Endangered Species Act at twenty-one: Issues of reauthorization Auteur various authors Périodique/Collection Environmental Law | Vol. 24(2); 321 - 760; 440 p. Date 1994 Source IUCN (ID: ANA-052222) Éditeur | Lieu de publication Northwestern School of Law Lewis and Clark College | Portland, OR, USA Type du document Article en publication périodique Langue Anglais Pays/Territoire États-Unis d'Amérique Sujet Espèces sauvages et écosystèmes Mot clé Terres privées Espèces végétales protégées Espèces animales protégées Gestion/conservation Flore sauvage Faune sauvage Politique/planification Résumé Contents: 1. Major issues in reauthorization of the Endangered Species Act; 2. The Endangered Species Act: time for a new approach? 3. The Endangered Species Act and 'Takings'. A call for innovation within the terms of the Act; 4. Where the wild things are: The Endangered Species Act and private property; 5. The Endangered Species Act: impact of Section 9 on private landowners; 6. The fallacy of deathbed conservation under the Endangered Species Act; 7. Promoting recovery or hedging a bet against extinction: Austin, Texas's risky approach to ensuring endangered species' survival in the Texas Hill Country; 8. Natural communities conservation planning: California's new ecosystem approach to biodiversity; 9. There's something fishy going on here: a critique of thee National Marine Fisheries Service's definition of species under the Endangered Species Act; 10.The need for a smolt travel time objective in the Columbia basin fish and wildlife program to protect and restore the Northwest's imperiled salmon runs; 11.Natural resource restoration: the interface between the Endangered Species Act and CERCLA's natural resource damage provisions