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Nationhood and National Parks: Comparative Examples from the Post-Imperial Experience

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Nationhood and National Parks: Comparative Examples from the Post-Imperial Experience
Author(s)Carruthers, Jane
AbstractIn terms of international legislation as well as in popular consciousness, a national park was, for more than half a century, the most advanced level of protected area; it encapsulated all that was “good” and “unselfish” in nature conservation. As is well-documented, the first national parks in the United States crystallized the romantic settler frontier experience which had brought within the fold of a self-conscious new nation some of the earth’s most spectacular and monumental scenery. Many works have emphasized the ecological innovation of national parks, but recent research has involved closer and critical scrutiny of its features as a “social invention”.
IssueNo
Pages125-138
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceEcology and Empire: Environmental History of Settler Societies
VolumeNo
PubDateOctober1997
ISBN_ISSN0-295-97667-5
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