New Jersey's Environments
192 pages, 6 x 9
6 maps, 4 tables
Paperback
Release Date:19 Jan 2006
ISBN:9780813537191
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New Jersey's Environments

Past, Present, and Future

Rutgers University Press

Americans often think of New Jersey as an environmental nightmare. As seen from its infamous turnpike, which is how many travelers experience the Garden State, it is difficult not to be troubled by the wealth of industrial plants, belching smokestacks, and hills upon hills of landfills. Yet those living and working in New Jersey often experience a very different environment. Despite its dense population and urban growth, two-thirds of the state remains covered in farmland and forest, and New Jersey has a larger percentage of land dedicated to state parks and forestland than the average for all states. It is this ecological paradox that makes New Jersey important for understanding the relationship between Americans and their natural world.

In New Jersey’s Environments,historians, policy-makers, and earth scientists use a case study approach to uncover the causes and consequences of decisions regarding land use, resources, and conservation. Nine essays consider topics ranging from solid waste and wildlife management to the effects of sprawl on natural disaster preparedness. The state is astonishingly diverse and faces more than the usual competing interests from environmentalists, citizens, and businesses.

This book documents the innovations and compromises created on behalf of and in response to growing environmental concerns in New Jersey, all of which set examples on the local level for nationwide and worldwide efforts that share the goal of protecting the natural world.

The Garden State is second to none when it comes to clashes of humanity and nature, and this is a valuable collection of treatises on several of the most notable ones. Alexander Lane, Environment Writer for the New Jersey Star-Ledger
The Garden State is second to none when it comes to clashes of humanity and nature, and this is a valuable collection of treatises on several of the most notable ones. Alexander Lane, Environment Writer for the New Jersey Star-Ledger
NEIL M. MAHER is an assistant professor in the federated department of history at the New Jersey Institute of Technology and Rutgers University, Newark.
Introduction : Nature's next exit? or Why New Jersey is as important as Yellowstone National Park / Neil M. Maher
A natural history of the life and death of a great American city : Atlantic City, New Jersey, 1850-2000 / Bryant Simon
Solid waste management in "The garbage state" : New Jersey's transformation from landfilling to incineration / Eileen McGurty
Oysters, public trust, and the law in New Jersey / Bonnie J. McCay
Citizen expertise and citizen action in the creation of the Freshwater Wetlands Protection Act / Heather Fenyk and David H. Guston
The free fishing controversy of Sussex County, New Jersey / Robert W. Reynolds
Tracking New Jersey's changing landscape / Richard Lathrop and John Hasse
Evaluating the effects of historical land cover change on summertime weather and climate in New Jersey / Paul S. Wichansky [and others]
A century of natural disasters in a state of changing vulnerability : New Jersey, 1900-1999 / James K. Mitchell
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