Riverflow: The Right to Keep Water Instream
There are many people and places connected to rivers: fishermen whose livelihood depends on river ecosystems, farms that need irrigation, indigenous groups whose cultures rely on fish and flowing waters, cities whose electricity comes from hydroelectric dams, and citizens who seek wild nature. For all of these people, instream flow is vitally important to where and how they live and work. Riverflow reveals the diverse and creative ways people are using the law to restore rivers, from the Columbia, Colorado, Klamath and Sacramento–San Joaquin watersheds in America, to the watersheds of the Tweed in England and Scotland, the Fraser in Canada, the Saru in Japan, the Nile in North Africa, and the Tigris–Euphrates in the Middle East. Riverflow documents that we already have the legal tools to preserve the ecological integrity of our waterways; the question is whether we have the political will to deploy these tools effectively.
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Riverflow: The Right to Keep Water Instream
There are many people and places connected to rivers: fishermen whose livelihood depends on river ecosystems, farms that need irrigation, indigenous groups whose cultures rely on fish and flowing waters, cities whose electricity comes from hydroelectric dams, and citizens who seek wild nature. For all of these people, instream flow is vitally important to where and how they live and work. Riverflow reveals the diverse and creative ways people are using the law to restore rivers, from the Columbia, Colorado, Klamath and Sacramento–San Joaquin watersheds in America, to the watersheds of the Tweed in England and Scotland, the Fraser in Canada, the Saru in Japan, the Nile in North Africa, and the Tigris–Euphrates in the Middle East. Riverflow documents that we already have the legal tools to preserve the ecological integrity of our waterways; the question is whether we have the political will to deploy these tools effectively.
41.99 In Stock
Riverflow: The Right to Keep Water Instream

Riverflow: The Right to Keep Water Instream

by Paul Stanton Kibel
Riverflow: The Right to Keep Water Instream

Riverflow: The Right to Keep Water Instream

by Paul Stanton Kibel

Paperback

$41.99 
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Overview

There are many people and places connected to rivers: fishermen whose livelihood depends on river ecosystems, farms that need irrigation, indigenous groups whose cultures rely on fish and flowing waters, cities whose electricity comes from hydroelectric dams, and citizens who seek wild nature. For all of these people, instream flow is vitally important to where and how they live and work. Riverflow reveals the diverse and creative ways people are using the law to restore rivers, from the Columbia, Colorado, Klamath and Sacramento–San Joaquin watersheds in America, to the watersheds of the Tweed in England and Scotland, the Fraser in Canada, the Saru in Japan, the Nile in North Africa, and the Tigris–Euphrates in the Middle East. Riverflow documents that we already have the legal tools to preserve the ecological integrity of our waterways; the question is whether we have the political will to deploy these tools effectively.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108927765
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 01/06/2022
Pages: 310
Product dimensions: 5.98(w) x 9.02(h) x 0.67(d)

About the Author

Paul Stanton Kibel is Professor at Golden Gate University School of Law and Director of its Center on Urban Environmental Law. He has also taught Water Policy in the West at Berkeley's Goldman School of Public Policy, and water law at Berkeley Law School. He is natural resource counsel to the Water and Power Law Group, and his previous books include The Earth on Trial: Environmental Law on the International Stage (1998) and Rivertown: Rethinking Urban Rivers (2007).

Table of Contents

Foreword; Introduction: Publicum Ius Aquae; 1. Instream Rights and the Public Trust; 2. Instream Rights and Unreasonable Use; 3. Instream Rights and Dams; 4. Instream Rights and Watershed Governance; 5. Instream Rights as Federal Law Recedes; 6. Instream Rights as Water Temperatures Rise; 7. Instream Rights as Sea Levels Rise; 8. Instream Rights and Groundwater Extraction; 9. Instream Rights and Old Canals; 10. Instream Rights and Water as an Investment; 11. Instream Rights and International Law; 12. Instream Rights and Irrigation Subsidies; 13. Instream Rights and Pacific Salmon; 14. Instream Rights and Hatchery Fish; 15. Instream Rights as Indigenous Rights; Conclusion: Policy Disconnected from Science; Attributions; Index.
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