earth. Primarily managed by four federal agencies—the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Forest Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the National Park Service--American public lands have been central to developing the American economy, state, and identity. The history of these lands intersects with critical components of the American past—namely nature, politics, and economics. From the beginning, the concept of “public” has been the subject of controversy, from visions of homesteaders realizing the ideal of the Jeffersonian republic to western ranchers who use the open range to promote a free enterprise system, to wilderness activists who see these lands as wild places, free from human encumbrance. Environmental historian Adam Sowards synthesizes public lands history from the beginning of the republic to recent controversies. Since public lands are located everywhere, including iconic national parks like Yellowstone or the Grand Canyon, Americans at large have a stake in these lands. They are, after all, ours. In a real sense, this book is for those citizens who camp in the national forests, drive through the national parks, or admire distant wilderness landscapes. These readers will gain a greater appreciation for the long and complex history of the range of these places.

Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
    Pages: 250 • Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
    978-1-4422-4695-9 • Hardback • April 2022 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
    978-1-5381-9993-0 • Paperback • August 2024 • $27.00 • (£19.99)
    978-1-5381-2531-1 • eBook • April 2022 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
    Series: American Ways
    Subjects: History / United States / General, Political Science / Public Policy / Environmental Policy, History / Environmental History
Author
Author
  • Adam M. Sowards is professor of history at the University of Idaho. He is the author of United States West Coast: An Environmental History (a Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2008), The Environmental Justice: William O. Douglas and American Conservation, and An Open Pit Visible from the Moon: The Wilderness Act and the Fight to Protect Miners Ridge and the Public Interest (winner of the Western History Association's Hal K. Rothman Book Prize for 2021).

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Introduction: Huckleberries around the Table

    Chapter 1 Gathering

    Chapter 2 Forming

    Chapter 3 Managing

    Chapter 4 Balancing

    Chapter 5 Polarizing

    Conclusion: The Promise of the Public’s Land

    A Note on Sources

Reviews
Reviews
  • Before the American Revolution, the British prevented colonists' westward expansion near the Atlantic Coast via the Proclamation Line of 1763. After the Revolution, the young nation sought ways to offer new settlers the public land inherited from the new states. According to Sowards, this involved a host of scholars and a plethora of special interests and government agencies, which he highlights, but dispersal failed to be easy over time. The issue of land use is old but is as relevant as today’s news. Finding ways of conserving vast forests, mountains, wilderness, deserts, and waterways has bedeviled the nation in light of its economic and capitalistic impulses. In short, a vast number of government agencies and private organizations have attempted conservation but sometimes failed at the task. In competition with public interest, special interests often win but are sometimes thwarted in favor of the public. Recommended. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals.


    — Choice Reviews


    America’s public lands began in paradoxes that each generation has had to renegotiate. Adam Sowards deftly traces this complex narrative and shows the pressure points most vital today. Thoughtful, judicious, graceful, accessible – Making America’s Public Lands is a great place to begin any inquiry into the curious creation of a public estate in a country committed to private property.


    — Stephen Pyne, author of Between Two Fires: A Fire History of Contemporary America


    With care and discernment, historian Adam Sowards listens to the cacophonous stories of these remarkable landscapes, amplifying their legacies and lessons for all those with a stake in "the public’s land."


    — Michelle Nijhuis, author of Beloved Beasts: Fighting for Life in an Age of Extinction


    This book is a must-read for every aspiring land manager and every American who values their public lands. Adam Sowards takes readers on a well-written and engaging journey through the history of these lands, highlighting the sometimes glorious and sometimes complicated nature of their evolution. His depiction of them as places around which we all physically, emotionally, and spiritually gather is essential for moving us beyond thinking of our own individual relationship to these lands and considering our relationship to others and to our nation through them. Adam’s poignant and timely work reminds us how precious our public lands are and how delicate an endeavor preserving them has been and continues to be.


    — Leisl Carr Childers, author of The Size of the Risk: Histories of Multiple Use in the Great Basin


    Because of both its wide breadth and short length, Making America’s Public lands will be useful to many readers. It will easily avail itself to anyone interested in public lands and both undergraduate and graduate classes to introduce the complicated history of the U.S. environment, readily bringing them to the table of the topic.


