Recreational Uses of Coastal Areas

Recreational Uses of Coastal Areas
Author: P. Fabbri
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9400923910

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Human clustering in coastal areas The coastal zone has gained a solid reputation as a place vocated for recreational activities and this is generally related to the presence of the sea. The relationship, however, does not appear univocal or simple: the sea can be perceived as a hostile element by humans and the more general question of whether the presence of the shore is in itself a favourable, repulsive, or irrelevant factor to settlement is a debatable point, at least for pre-industrial societies. Back in the early part of the 19th century, Friedrich Hegel regarded oceans and rivers as unifying elements rather than dividing ones, thus implying a trend towards the concentration of human settlements along them. 'The sea', he wrote, 'stimulates 1 courage and conquest, as well as profit and plunder', although he realized that this did not equally apply to all maritime peoples. In Hegel's view, different approaches to the sea were mainly the results of cultural factors and, in fact, he recognized that some people living in coastal areas perceive the sea as a dangerous and alien place and the shore as aftnis terrae.

Coastal Recreation

Coastal Recreation
Author: Robert B. Ditton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 188
Release: 1976
Genre: Coastal zone management
ISBN:

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Coastal Recreation in California

Coastal Recreation in California
Author: Michael Heiman
Publisher: Institute of Governmental Studies Press
Total Pages: 194
Release: 1986
Genre: Law
ISBN:

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Coastal Recreation

Coastal Recreation
Author: Robert B. Ditton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 28
Release: 1976
Genre: Coastal zone management
ISBN:

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Assessing Economic Impacts to Coastal Recreation and Tourism from Oil and Gas Development in the Oregon and Washington Outer Continental Shelf

Assessing Economic Impacts to Coastal Recreation and Tourism from Oil and Gas Development in the Oregon and Washington Outer Continental Shelf
Author: Gregory M. Ellis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 158
Release: 1991
Genre: Coasts
ISBN:

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" ... potential oil spill damages are hard to quantify. Appropriate valuation techniques must be used to establish potential impacts from OCS development. In the next section of this report, we evaluate the the valuation techniques used in the Dornbusch study and discuss their applicability for valuing potential impacts from OCS development in the Pacific Northwest."--Page 4.

State Coastal Zone Management Activities

State Coastal Zone Management Activities
Author: National Ocean Survey. Office of Coastal Zone Management
Publisher:
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1976
Genre: Coastal zone management
ISBN:

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Shoreline for the Public

Shoreline for the Public
Author: Dennis W. Ducsik
Publisher: MIT Press (MA)
Total Pages: 286
Release: 1974
Genre: Architecture
ISBN:

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The problem of land management along the coastal shoreline is an important one for the American public, whose already extraordinary recreational demands on this limited space are expected to nearly triple by the turn of the century. "Shoreline for the Public" notes that the institutional mechanisms operating over the past three centuries to allocate scarce coastal resources among competing users have brought unchecked private development to America's coasts. Compounded by problems of pollution, erosion, and the increasing tendency of private owners to restrict public access, this trend has resulted in severe limitations on opportunities for public recreation.The Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972 proclaims a national interest in the problem of decreasing public recreational space in the face of mushrooming demand. This study discusses the social significance of the problem, outlines the causes of coastal mismanagement in terms of the organization of economic and political activity, and examines in detail the legal issues pertinent to the formation of public policy. Included are analyses of the legal regimes governing public versus private rights in seashore areas, the judicial application of common-law principles to secure public recreational rights, shoreline acquisition, and the application of land-use controls to regulate shoreline development. The author concludes that a number of legal techniques "can" be made effective in preserving the seashore as a unique recreational resource for public use.While concentrating on the narrow land-sea strip, "Shoreline for the Public" raises larger issues facing environmental resource management. Decreasing open space for public recreation is prototypical of the complexity of coastal resource management issues. The problems cannot be solved solely by judicial activity but will require coherent and orderly long-range legislative and administrative management to make equitable and efficient choices among policy alternatives. Bringing public recreation, private use, and conservation into balance will require the application of new techniques at the interfaces between government and the courts, between government and the citizenry, and between different levels of government.