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Range management : principles and practices
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ISBN: 9780135014165 0135014166 Year: 2011 Publisher: Boston : Prentice-Hall,

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Book
Trees, forested landscapes, and grazing animals : a European perspective on woodlands and grazed treescapes
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ISBN: 9780415626118 9780203102909 9781136242175 9781136242212 9781138304482 Year: 2013


Dissertation
Growing potatoes and grass-clover after turned down grassland
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ISBN: 9789059891890 Year: 2007 Publisher: Gent : Universiteit Gent. Faculteit bio-ingenieurswetenschappen,

Public lands and political meaning
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ISBN: 0520926889 1597348384 9780520926882 0585419779 9780585419770 9781597348386 9780520228627 0520228626 0520228626 Year: 2002 Publisher: Berkeley University of California Press

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The history of the American West is a history of struggles over land, and none has inspired so much passion and misunderstanding as the conflict between ranchers and the federal government over public grazing lands. Drawing upon neglected sources from organized ranchers, this is the first book to provide a historically based explanation for why the relationship between ranchers and the federal government became so embattled long before modern environmentalists became involved in the issue. Reconstructing the increasingly contested interpretations of the meaning of public land administration, Public Lands and Political Meaning traces the history of the political dynamics between ranchers and federal land agencies, giving us a new look at the relations of power that made the modern West.Although a majority of organized ranchers supported government control of the range at the turn of the century, by midcentury these same organizations often used a virulently antifederal discourse that fueled many a political fight in Washington and that still runs deep in American politics today. In analyzing this shift, Merrill shows how profoundly people's ideas about property wove their way into the political language of the debates surrounding public range policy. As she unravels the meaning of this language, Merrill demonstrates that different ideas about property played a crucial role in perpetuating antagonism on both sides of the fence.In addition to illuminating the origins of the "sagebrush rebellions" in the American West, this book also persuasively argues that political historians must pay more attention to public land management issues as a way of understanding tensions in American state-building.

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