Cover of book 'Upstream'
Upstream: Trust Lands and Power on the Feather River

In Upstream: Trust Land and Power on the Feather River (University of Arizona Press, September 2018) Beth Rose Middleton Manning, associate professor of Native American Studies, examines how native land allotments in California were taken over for various hydroelectric power projects with a focus on the Feather River and Native American resistance to such projects. 

Dr. Beth Rose Middleton Manning (Afro-Caribbean, Eastern European) is a Professor of Native American Studies at UC Davis. Beth Rose’s research centers on Native environmental policy and Native activism for site protection using conservation tools. Her broader research interests include environmental and climate justice, fire policy, intergenerational trauma and healing, Native land stewardship, rural environmental justice, Indigenous analysis of climate change, Afro-indigeneity, and qualitative GIS. Beth Rose received her BA in Nature and Culture from UC Davis, and her Ph.D. in Environmental Science, Policy, and Management from UC Berkeley. Her first book, Trust in the Land: New Directions in Tribal Conservation (University of Arizona Press 2011), focuses on Native applications of conservation easements, with an emphasis on conservation partnerships led by California Native Nations.

Beth Rose has published on Native economic development in Economic Development Quarterly, on political ecology and healing in the Journal of Political Ecology, on Federal Indian law as environmental policy, and the history of the environmental justice movement in The CQ Guide to US Environmental Policy, on mapping allotment lands in Ethnohistory, on using environmental laws for Indigenous rights in Environmental Management, on the application of market-based conservation tools to Garifuna site protection in Caribbean Quarterly, on Indigenous leadership in the carbon market in the Stanford Environmental Law Journal, on challenges to cultural site protection in Native California in Human Geography, and on Indigenous political ecologies in the International Handbook of Political Ecology. 

 

View the book at University of Arizona Press 

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