The Science of Politics/The Politics of Science: Examining the Snowmobile Controversy in Yellowstone National Park |
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Authors: | Daniel?L.?Dustin mailto:dustind@fiu.edu" title=" dustind@fiu.edu" itemprop=" email" data-track=" click" data-track-action=" Email author" data-track-label=" " >Email author,Ingrid?E.?Schneider |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, Florida International University, College of Education, 213A Ziff Education Building, Miami, Florida 33199, USA;(2) Department of Forest Resources, The University of Minnesota, 115 Green Hall, 530 Cleveland Avenue N., St. Paul, Minnesota 55108, USA |
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Abstract: | The snowmobile controversy in Yellowstone National Park not only pits snowmobilers against environmentalists, but it also pits the Bush Administration against the Clinton Administration. Caught in the middle are the National Park Service, scores of natural and social scientists, and Yellowstones permanent residents—the flora and fauna. The controversys political aspects are the focus of this paper; specifically, the tenuous relationship among research scientists, whose job it is to inform management and policy decisions; politicians, whose job it is to formulate those same decisions in the public arena; and public land management agencies, whose job it is to implement the decisions. The crux of the paper concerns the politicization of natural resource policy and ways in which research scientists tend to get caught up in it. Lessons learned from this Yellowstone episode regarding the role of science in policy-making processes are also considered. Two recent federal court rulings shed additional light on the politics surrounding Yellowstones snowmobile controversy, as does the importance of governmental checks and balances in resolving natural resource management disputes. |
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Keywords: | Yellowstone National Park Snowmobiles Controversy Science Politics Litigation Public land management agencies |
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