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Full-Text Articles in Law
Market Solutions To Public Recreation Finance: Creating User-Supported Parks, Donald R. Leal
Market Solutions To Public Recreation Finance: Creating User-Supported Parks, Donald R. Leal
Outdoor Recreation: Promise and Peril in the New West (Summer Conference, June 8-10)
11 pages.
Contains 1 page of references.
Market Solutions To Public Recreation Finance: The Texas State Parks Example, Donald R. Leal
Market Solutions To Public Recreation Finance: The Texas State Parks Example, Donald R. Leal
Outdoor Recreation: Promise and Peril in the New West (Summer Conference, June 8-10)
11 pages.
Contains 1 page of references.
Agenda: Outdoor Recreation: Promise And Peril In The New West, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center, Colorado. Bureau Of Land Management
Agenda: Outdoor Recreation: Promise And Peril In The New West, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center, Colorado. Bureau Of Land Management
Outdoor Recreation: Promise and Peril in the New West (Summer Conference, June 8-10)
Co-sponsored by the Natural Resources Law Center and the Colorado Bureau of Land Management.
The conference will explore several components of the “promise and peril” of the ongoing outdoor recreation explosion. The conference will begin on the morning of June 8 with a series of introductory presentations designed to place the outdoor recreation movement in a useful historical and socioeconomic context. This material will be followed in the afternoon session by a discussion of environmental impacts of outdoor recreation, recognizing that the diversity and magnitude of impacts is as broad as the industry itself. This discussion will be followed on …
Will Tribes Ever Be Able To "Trust" Their Federal Trustee?, David E. Wilkins
Will Tribes Ever Be Able To "Trust" Their Federal Trustee?, David E. Wilkins
Jepson School of Leadership Studies articles, book chapters and other publications
It is widely reported that the federal government has a trust relationship with the Indian peoples of this land, one of the many distinctive features of the indigenous/federal relationship. Despite the importance of this concept, legal and political commentators and, surprisingly, federal policy makers have radically conflicting definitions of what the trust relationship actually means.