Conflicting demands on dwindling surface water supplies in California have led to frequent challenges of state decisions to grant diversions of water that impair or destroy ecological, recreational, or other instream uses of surface waters. This Comment examines the fundamental problems of surface water allocation in California and addresses the possibility of incorporating the public trust doctrine into the current water law system. The Comment then evaluates a recent attempt to apply the public trust doctrine in National Audubon Society v. Department of Water and Power. The Comment concludes by offering an alternative means to public trust protection of California\u27s surface waters
The delicate area of state control over federal reclamation projects has been a disputed issue betwe...
Under the public trust doctrine, a state must hold certain types of natural resources, most particul...
In designing a rule of reasonableness for the disposition of surface waters in California, the Calif...
Conflicting demands on dwindling surface water supplies in California have led to frequent challenge...
Courts largely view the public trust doctrine as limited by state legislative and executive policy. ...
California\u27s Bay Delta, where freshwater from the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers meets the sal...
California\u27s water resources system is poised at a turning point. For the first time since the gr...
Although California courts have consistently held that riparian water rights do not attach to federa...
This article tells the epic tale of the fall and rise of Mono Lake — the strange and beautiful Dead ...
Our society uses water for a variety of productive purposes, including domestic, agricultural, minin...
Oregon’s public trust doctrine has been misunderstood. The doctrine has not been judicially interpre...
This paper seeks to demonstrate the potential role of the Public Trust Doctrine (PTD) in the managem...
The cardinal principle of California water law is that all water rights, and all uses of water, must...
This article explores the development of public trust principles from early Roman and British law th...
This Comment argues that the federal and state standards for reducing marine life mortality from pow...
The delicate area of state control over federal reclamation projects has been a disputed issue betwe...
Under the public trust doctrine, a state must hold certain types of natural resources, most particul...
In designing a rule of reasonableness for the disposition of surface waters in California, the Calif...
Conflicting demands on dwindling surface water supplies in California have led to frequent challenge...
Courts largely view the public trust doctrine as limited by state legislative and executive policy. ...
California\u27s Bay Delta, where freshwater from the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers meets the sal...
California\u27s water resources system is poised at a turning point. For the first time since the gr...
Although California courts have consistently held that riparian water rights do not attach to federa...
This article tells the epic tale of the fall and rise of Mono Lake — the strange and beautiful Dead ...
Our society uses water for a variety of productive purposes, including domestic, agricultural, minin...
Oregon’s public trust doctrine has been misunderstood. The doctrine has not been judicially interpre...
This paper seeks to demonstrate the potential role of the Public Trust Doctrine (PTD) in the managem...
The cardinal principle of California water law is that all water rights, and all uses of water, must...
This article explores the development of public trust principles from early Roman and British law th...
This Comment argues that the federal and state standards for reducing marine life mortality from pow...
The delicate area of state control over federal reclamation projects has been a disputed issue betwe...
Under the public trust doctrine, a state must hold certain types of natural resources, most particul...
In designing a rule of reasonableness for the disposition of surface waters in California, the Calif...