The Law of the American West: a Critical Bibliography of the Nonlegal Sources

The Law of the American West: a Critical Bibliography of the Nonlegal Sources

University of Colorado Law School Colorado Law Scholarly Commons Articles Colorado Law Faculty Scholarship 1987 The Law of the American West: A Critical Bibliography of the Nonlegal Sources Charles F. Wilkinson University of Colorado Law School Follow this and additional works at: https://scholar.law.colorado.edu/articles Part of the Environmental Law Commons, Indian and Aboriginal Law Commons, Land Use Law Commons, Law and Politics Commons, Law and Race Commons, Legal Biography Commons, Legal History Commons, Legal Writing and Research Commons, Natural Resources Law Commons, Oil, Gas, and Mineral Law Commons, and the Water Law Commons Citation Information Charles F. Wilkinson, The Law of the American West: A Critical Bibliography of the Nonlegal Sources, 85 MICH. L. REV. 953 (1987), available at https://scholar.law.colorado.edu/articles/1009. Copyright Statement Copyright protected. Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is required. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Colorado Law Faculty Scholarship at Colorado Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Articles by an authorized administrator of Colorado Law Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. +(,121/,1( Citation: Charles F. Wilkinson, The Law of the American West: A Critical Bibliography of the Nonlegal Sources, 85 Mich. L. Rev. 953, 1051 (1987) Provided by: William A. Wise Law Library Content downloaded/printed from HeinOnline Fri Sep 22 17:49:16 2017 -- Your use of this HeinOnline PDF indicates your acceptance of HeinOnline's Terms and Conditions of the license agreement available at http://heinonline.org/HOL/License -- The search text of this PDF is generated from uncorrected OCR text. -- To obtain permission to use this article beyond the scope of your HeinOnline license, please use: Copyright Information Use QR Code reader to send PDF to your smartphone or tablet device THE LAW OF THE AMERICAN WEST: A CRITICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE NONLEGAL SOURCESt Charles F. Wilkinson* TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION ........................................ 955 II. THE EVENTS .......................................... 960 A. The Turning Points................................ 962 1. The California Gold Rush ...................... 962 2. The Opening of the Public Domain ............. 963 3. Yellowstone National Park...................... 964 4. Indian Allotment .............................. 965 5. Hoover Dam ................................... 966 6. The Post-World War II Boom .................. 967 B. The Epic Conflicts ................................. 968 1. Conquest by Manifest Destiny ................... 968 2. The Mussel Slough Tragedy .................... 969 3. The Johnson County War ...................... 970 4. Water for Los Angeles .......................... 971 5. Hetch Hetchy .................................. 971 6. Alaska Land ................................... 972 III. THE PEOPLE .......................................... 973 A. The Leaders ...................................... 973 1. Lewis and Clark and the Mountain Men ........ 973 2. The Big Four .................................. 975 3. John Wesley Powell ............................ 975 4. John M uir ..................................... 976 5. Gifford Pinchot ................................ 976 6. John Collier ................................... 977 t Copyright © 1987 by Charles F. Wilkinson. * Professor of Law, University of Colorado (Professor of Law, University of Oregon, during the writing of most of this article). B.A. 1963, Denison University; LL.B. 1966, Stanford Univer- sity. - Ed. I appreciate the many and varied comments of Tom Watkins, Patty Limerick, John Leshy, Jim Moony, Larry MacDonnell, Ralph Johnson, and Don Snow. My thanks to my research assistants, Chris Minturn, Sharon Raymond, Karen Lewotsky, Meg Kieran, and Allen Field. Joan Conners was an extraordinary source of ideas, inspiration, and perspective. Thanks also to the students in my Advanced Natural Resources Seminar at Oregon, who debated with me an earlier version of this manuscript. I dedicate this piece to Wallace Stegner, who has depicted the native home of hope in its truest hues. 954 Michigan Law Review [Vol. 85:953 7. The PoliticalFigures of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s .......................................... 978 8. Wallace Stegner ............................... 979 B. The Subcultures ................................... 980 1. American Indians .............................. 980 2. H ispanics ...................................... 981 3. Mormons ...................................... 