The Prior Appropriation Doctrine has long been the foundation of laws governing water allocation and use in the American West, but it has been under pressure from forces both external and internal to the western states. Twenty years ago, Prior Appropriation was pronounced dead in a provocative essay by Charles Wilkinson. Other scholars argued that it was still alive, but it now appears to have lost its force as the controlling doctrine of western water law. This Article analyzes three recent cases upholding state laws that undermine a fundamental Prior Appropriation principle, then considers the water policy implications of the western states departure from Prior Appropriation
Economics deals with the allocation of scarce resources among many consumer goals. Water is a scarce...
86 p.This Article examines the development of water law in the West and suggests reliance on a comm...
American water law reflects the diverse geography and population patterns of this expansive country....
Water law in the Northwest states has long been based on the well-established rules of the Prior App...
The Prior Appropriation Doctrine in Montana: Rooted in mid-nineteenth century goals—responding to tw...
Climate change is the new lens through which the world needs to view water. Such a viewpoint is prud...
Water conflicts in the western United States increasingly arise from competition between traditional...
The prior appropriation doctrine that dominates the water laws of the Western United States was perh...
Conference organizers and/or faculty included University of Colorado School of Law professors James ...
This systematic review of New Mexico prior appropriation case law from 1883 to the present employs a...
In this article, I first review some aspects of early western water allocation, particularly the way...
The story of water in the American West shows that political intervention is unnecessary. Local inst...
One hallmark of economic development, and indeed of civilization itself, may be found in the rules m...
From the Proceedings of the 1974 Meetings of the Arizona Section - American Water Resources Assn. an...
This Article assesses the fit of Professor Claeys’s theory of Natural Property Rights to traditional...
Economics deals with the allocation of scarce resources among many consumer goals. Water is a scarce...
86 p.This Article examines the development of water law in the West and suggests reliance on a comm...
American water law reflects the diverse geography and population patterns of this expansive country....
Water law in the Northwest states has long been based on the well-established rules of the Prior App...
The Prior Appropriation Doctrine in Montana: Rooted in mid-nineteenth century goals—responding to tw...
Climate change is the new lens through which the world needs to view water. Such a viewpoint is prud...
Water conflicts in the western United States increasingly arise from competition between traditional...
The prior appropriation doctrine that dominates the water laws of the Western United States was perh...
Conference organizers and/or faculty included University of Colorado School of Law professors James ...
This systematic review of New Mexico prior appropriation case law from 1883 to the present employs a...
In this article, I first review some aspects of early western water allocation, particularly the way...
The story of water in the American West shows that political intervention is unnecessary. Local inst...
One hallmark of economic development, and indeed of civilization itself, may be found in the rules m...
From the Proceedings of the 1974 Meetings of the Arizona Section - American Water Resources Assn. an...
This Article assesses the fit of Professor Claeys’s theory of Natural Property Rights to traditional...
Economics deals with the allocation of scarce resources among many consumer goals. Water is a scarce...
86 p.This Article examines the development of water law in the West and suggests reliance on a comm...
American water law reflects the diverse geography and population patterns of this expansive country....