Description

Book Synopsis
This book looks to the history of the ''the commons'' in American and European social thought to better understand contemporary environmental problems. The authors show how American law governing lands and resources relies on the individualist assumptions of Enlightenment thinkers, who regarded land as ''wasted'' when not being ''improved'' by European agriculture or colonization. Curry and McGuire trace the history of this philosophical and historical legacy and reveal its strong influence on American concepts on community and land. They not only reveal the law''s insufficient comprehension of community rights, but they also advocate realistic policy alternatives whereby community governance can better solve the challenges of resource management and other American social problems.

Trade Review
When people, land, and community are as one, all members prosper. When regarded as competing agents, all suffer. These authors show what we must do to get it right. -- Wes Jackson, author of New Roots for Agriculture
In a well-reasoned, coherent . . . discussion, Curry and McGuire argue for a renewal of the 'concept of community' to counter the pervasive influence of individualism in all its form. A valuable contribution. * CHOICE *
Curry and McGuire's provocative analysis shows that the privatization and degradation of the American 'commons' have deep historical roots within the rise of industrial civilization and of the individualistic capitalist ethos. But they also show that history is now being rewritten as promising new alternatives to the degradation of land emerge within American and Third world rural communities. A critical analysis of a critical social and environmental problem. -- Frederick H. Buttel, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Series Editor's Foreword Chapter 2 Preface Chapter 3 Introduction Part 4 Historical Overview Chapter 5 Corporate Colonialism Chapter 6 Colonizer Enlightenment Chapter 7 Industrial Transformations Chapter 8 A New Leviathan in the New World Chapter 9 The Individual and Natural Resource Management Part 10 Current Consequences Chapter 11 Aggregated in Theory Chapter 12 Monad Law Chapter 13 Land in Practice Chapter 14 Forestry Management Philosophies Chapter 15 A Tale of Two Countries Part 16 Re-mediation Optic Chapter 17 In Thought Chapter 18 Community on Land Chapter 19 Conclusion: The Road to a Place

Community on Land

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Janel M. Curry, Steven F. McGuire

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      View other formats and editions of Community on Land by Janel M. Curry

      Publisher: Rlpg/Galleys
      Publication Date: 6/11/2002 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780742501614, 978-0742501614
      ISBN10: 0742501612

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book looks to the history of the ''the commons'' in American and European social thought to better understand contemporary environmental problems. The authors show how American law governing lands and resources relies on the individualist assumptions of Enlightenment thinkers, who regarded land as ''wasted'' when not being ''improved'' by European agriculture or colonization. Curry and McGuire trace the history of this philosophical and historical legacy and reveal its strong influence on American concepts on community and land. They not only reveal the law''s insufficient comprehension of community rights, but they also advocate realistic policy alternatives whereby community governance can better solve the challenges of resource management and other American social problems.

      Trade Review
      When people, land, and community are as one, all members prosper. When regarded as competing agents, all suffer. These authors show what we must do to get it right. -- Wes Jackson, author of New Roots for Agriculture
      In a well-reasoned, coherent . . . discussion, Curry and McGuire argue for a renewal of the 'concept of community' to counter the pervasive influence of individualism in all its form. A valuable contribution. * CHOICE *
      Curry and McGuire's provocative analysis shows that the privatization and degradation of the American 'commons' have deep historical roots within the rise of industrial civilization and of the individualistic capitalist ethos. But they also show that history is now being rewritten as promising new alternatives to the degradation of land emerge within American and Third world rural communities. A critical analysis of a critical social and environmental problem. -- Frederick H. Buttel, University of Wisconsin, Madison

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 Series Editor's Foreword Chapter 2 Preface Chapter 3 Introduction Part 4 Historical Overview Chapter 5 Corporate Colonialism Chapter 6 Colonizer Enlightenment Chapter 7 Industrial Transformations Chapter 8 A New Leviathan in the New World Chapter 9 The Individual and Natural Resource Management Part 10 Current Consequences Chapter 11 Aggregated in Theory Chapter 12 Monad Law Chapter 13 Land in Practice Chapter 14 Forestry Management Philosophies Chapter 15 A Tale of Two Countries Part 16 Re-mediation Optic Chapter 17 In Thought Chapter 18 Community on Land Chapter 19 Conclusion: The Road to a Place

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