The Tortoise and the Expressway: The Governance of Circulation and the Conflict over the Appropriation of Residential and Conservation Properties by the Osceola Parkway Extension
Using the case of the Osceola Parkway Extension in Orange and Osceola Counties, this research examines how the legal geographies of expressway development and property rights claims intersect with gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus) conservation efforts in Central Florida. Proposed and existing ro...
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ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_7524332020-09-01T05:05:29Z The Tortoise and the Expressway: The Governance of Circulation and the Conflict over the Appropriation of Residential and Conservation Properties by the Osceola Parkway Extension Jones, Caitlin Erin (author) McCreary, Tyler (professor directing thesis) Gergan, Mabel Denzin (committee member) Doel, Ronald Edmund (committee member) Florida State University (degree granting institution) College of Social Sciences and Public Policy (degree granting college) Department of Geography (degree granting departmentdgg) Text text master thesis Florida State University English eng 1 online resource (101 pages) computer application/pdf Using the case of the Osceola Parkway Extension in Orange and Osceola Counties, this research examines how the legal geographies of expressway development and property rights claims intersect with gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus) conservation efforts in Central Florida. Proposed and existing road infrastructure projects, such as the proposed Osceola Parkway Extension, continue to fragment gopher tortoise habitat in Florida. The Central Florida Expressway Authority rationalizes the road as a necessity, justifying appropriation of land for the parkway extension’s development. Thus, determining the route of the Osceola Parkway Extension has become the focus of road governance. The majority of the proposed road alignments for the extension transect Split Oak Forest and Wildlife Management Area, threatening the security of both the gopher tortoise population and gopher tortoise mitigation property within the forest. However, while the Central Florida Expressway Authority has jurisdiction over the governance of the road, it does not own the land needed to build it. This creates a relation between road governance and competing property rights, which then poses the question: what property rights must be ceded for right-of-way acquisition? Competing property rights holders have become enmeshed in the road governance process, as environmentalists seeking to protect conservation easements conflict with residential property owners. Thus, the mobilization of competing property rights claims structure the dialogue around road infrastructure encroachment onto conservation lands. How the competing values of suburban family homes and conservation easements, and the human and animal lives they support, are balanced will ultimately shape the road’s alignment. This suggests that legal and political conservation strategies need to be understood in dialogue with the governing rationalities of expressway and suburban development that continue to constitute enduring threats to the gopher tortoise and their local environments. A Thesis submitted to the Department of Geography in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science. 2019 November 8, 2019. Circulation, Conservation, Expressway, Gopher Tortoise, Governance, Property Includes bibliographical references. Tyler McCreary, Professor Directing Thesis; Mabel Gergan, Committee Member; Ronald E. Doel, Committee Member. Geography Wildlife conservation Transportation--Planning 2019_Fall_Jones_fsu_0071N_15598 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/2019_Fall_Jones_fsu_0071N_15598 http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A752433/datastream/TN/view/Tortoise%20and%20the%20Expressway.jpg |
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English English |
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Geography Wildlife conservation Transportation--Planning |
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Geography Wildlife conservation Transportation--Planning The Tortoise and the Expressway: The Governance of Circulation and the Conflict over the Appropriation of Residential and Conservation Properties by the Osceola Parkway Extension |
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Using the case of the Osceola Parkway Extension in Orange and Osceola Counties, this research examines how the legal geographies of expressway development and property rights claims intersect with gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus) conservation efforts in Central Florida. Proposed and existing road infrastructure projects, such as the proposed Osceola Parkway Extension, continue to fragment gopher tortoise habitat in Florida. The Central Florida Expressway Authority rationalizes the road as a necessity, justifying appropriation of land for the parkway extension’s development. Thus, determining the route of the Osceola Parkway Extension has become the focus of road governance. The majority of the proposed road alignments for the extension transect Split Oak Forest and Wildlife Management Area, threatening the security of both the gopher tortoise population and gopher tortoise mitigation property within the forest. However, while the Central Florida Expressway Authority has jurisdiction over the governance of the road, it does not own the land needed to build it. This creates a relation between road governance and competing property rights, which then poses the question: what property rights must be ceded for right-of-way acquisition? Competing property rights holders have become enmeshed in the road governance process, as environmentalists seeking to protect conservation easements conflict with residential property owners. Thus, the mobilization of competing property rights claims structure the dialogue around road infrastructure encroachment onto conservation lands. How the competing values of suburban family homes and conservation easements, and the human and animal lives they support, are balanced will ultimately shape the road’s alignment. This suggests that legal and political conservation strategies need to be understood in dialogue with the governing rationalities of expressway and suburban development that continue to constitute enduring threats to the gopher tortoise and their local environments. === A Thesis submitted to the Department of Geography in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science. === 2019 === November 8, 2019. === Circulation, Conservation, Expressway, Gopher Tortoise, Governance, Property === Includes bibliographical references. === Tyler McCreary, Professor Directing Thesis; Mabel Gergan, Committee Member; Ronald E. Doel, Committee Member. |
author2 |
Jones, Caitlin Erin (author) |
author_facet |
Jones, Caitlin Erin (author) |
title |
The Tortoise and the Expressway: The Governance of Circulation and the Conflict over the Appropriation of Residential and Conservation Properties by the Osceola Parkway Extension |
title_short |
The Tortoise and the Expressway: The Governance of Circulation and the Conflict over the Appropriation of Residential and Conservation Properties by the Osceola Parkway Extension |
title_full |
The Tortoise and the Expressway: The Governance of Circulation and the Conflict over the Appropriation of Residential and Conservation Properties by the Osceola Parkway Extension |
title_fullStr |
The Tortoise and the Expressway: The Governance of Circulation and the Conflict over the Appropriation of Residential and Conservation Properties by the Osceola Parkway Extension |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Tortoise and the Expressway: The Governance of Circulation and the Conflict over the Appropriation of Residential and Conservation Properties by the Osceola Parkway Extension |
title_sort |
tortoise and the expressway: the governance of circulation and the conflict over the appropriation of residential and conservation properties by the osceola parkway extension |
publisher |
Florida State University |
url |
http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/2019_Fall_Jones_fsu_0071N_15598 |
_version_ |
1719339212774309888 |