ABSTRACT

This book provides a comprehensive and up to date comparative study of the management and resolution of conflicts between conservation and recreation in protected areas in the US and China. Competing claims on the use of nature, increasing regulation of land use and recreational activities, and the conflicting goals between conservation and development have led to a rise in conflicts in the designation and management of protected areas. How to effectively manage and resolve these conflicts has become a challenge for both legislators and managers. By adopting an institutional dimension in legal interpretation, this book critically examines how such conflicts are dealt with in the legal regimes of the US and China while exploring interactions between legislatures, agencies and courts. The book searches for a plausible solution to improve the legal framework of protected areas in China by emulating pertinent mechanisms developed in the US, whilst also presenting legal and policy recommendations to the US. This informative book will be useful for legal scholars in Chinese law, nature conservation law, administrative law and comparative law.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

part I|56 pages

Conflicts in Theory

chapter 2|26 pages

Schemes of Protected Areas

Historical, Structural and Institutional Perspectives

chapter 3|28 pages

Resolving Conflicts in Protected Areas

Rationale, Principles and the Institutional Approach

part II|86 pages

Country Studies

chapter 6|15 pages

Resolution of Conflicts in Legislation and Policies

Assessing the Legal Foundations

chapter 7|29 pages

Resolution of Conflicts

A Judicial Perspective

part III|133 pages

Country studies