Papers and Reports Upon Forestry, Forest Schools, Forest Administration and Management, in Europe, America, and the British Possessions, and Upon Forests as Public Parks and Sanitary Resorts Collected by A. Kirkwood ... to Accompany the Report of the Royal Commission on Forest Reservation and National Park


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Forests and Forestry in Ontario


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Annual Report


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Empire Forestry and the Origins of Environmentalism


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What we now know of as environmentalism began with the establishment of the first empire forest in 1855 in British India, and during the second half of the nineteenth century, over ten per cent of the land surface of the earth became protected as a public trust. Sprawling forest reservations, many of them larger than modern nations, became revenue-producing forests that protected the whole 'household of nature', and Rudyard Kipling and Theodore Roosevelt were among those who celebrated a new class of government foresters as public heroes. Imperial foresters warned of impending catastrophe, desertification and global climate change if the reverse process of deforestation continued. The empire forestry movement spread through India, Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and then the United States to other parts of the globe, and Gregory Barton's study looks at the origins of environmentalism in a global perspective.