Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Event Date
6-10-1996
Series
Summer Conference (17th: 1996: Boulder, Colo.)
Description
13 pages.
Citation Information
Shroufe, Duane L., "The Sonoran Desert Tortoise and the Mexican Spotted Owl: The High Road and the Slow Road to Conservation" (1996). Biodiversity Protection: Implementation and Reform of the Endangered Species Act (Summer Conference, June 9-12).
https://scholar.law.colorado.edu/biodiversity-protection-implementation-and-reform-endangered-species-act/8
Alternate Title
Lessons from the Southwest - With and Without HCPs: The Tortoise and the Owl
Included in
Administrative Law Commons, Animal Law Commons, Biodiversity Commons, Environmental Law Commons, Environmental Policy Commons, Land Use Law Commons, Natural Resource Economics Commons, Natural Resources and Conservation Commons, Natural Resources Law Commons, Natural Resources Management and Policy Commons, Property Law and Real Estate Commons, Public Policy Commons, State and Local Government Law Commons, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology Commons
Comments
All across the country - in Congress, in state legislatures and in urban and rural communities - people are discussing why we should or should not protect biodiversity and how best to do so. Since the Endangered Species Act is up for reauthorization, a variety of reform proposals are being debated. Speakers - including natural resource scholars, experts from the private and nonprofit sectors, and government officials - examine the rationale for biodiversity protection, the legal framework of the Endangered Species Act, and examples of implementation of the Act from across the West. Special attention is given to major issues raised by the Act that cut across all regions, including: consultations and recovery planning; habitat conservation plans; the ESA and water rights; the ESA and state programs; the ESA and tribal rights; economic impacts of the ESA; and ESA reform proposals.
The Biodiversity Protection: Implementation and Reform of the Endangered Species Act conference has been expanded to include a keynote address Sunday evening by Jane Lubchenco, Valley Professor of Marine Biology, Department of Zoology, Oregon State University. We have also added to our traditional mountain cookout a talk by Don Snow, Executive Director, Northern Lights Institute, and Editor, Northern Lights Magazine, Laramie.