Examines tensions between state water rights laws and federal projects that require water. Presented as the Walker-Ames Lecture, University of Washington, Seattle, April 10, 1980
Water conflicts in the western United States increasingly arise from competition between traditional...
The general water policy applicable to unappropriated land within Washington Territory was that of p...
This article investigates the proposed designation of the North Coast rivers under WSRA. It chronicl...
Conflicts over water allocation have, become a national topic, rather than a regional one confined t...
In recent years, the western states have often struggled with the federal government over control an...
It is black letter constitutional theory that the several states are the masters of their property l...
The U. S. Supreme Court held in California v. United States, 98 S. Ct. 2985 (1978), that under secti...
The reserved water rights doctrine is — and always has been — a controversial doctrine in Western wa...
The struggle between California’s water plentiful north and the water deficient south has marked wat...
A conspicuous federal presence can be detected in almost every aspect of natural resources use and d...
Water rights in America, particularly in western states, have been a pervasive source of legal conte...
The Reclamation Act of 1902 delegated to the states the power to control the use of water developed ...
States have long held the exclusive right to allocate their surface and groundwater supplies absent ...
“Speculation. Water monopoly. Land monopoly. . . . John Wesley Powell was pretty well convinced that...
This article explores the waters of the state in three parts. First, we look to what the states sa...
Water conflicts in the western United States increasingly arise from competition between traditional...
The general water policy applicable to unappropriated land within Washington Territory was that of p...
This article investigates the proposed designation of the North Coast rivers under WSRA. It chronicl...
Conflicts over water allocation have, become a national topic, rather than a regional one confined t...
In recent years, the western states have often struggled with the federal government over control an...
It is black letter constitutional theory that the several states are the masters of their property l...
The U. S. Supreme Court held in California v. United States, 98 S. Ct. 2985 (1978), that under secti...
The reserved water rights doctrine is — and always has been — a controversial doctrine in Western wa...
The struggle between California’s water plentiful north and the water deficient south has marked wat...
A conspicuous federal presence can be detected in almost every aspect of natural resources use and d...
Water rights in America, particularly in western states, have been a pervasive source of legal conte...
The Reclamation Act of 1902 delegated to the states the power to control the use of water developed ...
States have long held the exclusive right to allocate their surface and groundwater supplies absent ...
“Speculation. Water monopoly. Land monopoly. . . . John Wesley Powell was pretty well convinced that...
This article explores the waters of the state in three parts. First, we look to what the states sa...
Water conflicts in the western United States increasingly arise from competition between traditional...
The general water policy applicable to unappropriated land within Washington Territory was that of p...
This article investigates the proposed designation of the North Coast rivers under WSRA. It chronicl...