Abstract
This paper examines the attitudes of Wyoming’s Jackson Hole toward controlled growth. Faced with population growth, a severe limitation on the availability of private lands, and a community concern about protecting the scenic beauty of the area, land-use planning and controls have become one of the most significant public issues in Teton County. A survey of attitudes toward land use disclosed that newer residents generally supported local government control in contrast to older residents and large landowners who favored control by the individual landowner. The older residents and large landowners are a numerical minority whose views no longer dominate the political strength of the county. Such strength now resides in the newcomer group. The newcomers are attempting to limit and to control the change which they themselves have brought to the county. This study implies that future population growth and economic development will continue within a framework of local government control over the use of private land.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
William C. Cockerham
Dr. Cockerham holds a joint appointment in the Department of Sociology and Basic Medical Sciences at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Audie L. Blevins
Dr. Blevins is head, Department of Sociology at the University of Wyoming in Laramie. Revision of a paper presented at the American Sociological Association Meeting, San Francisco, California, 1975. This paper results from a study funded by the Teton County Board of Commissioners, Jackson, Wyoming. The authors would like to thank Harvey Choldin and Frederick C. Fliegel for their comments on an earlier draft.