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- Who Really Owns America’s Land? – National Center for Constitutional . . .
Land and the products of the earth, in their natural state, were considered a gift of God to man, but then man was commanded individually to cultivate, beautify, and subdue it and bring it under his dominion
- Americas Public Lands: origin, history, future - Public Lands Foundation
In the Lower 48 contiguous states, Indian Nations ceded millions of acres of land to the newly established government that contributed to making the U S what it is today In Alaska and Hawaii, the status of lands was negotiated as a part of Statehood
- By Force of Expectation: Colonization, Public Lands, and the Property . . .
Two armed confrontations—one in Nevada in 2014 and another in Oregon in 2016—illustrate this conflict Initiated by the Bundy family and supported by various militia groups, these incidents were staged as challenges to federal ownership of public lands and the legitimacy of environmental regulation
- America’s Public Lands: What History Suggests About Their Future
I recently published a comprehensive political history of America’s public lands, [2] those owned by the national government and managed by four agencies—the National Park Service, the U S Forest Service, the U S Fish Wildlife Service, and the Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”)
- Timeline of Major US Public Land Laws and Acts - ThoughtCo
20 May 1785: Congress enacted the first law to manage the Public Lands that resulted from the thirteen newly independent states agreeing to relinquish their western land claims and allow the land to become the joint property of all citizens of the new nation
- Origins of Public Lands - Rangelands Gateway
Addresses how public lands were acquired, history of disposal, origin of the current management system, and benefits of public lands ownership to all Americans BLM National History : includes a public lands historical timeline
- Our Common Ground: A History of Americas Public Lands on JSTOR
While Congress was bestowing huge grants of public lands on the western railroads, it was also furnishing the legal basis for extracting minerals found on the public lands
- Understanding the People of Our Public Lands
The people charged with protecting our public lands and helping you enjoy them are called rangers The most famous rangers work for the National Park Service —they’re the ones wearing the iconic wide-brimmed hats—but they can also be found in places like national forests and state parks
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