Scholarship · Tier 3 · in-copyright · curator-recruitment open
State Trust Lands in the West: Fiduciary Duty in a Changing Landscape
Scholarship · Tier 3 (in-copyright; curator-recruitment open). This editorial summary is a Library editorial-team draft. The Library is recruiting a Title Steward who has institutional access to this work — see /contribute/ for the role definition.
[Editorial flag — verify open-access status.] The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy makes most of its policy research reports open-access at lincolninst.edu. If this volume is in fact open-access, the page should be promoted to Tier 2, the access footer should be updated to lead with the direct PDF link, and the Title Steward role description should shift from “institutional access” to “domain expertise.” A Title Steward or the Library editorial team should resolve this on next pass.
Why this matters
Culp, Laurenzi, and Tuell’s 2006 study is the modern companion to Souder & Fairfax (1996) — narrower in geographic scope (the western states with significant trust-land holdings) and sharper in its policy frame. Where Souder & Fairfax established that state trust lands constitute a coherent category and made the case for sustainable use under fiduciary duty, Culp et al. focuses on the central tension that has dominated western trust-lands policy since the 1990s: the pressure to manage trust lands for multiple uses (recreation, conservation, ecosystem services) versus the fiduciary obligation to manage them for the named beneficiaries (predominantly common schools, in revenue terms). The volume is the most direct articulation of why “multiple use” framings — imported from the federal public-lands vocabulary — are doctrinally incompatible with the trust-lands frame, and what reform pathways exist that respect the fiduciary mandate.
What’s in it
The school-trust-relevant structure, as best reconstructed from the Lincoln Institute catalog and the Sacred Compact footnote pass, is approximately:
- An introductory chapter framing the fiduciary-versus-multiple-use tension.
- Comparative chapters on the principal western trust-lands states, with attention to institutional design, beneficiary structure, and revenue mix.
- A chapter on conservation easements and other tools that allow trust managers to capture non-extractive value while remaining within the fiduciary frame.
- A chapter on urbanizing-edge trust lands — the highest-stakes contemporary management challenge in states like Arizona and Colorado.
- A concluding analysis of reform pathways, with attention to the role of state legislatures, state land boards, and beneficiary advocacy.
A Title Steward should verify the chapter structure against the published volume and the Lincoln Institute’s catalog page.
Most-quoted passages
The Library editorial team has not selected verbatim quotations for this stub. The Sacred Compact footnotes cite Culp et al. at the points where the multiple-use-versus-fiduciary tension is doctrinally load-bearing. A Title Steward with the volume in hand should add up to three short quotations under thirty words each, fully cited.
How it connects to the Library’s argument
The Library argues that drift in school-trust management takes specific institutional forms: redefinition of the beneficiary class, modernization of the trust mandate, commingling with general-fund operations, and the importation of “multiple use” framings from the federal public-lands vocabulary. Culp et al. is the volume that names the multiple-use drift most directly. The federal multiple-use frame, codified in FLPMA (1976) for BLM lands and in the Multiple-Use Sustained-Yield Act (1960) for the Forest Service, is policy-discretion law: the agency balances competing public interests with broad managerial discretion. State trust lands operate under a categorically different legal regime — they are trust lands, with named beneficiaries and enforceable fiduciary obligations. Culp et al. shows how the casual borrowing of multiple-use vocabulary into trust-lands-agency strategic plans, public-comment processes, and even statutory language has eroded the trust frame. Sacred Compact uses Culp et al. at exactly that doctrinal pressure point. Schools of the Republic uses the volume’s state-by-state institutional analysis as a comparative foil to Oregon’s Elliott State Forest history.
How to engage
- Lincoln Institute catalog: https://www.lincolninst.edu/ (search “State Trust Lands in the West”). If this volume is open-access at lincolninst.edu, the direct PDF should be the lead access path and this page should be promoted to Tier 2.
- WorldCat search: https://www.worldcat.org/search?q=culp+state+trust+lands+west+fiduciary (find this title at a library near you)
- Interlibrary loan: ask your local library to request it.
- Used-book channels (access paths, not commerce): AbeBooks, ThriftBooks, Amazon used.
- Submit a correction or annotation: /contribute/
- Apply to be Title Steward for this book: /contribute/
Curated by
Title Steward — OPEN. This editorial summary is a draft by the Library editorial team, 2026-05-07. We are recruiting a Title Steward who has institutional access to this work and the time to refine the summary into something authoritative. Especially well-suited to law-school faculty, trust-and-estates attorneys, school-finance officers, state-lands-agency staff, and library-science curators of state-finance collections. See /contribute/ for the role definition.