Not in My Backyard Not in My Backyard

Not in My Backyard

    • $16.99
    • $16.99

Publisher Description

How a woman-led citizens’ group beat a Southern political machine by enlisting federal bureaucrats and judges to protect their neighborhood from unchecked economic development
 
This social history of local political activism tells the story of the decades-long fight to save Green Springs, Virginia, illuminating the economic tradeoffs of protecting the environment, the origins of NIMBYism, the changing nature of local control, and the surprising power of history to advance public policy.
 
Rae Ely faced long odds when she launched a campaign in 1970 to stop a prison, then a strip mine, in Green Springs. The local political machine supported both projects, promising jobs for impoverished Louisa County, Virginia. But Ely and her allies prevailed by repurposing the same tactics used by the Civil Rights movement—the appeal to federal agencies and courts to circumvent local control—and by using new historical interpretations to create the first rural National Historic Landmark District.
 
The Green Springs protesters fought to preserve the historic character of their neighborhood and the surrounding environment in a quest that epitomized the conflict in late twentieth-century America between unbridled economic development for all and protecting the quality of life for an economically privileged few. Ely’s tactics are now used by neighborhood groups across the nation, even if they have been applied in ways she never intended: to resist any form of development.

GENRE
Politics & Current Events
RELEASED
2024
January 2
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
352
Pages
PUBLISHER
Yale University Press
SELLER
Yale University
SIZE
3.5
MB
Recapturing the Oval Office Recapturing the Oval Office
2015
A Government Out of Sight A Government Out of Sight
2009
The Associational State The Associational State
2015
The Associational State The Associational State
2015