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Books > Earth & environment > The environment > Environmentalist, conservationist & Green organizations
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Environment, Inc. - From Grassroots to Beltway (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R781
Discovery Miles 7 810
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Environment, Inc. - From Grassroots to Beltway (Paperback, New)
Series: Studies in Government and Public Policy
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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We expect Birkenstocks. We find wing-tips. Professional
organizations that advocate on behalf of environmental issues have
become a permanent part of the American political landscape. From
the Sierra Club to the Rainforest Action Network, these groups
represent more than eleven million members and claim more than $3.5
billion is assets. Sometimes lambasted for non-stop fund-raising,
top-heavy bureaucracies, or agendas out of touch will local
concerns, they remain staunch advocates for Mother Nature in the
marble halls of Washington. But what happens to a grassroots
movement when it goes mainstream? In this insightful book,
Christopher Bosso considers how organizations that once contested
the Establishment have become an establishment of their own.
"Environment, Inc, is the only book to examine the evolution of a
national advocacy community over the span of a century. Bosso
describes the transformation of an inchoate 1960s movement into
fixtures of contemporary politics to show how this transformation
of an inchoate 1960s movement into fixtures of contemporary
polities to show how this transformation was necessary for the
success of environmental policy. Presenting some thirty
organizations that lie at the core of the national environmental
advocacy community-"today's environmental establishment-"he
examines these groups both individually and collective to clarify
their origins, organizational evolution, and methods of operation.
He looks at annual reports and tax forms to assess their financial
health and organizational maintenance, and he describes how people
whose heart is in the great outdoors have been forced to become
more businesslike in order to survive in a political contextthat
places a premium on presence. Bosso seeks to learn why
organizations born in social movements become larger, more
professional, and more bureaucratic over time. He tells how
warhorses like the Sierra Club and National Audubon Society have
survived in the face of an influx of competitors, and why so
relatively few new national organizations have appeared in recent
years. In examining the success of some and the demise of others,
he sheds light on how organizations adapt to the shifting winds of
politics and economics. As Bosso observes, the very normaley of
today's environmental community speaks volumes about the contours
of American democracy. He shows that these groups, for all their
flaws, remain the most consistent promoters of environmental values
in a political system based on organized advocacy. His cogent
alalysis offer new insights into the nature of interest group
politics in the United States.
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