The North American Wildlife Conservation Model

Triumph For Man and Nature
Author(s): 
Shane P. Mahoney

This is two-part article by the author dedicated to helping hunters appreciate our own history of achievement in wildlife conservation and to encouraging greater commitment to the cause. It examines the North American Wildlife Conservation Model, both as a touchstone to our past and guidepost to our future. In the first installment, the author outlines rescue and recovery of wildlife it engendered and succeeded against all odds. In the second article, the author focuses on the impact of George Perkins Marsh on conservation.

 

Triumph For Man and Nature

The American Wilderness and John Muir
Author(s): 
Shane P. Mahoney

These are the latest in a series of articles about The North American Wildlife Conservation Model. Titled Triumph For Man and Nature, the series is dedicated to helping hunters and anglers from throughout the United States and Canada appreciate their own history of achievement in wildlife conservation and encouraging greater commitment to the cause. For these two articles, the author focuses on the work and accomplishments of John Muir.

The Seven Sisters

Pillars of the North American Wildlife Conservation Model
Author(s): 
Shane P. Mahoney

This is the third in a series of articles about the North American Wildlife Conservation Model. The series is dedicated to helping hunters and anglers throughout the United States and Canada appreciate their own history of achievements in wildlife conservation, and encouraging greater commitment to the cause. The author outlines the pillars of North American Wildlife Conservation Model as: the public trust, prohibitions on commerce, democratic rule of law, hunting opportunity for all, non-frivolous use, international resources and scientific management.

The North American Conservation Model

George Bird Grinnell: Father of American Conservation, Part 2
Author(s): 
Shane P. Mahoney

This is the 5th in a series of articles dedicated to helping hunters and anglers throughout the United States and Canada appreciate their history of achievement in wildlife conservation and to encouraging greater commitment to the cause. In this issue the author concludes the story of one of the greatest North American conservationists of them all.

George Bird Grinnell

The Father of American Conservation
Author(s): 
Shane P. Mahoney

He was many things: scientist, hunter, explorer, naturalist, entrepeneur and author. Above all else, however, George Bird Grinnell was and remains the most influential conservationst in North American History.