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Reviews and ArticlesAlthough it pains us to say it, people and organizations other than NEMO do, on occasion, produce things of value. We have provided, below, a list of reading materials that come highly recommended by the NEMO Team. If you leave our cozy confines to order other reading materials, remember to tell them NEMO sent you!
ArticlesThis section of the Reviews contains links to articles of, about or pertaining to NEMO, currently posted on the web. The subject matter alone puts us in mind to highly recommend them, and some of them we wrote ourselves. Check 'em out! 10/02
- Urban Sprawl: the Big Picture 7/02
- Internet Mapping Helps Local Communities 5/02
- Project Spotlight: Changing Land Use Decision Making One Town at
a Time: The NEMO Project at the Ten Year Mark 4/02
- Nonpoint Education for Municipal Officials (NEMO): Successful Connecticut
Project Used as Model Nationwide 10/29/01
- NEMO Provides Technical Assistance to Local Officials
8/01
- This Land Is Your Land 3/01
- New Tools for Communities are Needed if NPS Regulation is to Succeed
2/01
- NEMO Program Provides Tech Assistance 2/01
- Educating Local Land Use Decision Makers to Improve Water Quality
in Connecticut 12/00
- Land Use Is the Issue, But Is Land Grant the Answer? 2000 - Sprawl: What Can We Do About It in Connecticut? ( PDF 158K) Written by Christopher J. Smith of the law firm of Pullman and Comley, this article appeared in the October/November issue of the American Planning Association/CT Chapter newsletter. Bibliographies2002 - Open Space Planning Bibliography - (PDF 26K) Compiled by John Rozum, CT NEMO Director. 2000 - The Remedial Bibliography for Land Use Planning - (PDF 39K) Compiled by John Rozum, CT NEMO Director (o.k., so we snuck a NEMO generated pub, or two, in here). 2000
- Selected NEMO References - (PDF 47K) Compiled by NEMO
Co-founder Jim Gibbons. Books2000 - The Practice of Watershed Protection. Written by Tom Schueler and Heather Holland. This book is a very complete compendium of material from a NEMO partner, the Center for Watershed Protection, drawn mostly from past issues of their great journal Watershed Protection Techniques (see cover art) . Order from the Center For Watershed Protection website. Editorials2004
- Where
Should Growth Occur? National NEMO Soap Box Editorial #1 (PDF
28K) The debate over the primacy of the central city versus the suburbs has been around some time, but it is at the heart of the debate about what our cities and regions will look like in the future. Where is most of our future growth going to occur? Does it make a difference where it occurs, and could we do anything about changing where it occurs if we wanted to? Email UpdatesNEMO
and National Email Updates!
Press ReleasesMarch
22, 2004 - The Hartford Courant, Editorial March
21, 2004 - The Hartford Courant, Commentary by
Chester Arnold January
4, 2004 - The Hartford Courant, Article By
Mike Swift
April 22, 2002 - Land Use/Water Quality Program Draws Audience Of 45 - Published in the Groton Open Space Association's E-News Reports6/04 - NEMO Highlighted in the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy's Preliminary ReportABSTRACT Visit the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy website. View full report. 2/03 - Implementing the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Mandate to Engage Coastal Users: Opportunities for National Sea Grant Outreach Growth. Report of the Sea Grant Outreach Growth Committee, National Sea Grant College Program, February 2003. In response to one of the suggestions in the Byrne Report, A Mandate to Engage Coastal Users, the Assembly of Sea Grant Extension Leaders established a Growth Committee in March 2002, subsequently joined by Sea Grant’s National Communications Network and the Sea Grant Educators Network. This committee was charged with critically looking at opportunities to develop or expand Sea Grant outreach. The committee selected seven issues from among the many currently facing coastal America. This list included "sustainable coastal communities," and the subsequent discussion calls for support of state-based NEMO programs, among other related items. http://seagrant.oregonstate.edu/sgpubs/onlinepubs/q03002.pdf 8/02-
Paving Our Way to Shortages: How Sprawl Aggravates Drought An interesting and sober look at how impervious surfaces affect groundwater recharge. ABSTRACT 10/31/01 - Environmental Protection: Federal Incentives Could Help Promote Land Use That Protects Air and Water Quality. - Go to "GAO Reports/Find Reports" and type in report number GAO-02-12.A report making a strong case for increased assistance to, and education of, local land use decision makers. ABSTRACT 4/02 - Coastal Sprawl: The Effects of Urban Design on Aquatic Ecosystems in the United States - Pew Oceans Commission A very NEMO-esque focus on the coast (although we're not mentioned!). ABSTRACT |
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