In Defining Navigability : Balancing State Court Flexibility and Private Rights in Waterways, 36 Cardozo L. Rev. 1415 (2015), Maureen Brady explains that over the last two centuries, state courts have broadened the concept of navigability, and applied the new definitions to alter existing land titles. As a consequence, many non-navigable waterways have become navigable waterways, increasing public ownership and extinguishing private rights
This paper will discuss various approaches that have \u27been or could be taken by government agenci...
Water reform has led to important improvements in how water is used, with net gains for society as a...
In June of 2006, the US Supreme Court ruled in two cases concerning jurisdiction under the Clean Wat...
In Defining Navigability : Balancing State Court Flexibility and Private Rights in Waterways, 36 Ca...
A critical legal issue in water governance is who owns and who holds property rights in water. Hence...
Historically, water consumption in the eastern United States has been governed by the common-law rip...
Courts largely view the public trust doctrine as limited by state legislative and executive policy. ...
Entrenched in the common law, North Carolina\u27s public trust doctrine applies to waterways and the...
Since the early 1970s most western states have made a concerted effort to either maintain or augment...
Wetlands regulation in the United States has a tumultuous history. The early European settlers viewe...
By 2030 the U.S. will lose around $520 billion annually from its gross domestic product due to flood...
This article explores the waters of the state in three parts. First, we look to what the states sa...
Our society uses water for a variety of productive purposes, including domestic, agricultural, minin...
Sustainable development is on the policy agenda for the '90s. What does sustainability mean? Is it a...
Definition of property rights is not useful unless there is an enforcement system, either public or ...
This paper will discuss various approaches that have \u27been or could be taken by government agenci...
Water reform has led to important improvements in how water is used, with net gains for society as a...
In June of 2006, the US Supreme Court ruled in two cases concerning jurisdiction under the Clean Wat...
In Defining Navigability : Balancing State Court Flexibility and Private Rights in Waterways, 36 Ca...
A critical legal issue in water governance is who owns and who holds property rights in water. Hence...
Historically, water consumption in the eastern United States has been governed by the common-law rip...
Courts largely view the public trust doctrine as limited by state legislative and executive policy. ...
Entrenched in the common law, North Carolina\u27s public trust doctrine applies to waterways and the...
Since the early 1970s most western states have made a concerted effort to either maintain or augment...
Wetlands regulation in the United States has a tumultuous history. The early European settlers viewe...
By 2030 the U.S. will lose around $520 billion annually from its gross domestic product due to flood...
This article explores the waters of the state in three parts. First, we look to what the states sa...
Our society uses water for a variety of productive purposes, including domestic, agricultural, minin...
Sustainable development is on the policy agenda for the '90s. What does sustainability mean? Is it a...
Definition of property rights is not useful unless there is an enforcement system, either public or ...
This paper will discuss various approaches that have \u27been or could be taken by government agenci...
Water reform has led to important improvements in how water is used, with net gains for society as a...
In June of 2006, the US Supreme Court ruled in two cases concerning jurisdiction under the Clean Wat...