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The University of Arizona Press is the premier publisher of academic, regional, and literary works in the state of Arizona. They disseminate ideas and knowledge of lasting value that enrich understanding, inspire curiosity, and enlighten readers. They advance the University of Arizona’s mission by connecting scholarship and creative expression to readers worldwide.

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Edward Abbey

A Life

The University of Arizona Press
  • Copyright year: 2001
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Sharing the Desert

The Tohono O'odham in History

The University of Arizona Press

Sharing the Desert offers a balanced treatment of Tohono O'odham history, considering the primary political, social, and economic events of the Southwest as they affected the tribe. Commissioned as a textbook for use in Tohono O'odham schools, it will serve as an authoritative introduction for anyone seeking to learn about the history of these native people of the Sonoran Desert. Fully endorsed by the Tohono O'odham Tribal Council, it traces the evolution of a distinctive community facing recurring challenges.

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Telling Stories the Kiowa Way

The University of Arizona Press
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A Rush of Hands

The University of Arizona Press
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The Changing Mile Revisited

An Ecological Study of Vegetation Change with Time in the Lower Mile of an Arid and Semiarid Region

The University of Arizona Press
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A Poet's Truth

Conversations with Latino/Latina Poets

The University of Arizona Press
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Blood and Voice

Navajo Women Ceremonial Practitioners

The University of Arizona Press
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Blood Mysteries

The University of Arizona Press
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Being Chinese

Voices from the Diaspora

The University of Arizona Press
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Deception on All Accounts

The University of Arizona Press
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Shapeshift

The University of Arizona Press
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The Return of the Mexican Gray Wolf

Back to the Blue

The University of Arizona Press
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The Return of the Mexican Gray Wolf

The University of Arizona Press

The return of the Mexican gray wolf to Arizona's Blue Range in 1998 marked more than a victory for an endangered species. Long hated by ranchers, the gray wolf had been hunted to the brink of extinction until one woman took on the challenge of restoring it to its natural habitat. Inspired by the plight of the Mexican gray wolf, retiree Bobbie Holaday formed the citizens advocacy group Preserve Arizona's Wolves (P.A.WS.) in 1987 and embarked on a crusade to raise public awareness. She soon found herself in the center of a firestorm of controversy, with environmentalists taking sides against ranchers and neighbors against neighbors. This book tells her story for the first time, documenting her eleven-year effort to bring the gray wolf back to the Blue.

As Holaday quickly learned, ranchers exerted considerable control over the state legislature, and politicians in turn controlled decisions made by wildlife agencies. Even though the wolf had been listed as endangered since 1976, opposition to it was so strong that the Arizona Game and Fish Department had been unable to launch a recovery program. In The Return of the Mexican Gray Wolf, Holaday describes first-hand the tactics she and other ordinary citizens on the Mexican Wolf Recovery Team adopted to confront these obstacles. Enhanced with more than 40 photographs—32 in color—her account chronicles both the triumphs of reintroduction and the heartbreaking tragedies the wolves encountered during early phases.

Thanks to Holaday's perseverance, eleven wolves were released into the wild in 1998, and the Blue Range once again echoed with their howls. Her tenacity was an inspiration to all those she enlisted in the cause, and her story is a virtual primer for conservation activists on mobilizing at the grassroots level. The Return of the Mexican Gray Wolf shows that one person can make a difference in a seemingly hopeless cause and will engage all readers concerned with the preservation of wildlife.

All royalties go to the Mexican Wolf Trust Fund administered by the Arizona Game and Fish Department.

  • Copyright year: 2003
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The Shadow’s Horse

The University of Arizona Press
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Writing on the Edge

A Borderlands Reader

Edited by Tom Miller
The University of Arizona Press
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Arizona's War Town

The University of Arizona Press

Few American towns went untouched by World War II, even those in remote corners of the country. During that era, the federal government forever changed the lives of many northern Arizona citizens with the construction of the U.S. Army ordnance depot at Bellemont, ten miles west of Flagstaff. John Westerlund now tells how this ...

  • Copyright year: 2003
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Blanket Weaving in the Southwest

The University of Arizona Press
  • Copyright year: 2003
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Chiricahua Mountains

Bridging the Borders of Wildness

By Ken Lamberton; By (photographer) Jeff Garton
The University of Arizona Press
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Heterarchy, Political Economy, and the Ancient Maya

The Three Rivers Region of the East-Central Yucatán Peninsula

The University of Arizona Press
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Speak to Me Words

Essays on Contemporary American Indian Poetry

Edited by Dean Rader and Janice Gould
The University of Arizona Press
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Working Women in Mexico City

Public Discourses and Material Conditions, 1879-1931

The University of Arizona Press
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Ancient Maya Life in the Far West Bajo

Social and Environmental Change in the Wetlands of Belize

The University of Arizona Press
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Arizona's War Town

Flagstaff, Navajo Ordnance Depot, and World War II

The University of Arizona Press
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The Colorado Plateau

Cultural, Biological, and Physical Research

The University of Arizona Press
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Border Confluences

Borderland Narratives from the Mexican War to the Present

The University of Arizona Press
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Gateways to the Southwest

The Story of Arizona State Parks

The University of Arizona Press
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Glen Canyon Dammed

Inventing Lake Powell and the Canyon Country

The University of Arizona Press
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In the City of Smoking Mirrors

The University of Arizona Press
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Ruins and Rivals

The Making of Southwest Archaeology

The University of Arizona Press
  • Copyright year: 2001
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The Keepsake Storm

The University of Arizona Press
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Beloved Land

An Oral History of Mexican Americans in Southern Arizona

Edited by Patricia Preciado Martin; By (photographer) José Galvez
The University of Arizona Press
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Mexican Americans and the Law

¡El pueblo unido jamás será vencido!

The University of Arizona Press
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Race, Nation, and Market

Economic Culture in Porfirian Mexico

The University of Arizona Press
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Stalking the Big Bird

A Tale of Turkeys, Biologists, and Bureaucrats

The University of Arizona Press
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Stories and Stone

Writing the Ancestral Pueblo Homeland

Edited by Reuben Ellis
The University of Arizona Press
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Tequila

A Natural and Cultural History

The University of Arizona Press
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