California 2025: Planning for a Better Future
Title | California 2025: Planning for a Better Future PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | Public Policy Instit. of CA |
Pages | 42 |
Release | |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Taxing California Property
Title | Taxing California Property PDF eBook |
Author | Kenneth A. Ehrman |
Publisher | |
Pages | 180 |
Release | 1979 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN |
California Transactions Forms
Title | California Transactions Forms PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | Bancroft-Whitney Law Publishers |
Pages | 412 |
Release | 1996 |
Genre | Law |
ISBN |
Consists of 11 modules: Business entities 6 v.
Fish and Game Code
Title | Fish and Game Code PDF eBook |
Author | California |
Publisher | |
Pages | 296 |
Release | 1961 |
Genre | Fishery law and legislation |
ISBN |
California 2025
Title | California 2025 PDF eBook |
Author | Ellen Hanak |
Publisher | Public Policy Instit. of CA |
Pages | 322 |
Release | 2005 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 9781582131108 |
California Crackup
Title | California Crackup PDF eBook |
Author | Joe Mathews |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 237 |
Release | 2010 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0520268520 |
"California Crackup is brilliant. It cuts through the familiar tangle of diagnoses and quick-fix solutions to provide a comprehensive and persuasive analysis of California's dysfunctional governmental system. Paul and Mathews have coolly laid out a complicated story, made it readable, sometimes even comedic. It is the best discussion of the issue I've seen in over three decades."--Peter Schrag, author of California: America's High-Stakes Experiment "I know of no other work that combines so succinctly and enjoyably a historical summary of California's existing problems with such a sweeping and provocative program of reform."--Ethan Rarick, University of California, Berkeley "Mark Paul and Joe Mathews have produced an indispensable guide to California's crisis of governance--and they have done so with humor, scholarship, fairness and storytelling verve. Every Californian should read this book."--Steve Coll, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Ghost Wars "Mark Paul... has a talent for presenting California Big Think stuff in an easily accessible and always readable way...[offering] clear and creative insights on the subject of California's collapse."--CalBuzz "Joe Mathews has done an artful, fascinating, and convincing job of connecting the California of today's Schwarzenegger era to the long history that made his rise possible.--James Fallows,The Atlantic Monthly on Mathews' book, The People's Machine
Alta California
Title | Alta California PDF eBook |
Author | Nick Neely |
Publisher | Catapult |
Pages | 346 |
Release | 2019-11-05 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1640091661 |
This national bestseller chronicles one man’s 650–mile trek on foot from San Diego to San Francisco—sure to appeal to readers of naturalist works like Edward Abbey’s Desert Solitaire, Paul Thoreau’s On the Plain of Snakes, and Mark Kenyon’s That Wild Country. In 1769, an expedition led by Gaspar de Portolá sketched a route that would become, in part, the famous El Camino Real. It laid the foundation for the Golden State we know today, a place that remains as mythical and captivating as any in the world. Despite having grown up in California, Nick Neely realized how little he knew about its history. So he set off to learn it bodily, with just a backpack and a tent, trekking through stretches of California both lonely and urban. For twelve weeks, following the journal of expedition missionary Father Juan Crespí, Neely kept pace with the ghosts of the Portolá expedition—nearly 250 years later. Weaving natural and human history, Alta California relives Neely’s adventure, while telling a story of Native cultures and the Spanish missions that soon devastated them, and exploring the evolution of California and its landscape. The result is a collage of historical and contemporary California, of lyricism and pedestrian serendipity, and of the biggest issues facing California today—water, agriculture, oil and gas, immigration, and development—all of it one step at a time. “Rich in little–known history . . . Up the Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo county coasts, then inland into the Salinas Valley to Monterey Bay. Somewhere along here, the owl moons and woodpeckers do something you might not have thought possible in 2019: they make you fall, or refall, in love with California, ungrudgingly, wildfires and insane housing prices and all . . . What a journey, you think. What a state." —San Francisco Chronicle