描述
Water users of the Platte River Basin have long struggled to share this scarce commodity in the arid high plains ultimately organizing collectively owned and managed water systems allocating water along extensive stream systems and integrating newer groundwater with existing surfacewater uses. In 1973 the Endangered Species Act brought a new challenge incorporating the habitat needs of four speciesthe whooping crane piping plover least tern and pallid sturgeoninto its watermanagement agenda. Implementing the Endangered Species Act on the Platte Basin Water Commons tells of the negotiations among the U.S. Department of the Interior the environmental community and the states of Wyoming Colorado and Nebraska that took place from the mid1970s to 2006. Ambitious talks among rival water users environmentalists state authorities and the Department of the Interior finally resulted in the Platte River Habitat Recovery Program. Documenting how organizational interests found remedies within the conditions set by the Endangered Species Act describing how these interests addressed habitat restoration and advancing sociological propositions under which water providers transcended selfinterest and produced an agreement benefiting the environment this book details the messy process that took place over more than thirty years. Presenting important implications for the future of water management in arid and semiarid environments this book will be of interest to anyone involved in water management as well as academics interested in the social organization of common property.
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Fruugo ID:
379423350-818986704
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ISBN:
9781607321835