Where were we in 1960, where have we come in the years since, how did we
get here, and where are we going? These questions guided the 22 speakers
in a public lecture series presented by the USM Muskie School that
examined Maine's changing economic, political, and social landscape.
This book is a collection of essays that expand upon those talks and
explore significant changes in Maine, important policy alternatives, and
the prospects for the decade ahead. On such diverse subjects as housing,
education, fishing, forestry, poverty, women's roles, the arts, being
Native American, politics, and land use, they aspire to challenge
conventional thinking, offer a new understanding of Maine and its place
in the world today, and guide civic life and dialogue in the years
ahead.