982 4. Asian-Americans ............................... 983 5. Farmers,Ranchers, and Cowboys ............... 983 C. The Organizations ................................. 985 1. The ForestService ............................. 985 2. The Navajo Nation ............................. 985 3. The Weyerhaeuser Company .................... 986 4. The Sierra Club ............................... 987 IV. THE TERRAIN ......................................... 988 A. The Natural Systems .............................. 988 1. The Major Watersheds ......................... 988 2. The Great Plains............................... 989 3. The Great Basin ............................... 990 4. The Yellowstone Ecosystem ..................... 991 5. The Pacific Coastline ........................... 992 6. Alaska ........................................ 992 B. The Commodity Resources ......................... 993 1. Minerals ....................................... 994 2. Water ......................................... 995 3. R ange ......................................... 995 4. Tim ber ........................................ 996 C. The Animals and Plants ........................... 997 1. The Grizzly Bear, the Wolf, the Bald Eagle, and the Pacific Salmon ............................. 997 2. Game and Nongame Species .................... 999 3. Old-Growth Timber Stands ..................... 1000 4. Wetlands ...................................... 1000 D. The Texture of the Ground ........................ 1001 V. THE IDEAS ............................................ 1003 A. Open Access to Public Natural Resources ........... 1003 B. Resource Planningand Management ............... 1004 C. Land and Species Preservation...................... 1005 D. Market-Based Economics .......................... 1006 E. Ethnic Pluralism .................................. 1007 F. Cooperation ....................................... 1008 G. Geologic Time ..................................... 1009 VI. CONCLUSION .......................................... 1011 April-May 1987] The Law of the West I. INTRODUCTION We ordinarily associate regionalism with history and literature, not with law. Conceptualizations of legal systems within the United States typically rest on the idea that law comes in three layers - fed- eral, state, and local. In fact, there are at least two major examples of regional bodies of law. One is comprised of two centuries of law and policy involving the South's experience with slavery, segregation, and desegregation. The second set of regional laws exists in the American West. The American West and its distinctive body of law are defined by the combination of several characteristics of climate, terrain, and political geography. Wallace Stegner, whom I count as the wisest ob- server of this region, has said that the two most influential factors of society in the West are its aridity and its high concentration of federal public lands.I Western water, or the lack of it, has determined agricul- tural, ranch, and mineral development; built financial empires; shaped and limited municipal growth patterns; and inspired recreationists, poets, and citizens of all stripes who are drawn to the rivers, streams, creeks, and rivulets coursing down the steep pitches of western can- yons. The public lands matter because of their abundance (they con- stitute about fifty percent of all land in the eleven western states and nearly ninety percent of Alaska land); their economic value; their in- trinsic tendency to create a pattern of dispersed population; and their extraordinary stores of wildlife and beauty. The West has other key characteristics of natural and political ge- ography. The terrain is variously chopped up by rugged mountains and spread out by high plains and desert country. Further, the region holds most of the nation's Indian lands. The Native American acreage is more than many Americans realize - almost six percent of the eleven western states and, after ongoing transfers of public land to Alaska Natives are completed, twelve percent of Alaska. In addition to the effects of their land holdings and cultural traditions, the tribes also have influenced the region during the last quarter-century by their successes in Congress and the courts, which have solidified Indian re- source rights and political power. The rejuvenation of the reservations has sharpened the age-old, uneasy blend of morality, guilt, and melt- ing-pot pragmatism that makes Indianness, and its future, a palpable presence in the West. Some of the same cultural issues are raised in regard to Hispanic and Mormon settlements, although large land holdings are not involved. The aridity, the federal public lands, the Indian lands, the moun- tains, the deserts, and

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