Acknowledgments
Introduction: Restoring Nature: Human Actions, Interactions, and Reactions \ Paul H. Gobster
PART I. Philosophy and Rationale of Restoration
Chapter 1. Restoration, Community, and Wilderness \ William R. Jordan III
Chapter 2. Another Look at Restoration: Technology and Artificial Nature \ Eric Katz
Chapter 3. Ecological Restoration and the Culture of Nature: A Pragmatic Perspective \ Andrew Light
Chapter 4. Restoring Nature in American Culture: An Environmental Aesthetic Perspective \ Cheryl Foster
PART II. Conflict over Which Nature to Restore
Chapter 5. The Language of Nature Matters: We Need a More Public Ecology \ R. Brnce Hull and David P. Robertson
Chpater 6. Constructing Nature as Constructing Science: Expertise, Activist Science, and Public Conflict in the Chicago Wilderness \ Reid M. Helford
Chapter 7. Public Values, Opinions, and Emotions in Restoration Controversies \ Joanne Vining, Elizabeth Tyler, and Byoung-Suk Kweon
Chapter 8. Restoration, the Value of Participation, and the Risks of Professionalization \ Andrew Light
PART III. Making Restoration Happen: Process and Implementation
Chapter 9. Negotiating Nature: Making Restoration Happen in an Urban Park Context \ Paul H. Gobster and Susan C. Barro
Chapter 10. A People-Centered Approach to Designing and Managing Restoration Projects: Insights from Understanding Attachment to Urban Natural Areas \ Robert L. Ryan
Chapter 11. Managing Naturalness as a Continuum: Setting Limits of Acceptable Change \ Mark W Brunson
PART IV. Making and Maintaining Restored Environments
Chapter 12. The Restoration Experience: Volunteers' Motives, Values, and Concepts of Nature \ Herbert W Schroeder
Chapter 13. Psychological Benefits of Volunteering in Stewardship Programs \ Robert E. Grese, Rachel Kaplan, Robert L. Ryan, and Jane Buxton
Chapter 14. Lessons for Restoration in the Traditions of Stewardship: Sustainable Land Management in Northern New Mexico \ Carol Raish
Conclusion: Which Nature? \ R. Bruce Hull and David P. Robertson
Contributors
Index
Introduction: Restoring Nature: Human Actions, Interactions, and Reactions \ Paul H. Gobster
PART I. Philosophy and Rationale of Restoration
Chapter 1. Restoration, Community, and Wilderness \ William R. Jordan III
Chapter 2. Another Look at Restoration: Technology and Artificial Nature \ Eric Katz
Chapter 3. Ecological Restoration and the Culture of Nature: A Pragmatic Perspective \ Andrew Light
Chapter 4. Restoring Nature in American Culture: An Environmental Aesthetic Perspective \ Cheryl Foster
PART II. Conflict over Which Nature to Restore
Chapter 5. The Language of Nature Matters: We Need a More Public Ecology \ R. Brnce Hull and David P. Robertson
Chpater 6. Constructing Nature as Constructing Science: Expertise, Activist Science, and Public Conflict in the Chicago Wilderness \ Reid M. Helford
Chapter 7. Public Values, Opinions, and Emotions in Restoration Controversies \ Joanne Vining, Elizabeth Tyler, and Byoung-Suk Kweon
Chapter 8. Restoration, the Value of Participation, and the Risks of Professionalization \ Andrew Light
PART III. Making Restoration Happen: Process and Implementation
Chapter 9. Negotiating Nature: Making Restoration Happen in an Urban Park Context \ Paul H. Gobster and Susan C. Barro
Chapter 10. A People-Centered Approach to Designing and Managing Restoration Projects: Insights from Understanding Attachment to Urban Natural Areas \ Robert L. Ryan
Chapter 11. Managing Naturalness as a Continuum: Setting Limits of Acceptable Change \ Mark W Brunson
PART IV. Making and Maintaining Restored Environments
Chapter 12. The Restoration Experience: Volunteers' Motives, Values, and Concepts of Nature \ Herbert W Schroeder
Chapter 13. Psychological Benefits of Volunteering in Stewardship Programs \ Robert E. Grese, Rachel Kaplan, Robert L. Ryan, and Jane Buxton
Chapter 14. Lessons for Restoration in the Traditions of Stewardship: Sustainable Land Management in Northern New Mexico \ Carol Raish
Conclusion: Which Nature? \ R. Bruce Hull and David P. Robertson
Contributors
Index