    — Pacific Historical Review


Features
Features
  • 4/19/22, National Archives Museum: Adam Sowards engaged in a timely book talk.

    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nCF3QFpLpbc



    5/19/22, Lawyers, Guns & Money Podcast: Adams Sowards was interviewed about the book.

    Link: https://www.lawyersgunsmoneyblog.com/2022/05/lgm-podcast-the-public-lands



    6/5/22, University of Puget Sound: Adam Sowards and his book were featured in his alma mater’s alumni magazine.

    Link: https://www.pugetsound.edu/stories/complicated-history



    9/15/22, Shepherd: Adam Sowards wrote about the best books for bringing the public into the public lands.

    Link: https://shepherd.com/best-books/bringing-the-public-into-the-public-lands



    9/25/22, Los Angeles Times: Adam Sowards wrote about America’s troubled history as stewards of public lands.

    Link: https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2022-09-25/yellowstone-park-mining-land-use-act-1872



    11/17/22, Library Journal: This book was highlighted as an academic bestseller in environmental science.

    Link: https://www.libraryjournal.com/story/waste-into-wealth-plastic-crisis-optimists-clean-energy-future-and-more-in-environmental-science-academic-best-sellers



    3/24/2023, New Books Network Podcast:

    Link: https://newbooksnetwork.com/making-americas-public-lands



ALSO AVAILABLE

  • Cover image for the book A Concise History of U.S. Foreign Policy, Fifth Edition
  • Cover image for the book What the Presidents Read: Childhood Stories and Family Favorites
  • Cover image for the book A Hard and Bitter Peace: A Global History of the Cold War, Third Edition
  • Cover image for the book So Help Us, God: American Presidents and the Bible
  • Cover image for the book The USA and The World 2024–2025, 19th Edition
  • Cover image for the book Federalists and Antifederalists: The Debate Over the Ratification of the Constitution
  • Cover image for the book Clearing Iroquoia: New York's Land Grab in the 1779 Campaigns of the American Revolution
  • Cover image for the book The American Studies Anthology
  • Cover image for the book The Blessings of Liberty: A Concise History of the Constitution of the United States, Fourth Edition
  • Cover image for the book Vindicating the Founders: Race, Sex, Class, and Justice in the Origins of America
  • Cover image for the book Modern Conspiracies in America: Separating Fact from Fiction
  • Cover image for the book The Statues and Legacies of Combat Athletes in the Americas
  • Cover image for the book Literacy in America: A Cultural History of the Past Century
  • Cover image for the book First Along the River: A Brief History of the U.S. Environmental Movement, Fifth Edition
  • Cover image for the book Right to the Road: How Marginalized American Motorists Fought to Drive and Park
  • Cover image for the book Germans in America: A Concise History
  • Cover image for the book Sources in American Constitutional History, Second Edition
  • Cover image for the book Crafting Dissent: Handicraft as Protest from the American Revolution to the Pussyhats
  • Cover image for the book Satan in America: The Devil We Know
  • Cover image for the book The Faiths of Our Fathers: What America's Founders Really Believed
  • Cover image for the book Scoundrels: Political Scandals in American History
  • Cover image for the book From Munich to Pearl Harbor: Roosevelt's America and the Origins of the Second World War
  • Cover image for the book Assassinations, Threats, and the American Presidency: From Andrew Jackson to Barack Obama
  • Cover image for the book Medicine, Education, and the Arts in Contemporary Native America: Strong Women, Resilient Nations
  • Cover image for the book The Light Gray People: An Ethno-History of the Lipan Apaches of Texas and Northern Mexico
  • Cover image for the book Fake News Nation: The Long History of Lies and Misinterpretations in America
  • Cover image for the book So Glorious a Landscape: Nature and the Environment in American History and Culture
  • Cover image for the book The Making of Urban America, 3rd Edition
  • Cover image for the book The Lost Soul of American Protestantism
  • Cover image for the book Small Strangers: The Experiences of Immigrant Children in America, 1880–1925
  • Cover image for the book The Wobblies: The Story of the IWW and Syndicalism in the United States
  • Cover image for the book That Old-Time Religion in Modern America: Evangelical Protestantism in the Twentieth Century
