Abstract:
A national park is an area and its biota that are managed
for permanent survival and maintenance of the
park's biodiversity as best as is possible given its surrounding
habitats (which are normally severely altered
by the agroindustry). When such management includes
management for education , research, tourism, genes,
etc., the management is believed to be in a non-destructive
manner or the damage that occurs is registered
as a survival tax. Today, theory and pragmatics are
evolving around the technology of such management. In
association with the homogenization of the world's cultures
by everything from telephones to bicycles to the
possession of national parks, this evolutionary process
contains a very strong and necessary tendency to seek
generalizations about wildland management , generalizations
that can be then applied to many conserved
wildlands in many areas, new, old or in trouble.