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After the Grizzly

The landmark federal Endangered Species Act-the most powerful and comprehensive U.S. environmental law and most ambitious biodiversity conservation statute ever enacted by any country-turns forty in 2013. Is this anniversary a cause for celebration or despair? What have we learned during the past four decades? Why is endangered species conservation so complicated? And why do efforts to preserve endangered species often result in such bitter controversy? This talk will address these questions, place them in a broader historical context, and discuss some of the challenges and opportunities for biodiversity conservation in the twenty-first century.

Speaker: Peter S. Alagona is an assistant professor of history and environmental studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Before joining the UCSB faculty, he was a Beagle Environmental Fellow in the Center for the Environment and Kennedy School of Government at Harvard and a postdoctoral fellow and visiting assistant professor in the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford.

 

Thursday, 05/30/13

Contact:

Website: Click to Visit

Cost:

$5 General, Free Members

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Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History

165 Forest Ave
Pacific Grove, CA 93950