Public land managers are confronted with an ever-growing and diversifying set of demands for providing recreation opportunities.
Coupled with a variety of trends (devolution of governance and decisionmaking, population growth, technological innovation, shifts
in public values, economic restructuring) and reduced organizational capacity, these demands represent a significant and complex
challenge to public land management. One way of dealing with this situation is to use a framework to assist in working through this
complexity. A framework, for the purpose of this report, is a process using a set of steps, based on sound science, that assists
managers in framing a particular problem, working through it, and arriving at a set of defendable decisions. Several such frameworks
exist for providing recreation opportunities on public lands. These include the Recreation Opportunity Spectrum, Limits of Acceptable
Change, Visitor Experience and Resource Protection, Visitor Impact Management, and Benefits-Based Management. The report traces the
development of each of these frameworks, describes the fundamental premises and concepts used within them, and provides an assessment
of the experience with their use. Each of the frameworks has been used with varying success, depending on the organization's will,
its technical capacity, the extent to which the process is inclusive of varying value systems, how open and deliberative the process
is, the extent to which the organization is concerned with effectiveness, and the extent to which issues are confronted at the systems level.