This book contains recent geographic work examining the changing geography of protected areas in the U.S. and Europe. These places can be national parks, forests, or other places that are being protected for their significant aesthetic, historical, or environmental values by governments and communities. These places can be studied with reference to their physical environments, the management of their plant and animal life, which places are to be protected, who visits these places (and who does not, and why not), and how we think of these places. This work includes examinations of many parks and issues that affect them, such as land degradation, the social and political geography involved in creating new national park units, visitation by underserved segments of the population, and the changing names of protected areas. It makes use of work using methods and data as diverse as remote sensing, nineteenth survey plats and GIS, and online visitor surveys.
Chapter 1. Introduction: The Changing Geography of Protected Areas / Joe Weber and Selima Sultana
Chapter 2. Geographic Research on National Parks: A Review and Prospectus / Joe Weber and Selima Sultana
Chapter 3. From Land Degradation to Habitat Loss: A Qualitative Assessment of Vegetation Cover in Protected Areas of Arid Lands / Xochizeltzin Castaneda-Camacho
Chapter 4. The role of national parks in the development of disadvantaged karst areas in some European countries / Tamas Telbisz and Laszlo Mari
Chapter 5. National Parks and Wildlife Restoration in the Global North: The Case of Wolves in the United States and France / Randall K. Wilson
Chapter 6. Failed National Park Proposals in "Sweet Home Alabama" / Lary M. Dilsaver and Joe Weber
Chapter 7. Equity and Inclusion in the National Park Service: Historical Challenges, New Possibilities / Yonit Yogev
Chapter 8. The Contentious Redesignation of the Gateway Arch National Park / Seth Kannarr and Michael A. Urban
Chapter 9. Canyon de Chelly National Monument and the Vanishing Navajo Meridian / Joe Weber
Chapter 10. Youth Visitor Trends in United States National Parks: A Preliminary Study / Matthew Balentine, John Crowell, Charles F. Holloman III, Michael Pretes
Joe Weber is a Professor at the University of Alabama. His research interests include the changing geography of the national park system, and especially changing boundaries and names, as well as the development of the American highway system.
Selima Sultana is a Professor at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Her research interests span various domains, including urban and transportation studies and national parks. Her research often delves into the interactions between the physical environment of neighbourhoods and social factors such as class, race/ethnicity, gender, and daily mobility.
The co-editors recently published the book The Parks Belong to the People: The Geography of the National Park System and have been carrying out research on the national park system for over a decade, publishing a half dozen journal articles on the topic. They also co-founded the Protected Areas Specialty Group of the American Association of Geographers, the leading group of academic geographers in the U.S.