Water on the Great Plains: Issues and Policies

Water on the Great Plains: Issues and Policies

Water on the Great Plains: Issues and Policies

Water on the Great Plains: Issues and Policies

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Overview

The Great Plains of North America stretch from Texas to Alberta. The region’s history is rich and its population diverse. But throughout this huge area, one issue has dominated culture and politics since before history began to be recorded. The need for water, the disputes over its use and ownership, and the consequences of those uses and disputes are concerns common to everyone who has ever lived here, concerns that grow sharper as water grows scarcer.Local and state governments have attempted to allocate water rights, but their efforts have been piecemeal and often short-sighted. In the absence of a coherent policy for protecting water resources, supplies are depleted, and what is left becomes more and more polluted by industrial, agricultural, and biological waste products. In fact, the Great Plains is on the brink of a water crisis, a silent crisis that threatens the health of people, environments, and economies. In Water on the Great Plains: Issues and Policies, Peter J. Longo and David W. Yoskowitz have collected current scholarship on the cultural, economic, environmental, legal, and political implications of water policy. The ten essays contained here tell a lively history of successful and unsuccessful water policies, and of how dedicated people and communities can work together to protect their homes. The authors sound an urgent call for wise management to preserve available water resources for the use of future generations.The importance of water to politics in the West is likely to grow as management of dwindling supplies fails to meet demands. How will water policy be made? Will water continue to flow uphill toward money or will public interest drive water allocation and use?—Joan M. Blauwkamp, Chapter 10

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780896724594
Publisher: Texas Tech University Press
Publication date: 01/15/2002
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.18(h) x 0.73(d)

Table of Contents

Forewordix
Acknowledgmentsxi
Introductionxiii
Part 1Physical and Cultural Dimensions1
1The Rigors of Existence on the Great Plains: The Role of Water3
2Hydrological Drought as a Settlement Inhibiting Factor16
3Culture Meandering Across the Plains: An Enduring Problematic for Water Politics35
Part 2Realities: Economics, Law, and Politics51
4The Use of Equitable Principles to Resolve "New" Western Water Disputes54
5Water Across Borders: Judicial Realities77
6Denver Water Politics, Two Forks, and Its Implications for Development on the Great Plains93
7Federal Water Grants Participation: A Comparison of Arid States with Nonarid States with Reference to the Great Plains116
8Water for the Future: The Development of Markets in the Texas Plains125
Part 3Beyond the Plains, Additional Considerations139
9Land, Water, and the Right to Remain Indian: The All Indian Pueblo Council and Indian Water Rights141
10Haunted by Waters: Water Rhetorics as Conservation Politics in Films of the American West168
Final Thoughts187
Notes on Contributors189
Index191
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