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“Enlightened System” or “Regulatory Nightmare”?: New York’s Adirondack Mountains and the Conflicted Politics of Environmental Land-Use Reform During the 1970s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2019
Abstract:
This exploration of the politics of land-use reform in New York’s vast Adirondack Mountains provides a revealing window onto the ambiguities, evolution, and importance of environmental liberalism during the 1970s. A distinctive set of circumstances, featuring forceful advocacy by Governor Nelson Rockefeller and propitious political timing, led to the creation in the early 1970s of one of the most ambitious state-level environmental reforms in modern American history. But implementation during the mid- and late 1970s proved challenging. Environmental management by a new regional agency that possessed powerful regulatory authority over all public and private lands in the region produced discontents, distrust, and organized opposition among both developers and property-rights advocates on the right and environmental advocates on the left. The result was an uneasy, enduring legacy: the new regulatory institution and key environmental planning ideas of the early 1970s and the later, wide-ranging discontents would coexist in similar forms for decades to come.
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References
NOTES
1. Temporary Study Commission on the Future of the Adirondacks, press release, 19 September 1968, Adirondack Museum Library records, New York State Archives website: http://iarchives.nysed.gov/dmsBlue/viewImageData.jsp?id=172337.
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30. See APA Meeting Minutes for 1976 and 1977 in Box 4, Series I, APA Papers; APA 1977 Annual Report, in Box 1, Series I, APA Papers.
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34. Graham, The Adirondack Park, esp. 254–57; D’Elia, The Adirondack Rebellion, 138.
35. D’Elia, The Adirondack Rebellion, v, 16, 59.
36. Terrie, Contested Terrain, 167–73; Alice Wolf Gilborn, Adirondack Faces (Syracuse, 1991), xx.
37. D’Elia, The Adirondack Rebellion, 162–63; McMartin, Perspectives on the Adirondacks, 43.
38. D’Elia, The Adirondack Rebellion, chaps. 12–13; Heiman, The Quiet Evolution, 210; Liroff and Davis, Protecting Open Space, 153–54.
39. Liroff and Davis, Protecting Open Space, 144; Popper, The Politics of Land-Use Reform, 148; D’Elia, The Adirondack Rebellion, chap. 13.
40. McMartin, Perspectives on the Adirondacks, chaps. 2–3, 7, quote from 26; Davis, “The Early Years of the Adirondack Park Agency,” 247–48; Stuart Buchanan, “The Evolution of the Department of Environmental Conservation,” in Porter, The Great Experiment in Conservation, chap. 18; Terrie, Contested Terrain, 170–71; Haskell, Elizabeth H. and Price, Victoria S., State Environmental Management: Case Studies of Nine States (New York, 1973).Google Scholar
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43. Liroff and Davis, Protecting Open Space, 44, 150–51; Glennon, “A Land Not Saved,” 270–71.
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47. Schneider, The Adirondacks, 306ff., 318; Booth, “New York’s Adirondack Park Agency,” 171; Terrie, Contested Terrain, 178; James Howard Kunstler, “For Sale,” New York Times Magazine, 18 June 1989, 22–25, 30–33.
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