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Published: November 12, 2006
This paper examines how Karl Jacoby's
book "Crimes Against Nature", paints a picture of an undetermined and inadequate governmental stance on
conservation and
details the direct and indirect effects these blunders caused. It looks at how the book details the state and federal government conservationist policies spanning the late 1800s and early 1900s that eventually set the tone for the widespread changes that would occur in the mid 1900s.
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