Until the past generation, problems in water law have been regarded as exclusively the concern of jurisdictions possessing either arid or saturated lands. The increasing industrialization and urban concentration occurring since 1900 have radically altered this attitude. Nowhere is this more strikingly shown than in the United States. In this country water use rose from 40 billion gallons per day in 1900 to 92 billion in 1930, and 312 billion in 1960. For the entire period, the total readily available fresh water supply has been 515 billion gallons per day. By 1975 it is predicted the United States will be drawing 453 billion of this each day and, in order to safeguard such demands, will require a quantity of water one third more than the to...
Although adequate supplies of water are generally available in Kentucky, the law governing its use a...
The availability of freshwater supplies to meet future demand is a growing concern. Water availabili...
Water policy in the western states consistently has embraced a nineteenth century, supply-side menta...
The history of water law throughout the United States is dynamic. Beginning with the inherited doctr...
Expanding municipal and Industrial demand, along with increasing use of supplemental irrigation have...
Legal instrumentalism and legal convergence, two legal constructs, describe how American water law h...
It is black letter constitutional theory that the several states are the masters of their property l...
In the United States water law is a subset of property law that controls the use and allocation of t...
Amid general plenty, local and regional shortages of water have appeared in the eastern United State...
This essay traces the emergence of environmental considerations in U.S. water law, beginning with co...
Rising urban and environmental demand for water has created growing pressure to re-allocate water fr...
As a nation, the United States is in the early stages of a developing water crisis. With an explodin...
The story of water in the American West shows that political intervention is unnecessary. Local inst...
The principal thesis of this article is that interstate water allocation matters. It matters because...
The maintenance of adequate water supplies to meet increasing demand upon residential and industrial...
Although adequate supplies of water are generally available in Kentucky, the law governing its use a...
The availability of freshwater supplies to meet future demand is a growing concern. Water availabili...
Water policy in the western states consistently has embraced a nineteenth century, supply-side menta...
The history of water law throughout the United States is dynamic. Beginning with the inherited doctr...
Expanding municipal and Industrial demand, along with increasing use of supplemental irrigation have...
Legal instrumentalism and legal convergence, two legal constructs, describe how American water law h...
It is black letter constitutional theory that the several states are the masters of their property l...
In the United States water law is a subset of property law that controls the use and allocation of t...
Amid general plenty, local and regional shortages of water have appeared in the eastern United State...
This essay traces the emergence of environmental considerations in U.S. water law, beginning with co...
Rising urban and environmental demand for water has created growing pressure to re-allocate water fr...
As a nation, the United States is in the early stages of a developing water crisis. With an explodin...
The story of water in the American West shows that political intervention is unnecessary. Local inst...
The principal thesis of this article is that interstate water allocation matters. It matters because...
The maintenance of adequate water supplies to meet increasing demand upon residential and industrial...
Although adequate supplies of water are generally available in Kentucky, the law governing its use a...
The availability of freshwater supplies to meet future demand is a growing concern. Water availabili...
Water policy in the western states consistently has embraced a nineteenth century, supply-side menta...