Bordering North America : constructing wilderness along the periphery of Canada, Mexico, and the United States

This dissertation considers the exchanges between national parks along the North American borderlands that defined the contours of development and wilderness and created a brand new category of protected space -- the transboundary park. The National Park Systems of Canada, Mexico, and the United Sta...

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Main Author: Baumgardner, Neel Gregory
Other Authors: Bsumek, Erika Marie
Format: Others
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/30459
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-304592015-09-20T17:32:33ZBordering North America : constructing wilderness along the periphery of Canada, Mexico, and the United StatesBaumgardner, Neel GregoryNational parkEnvironmental historyThis dissertation considers the exchanges between national parks along the North American borderlands that defined the contours of development and wilderness and created a brand new category of protected space -- the transboundary park. The National Park Systems of Canada, Mexico, and the United States did not develop and grow in isolation. "Bordering North America" examines four different parks in two regions: Waterton Lakes and Glacier in the northern Rocky Mountains of Alberta and Montana and Big Bend and the Maderas del Carmen in the Chihuahuan Desert of Texas and Coahuila. In 1932, Glacier and Waterton Lakes were combined to form the first transboundary park. In the 1930s and 1940s, using the Waterton-Glacier model as precedent, the U.S. and Mexican governments undertook a major effort, ultimately unsuccessful, to designate a sister park in Mexico and combine the two areas into another international space. Finally, in 1994, Mexico established two protected areas, including the Maderas del Carmen, adjacent to the Big Bend. Ideas about parks and wilderness migrated across borders just as freely as the flora and fauna these spaces sought to protect. Moreover, a multiplicity of views and forces, from three different Park Services, the visiting public, private enterprise, local landholders, competing government agencies and international NGOs, and even the elements of nature itself, all combined to shape the trajectory of park development.textBsumek, Erika Marie2015-08-26T22:17:04Z2013-052013-04-29May 20132015-08-26T22:17:04ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/30459
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic National park
Environmental history
spellingShingle National park
Environmental history
Baumgardner, Neel Gregory
Bordering North America : constructing wilderness along the periphery of Canada, Mexico, and the United States
description This dissertation considers the exchanges between national parks along the North American borderlands that defined the contours of development and wilderness and created a brand new category of protected space -- the transboundary park. The National Park Systems of Canada, Mexico, and the United States did not develop and grow in isolation. "Bordering North America" examines four different parks in two regions: Waterton Lakes and Glacier in the northern Rocky Mountains of Alberta and Montana and Big Bend and the Maderas del Carmen in the Chihuahuan Desert of Texas and Coahuila. In 1932, Glacier and Waterton Lakes were combined to form the first transboundary park. In the 1930s and 1940s, using the Waterton-Glacier model as precedent, the U.S. and Mexican governments undertook a major effort, ultimately unsuccessful, to designate a sister park in Mexico and combine the two areas into another international space. Finally, in 1994, Mexico established two protected areas, including the Maderas del Carmen, adjacent to the Big Bend. Ideas about parks and wilderness migrated across borders just as freely as the flora and fauna these spaces sought to protect. Moreover, a multiplicity of views and forces, from three different Park Services, the visiting public, private enterprise, local landholders, competing government agencies and international NGOs, and even the elements of nature itself, all combined to shape the trajectory of park development. === text
author2 Bsumek, Erika Marie
author_facet Bsumek, Erika Marie
Baumgardner, Neel Gregory
author Baumgardner, Neel Gregory
author_sort Baumgardner, Neel Gregory
title Bordering North America : constructing wilderness along the periphery of Canada, Mexico, and the United States
title_short Bordering North America : constructing wilderness along the periphery of Canada, Mexico, and the United States
title_full Bordering North America : constructing wilderness along the periphery of Canada, Mexico, and the United States
title_fullStr Bordering North America : constructing wilderness along the periphery of Canada, Mexico, and the United States
title_full_unstemmed Bordering North America : constructing wilderness along the periphery of Canada, Mexico, and the United States
title_sort bordering north america : constructing wilderness along the periphery of canada, mexico, and the united states
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/30459
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