1996
AGENDA: The National Forest Management Act in a Changing Society, 1976-1996: How Well Has It Worked in the Past 20 Years?: Will It Work in the 21st Century?, University of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center, Colorado State University, Oregon State University, Pinchot Institute for Conservation, and Syracuse University. Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs
Assessing the Need to Reform the Laws and Regulations, Perry R. Hagenstein
Bringing the Aquatic Sciences into NFMA Framework: Will They Fit?, James Sedell and Kelly Burnett
Can Managers Adapt to New Relationships and Roles Under NFMA?, Elizabeth Estill
“Can You Live With That, Chief?”—Forging NFMA Through Congressional and Agency Give and Take, John R. McGuire
Forest Planning on the National Forests Under Ecosystem Management, John Sessions and K. Norman Johnson
Framework for Understanding NFMA in a Legal Context, David H. Getches
Global Trends and the Future of National Forests, Nels C. Johnson
Making Forest Policy in an Imperfect World, James W. Giltmier
NFMA and Ecosystem Management, Richard L. Knight
NFMA Implementation Options: Managing Environmental Decisions [outline], Susan Yonts-Shepard
NFMA in Relation to Stewardship, Science, Community and Culture: Some Points of View from the Alaska Region, Phil Janik, Neil Hagadorn, and Rai Behnert
Reflections from the Seventh American Forest Congress: Some Thoughts for National Forest Management, William R. Bentley
Rural Communities in an Urban Society and Global Economy, Michael Preston
Stories from the Frontlines: How NFMA Developed and Key Players, Robert E. Wolf
The Failure of Federal Land Planning, Steven P. Quarles
The National Forest Management Act in a Changing Society, 1976-1996: How Well Has It Worked in the Past 20 Years? Will It Work in the 21st Century?, Margaret A. Shannon and K. Norman Johnson
The National Forest Management Act: Managing the Use Out of Multiple Use Lands, Dan S. Budd
The Need for a New NFMA Planning Rule, Jack Ward Thomas
Understanding the Interplay Among Many Laws: 1970 to 2000, Perry R. Hagenstein
What Can We Learn from Past Reform Efforts, R. Max Peterson
Whigs and Hunters: Indian Tribal Rights in the National Forests, Robert A. Williams, Jr.
Writing the Regulations: Using Scientists to Link Law and Policy, Arthur W. Cooper