  • Cover image for the book A Concise History of U.S. Foreign Policy, Fifth Edition
  • Cover image for the book What the Presidents Read: Childhood Stories and Family Favorites
  • Cover image for the book A Hard and Bitter Peace: A Global History of the Cold War, Third Edition
  • Cover image for the book So Help Us, God: American Presidents and the Bible
  • Cover image for the book The USA and The World 2024–2025, 19th Edition
  • Cover image for the book Federalists and Antifederalists: The Debate Over the Ratification of the Constitution
  • Cover image for the book Clearing Iroquoia: New York's Land Grab in the 1779 Campaigns of the American Revolution
  • Cover image for the book The American Studies Anthology
  • Cover image for the book The Blessings of Liberty: A Concise History of the Constitution of the United States, Fourth Edition
  • Cover image for the book Vindicating the Founders: Race, Sex, Class, and Justice in the Origins of America
  • Cover image for the book Modern Conspiracies in America: Separating Fact from Fiction
  • Cover image for the book The Statues and Legacies of Combat Athletes in the Americas
  • Cover image for the book Literacy in America: A Cultural History of the Past Century
  • Cover image for the book First Along the River: A Brief History of the U.S. Environmental Movement, Fifth Edition
  • Cover image for the book Right to the Road: How Marginalized American Motorists Fought to Drive and Park
  • Cover image for the book Germans in America: A Concise History
  • Cover image for the book Sources in American Constitutional History, Second Edition
  • Cover image for the book Crafting Dissent: Handicraft as Protest from the American Revolution to the Pussyhats
  • Cover image for the book Satan in America: The Devil We Know
  • Cover image for the book The Faiths of Our Fathers: What America's Founders Really Believed
  • Cover image for the book Scoundrels: Political Scandals in American History
  • Cover image for the book From Munich to Pearl Harbor: Roosevelt's America and the Origins of the Second World War
  • Cover image for the book Assassinations, Threats, and the American Presidency: From Andrew Jackson to Barack Obama
  • Cover image for the book Medicine, Education, and the Arts in Contemporary Native America: Strong Women, Resilient Nations
  • Cover image for the book The Light Gray People: An Ethno-History of the Lipan Apaches of Texas and Northern Mexico
  • Cover image for the book Fake News Nation: The Long History of Lies and Misinterpretations in America
  • Cover image for the book So Glorious a Landscape: Nature and the Environment in American History and Culture
  • Cover image for the book The Making of Urban America, 3rd Edition
  • Cover image for the book The Lost Soul of American Protestantism
  • Cover image for the book Small Strangers: The Experiences of Immigrant Children in America, 1880–1925
  • Cover image for the book The Wobblies: The Story of the IWW and Syndicalism in the United States
  • Cover image for the book That Old-Time Religion in Modern America: Evangelical Protestantism in the Twentieth Century
facebook icon twitter icon instagram icon linked in icon NEWSLETTERS
ABOUT US
  • Mission Statement
  • Employment
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Statement
CONTACT
  • Company Directory
  • Publicity and Media Queries
  • Rights and Permissions
  • Textbook Resource Center
AUTHOR RESOURCES
  • Royalty Contact
  • Production Guidelines
  • Manuscript Submissions
ORDERING INFORMATION
  • Rowman & Littlefield
  • National Book Network
  • Ingram Publisher Services UK
  • Special Sales
  • International Sales
  • eBook Partners
  • Digital Catalogs
IMPRINTS
  • Rowman & Littlefield
  • Lexington Books
  • Hamilton Books
  • Applause Books
  • Amadeus Press
  • Backbeat Books
  • Bernan
  • Hal Leonard Books
  • Limelight Editions
  • Co-Publishing Partners
  • Globe Pequot
  • Down East Books
  • Falcon Guides
  • Gooseberry Patch
  • Lyons Press
  • Muddy Boots
  • Pineapple Press
  • TwoDot Books
  • Stackpole Books
PARTNERS
  • American Alliance of Museums
  • American Association for State and Local History
  • Brookings Institution Press
  • Center for Strategic & International Studies
  • Council on Foreign Relations
  • Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
  • Fortress Press
  • The Foundation for Critical Thinking
  • Lehigh University Press
  • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  • Other Partners...