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In 1968 the residents of Lovell, Wyoming, began the work of saving the Pryor Mountain Mustang, a breed of horse with a genetic link dating back to the sixteenth-century Spanish conquistadores' horses. In this moving case study, Christine Reed shows how, through a grassroots campaign, these residents championed the creation of the first federal public wild horse range.

Produktbeschreibung
In 1968 the residents of Lovell, Wyoming, began the work of saving the Pryor Mountain Mustang, a breed of horse with a genetic link dating back to the sixteenth-century Spanish conquistadores' horses. In this moving case study, Christine Reed shows how, through a grassroots campaign, these residents championed the creation of the first federal public wild horse range.
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Autorenporträt
Christine Reed is a professor of public administration in the College of Public Affairs and Community Service at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. She is the author of several academic articles and book chapters on environmental collaborative governance, animal ethics, and the public management of wild horses in the United States and the Netherlands.