Legal instrumentalism and legal convergence, two legal constructs, describe how American water law has developed over time. A study of early Eastern and Western water law shows that both systems are instrumentalist at their core and evolved to suit pressing developmental needs. Early on in the East, law was created to protect water use for millers, who used mills to generate power. In the West, riparian systems of the East were rejected in favor of a system that met the needs of settlers in more arid environments. Legal convergence is a concept suggesting that law governing various fields converges over time-the legal solution best adapted to solving a problem becomes the dominant approach. Legal convergence, like instrumentalism, supports ...
Historically, water consumption in the eastern United States has been governed by the common-law rip...
One hallmark of economic development, and indeed of civilization itself, may be found in the rules m...
Rising urban and environmental demand for water has created growing pressure to re-allocate water fr...
Legal instrumentalism and legal convergence, two legal constructs, describe how American water law h...
The history of water law throughout the United States is dynamic. Beginning with the inherited doctr...
Until the past generation, problems in water law have been regarded as exclusively the concern of ju...
This paper examines how the law governing water has evolved in the United States and Australia. The ...
The story of water in the American West shows that political intervention is unnecessary. Local inst...
Expanding municipal and Industrial demand, along with increasing use of supplemental irrigation have...
It is black letter constitutional theory that the several states are the masters of their property l...
86 p.This Article examines the development of water law in the West and suggests reliance on a comm...
Water rights are of single importance in the Great Lakes region. Of primary concern are the various ...
The law of waters, as now settled on the Pacific Coast and the adjacent states is such a distinct de...
The principal thesis of this article is that interstate water allocation matters. It matters because...
21 p. ; 28 cmhttps://scholar.law.colorado.edu/books_reports_studies/1121/thumbnail.jp
Historically, water consumption in the eastern United States has been governed by the common-law rip...
One hallmark of economic development, and indeed of civilization itself, may be found in the rules m...
Rising urban and environmental demand for water has created growing pressure to re-allocate water fr...
Legal instrumentalism and legal convergence, two legal constructs, describe how American water law h...
The history of water law throughout the United States is dynamic. Beginning with the inherited doctr...
Until the past generation, problems in water law have been regarded as exclusively the concern of ju...
This paper examines how the law governing water has evolved in the United States and Australia. The ...
The story of water in the American West shows that political intervention is unnecessary. Local inst...
Expanding municipal and Industrial demand, along with increasing use of supplemental irrigation have...
It is black letter constitutional theory that the several states are the masters of their property l...
86 p.This Article examines the development of water law in the West and suggests reliance on a comm...
Water rights are of single importance in the Great Lakes region. Of primary concern are the various ...
The law of waters, as now settled on the Pacific Coast and the adjacent states is such a distinct de...
The principal thesis of this article is that interstate water allocation matters. It matters because...
21 p. ; 28 cmhttps://scholar.law.colorado.edu/books_reports_studies/1121/thumbnail.jp
Historically, water consumption in the eastern United States has been governed by the common-law rip...
One hallmark of economic development, and indeed of civilization itself, may be found in the rules m...
Rising urban and environmental demand for water has created growing pressure to re-allocate water fr...