Book contents
- Riverflow
- Riverflow
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Maps
- Foreword: Marching Away from Folly
- Acknowledgments
- 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
- About the Author
- Index
About the Author
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2021
- Riverflow
- Riverflow
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Maps
- Foreword: Marching Away from Folly
- Acknowledgments
- 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
- About the Author
- Index
Summary
Paul Stanton Kibel is Professor at Golden Gate University (GGU), School of Law in San Francisco, California, where he teaches Water Law, directs the GGU Center on Urban Environmental Law (CUEL) and serves as Faculty Editor for the GGU Environmental Law Journal. He has also taught Water Law at the University of California–Berkeley Boalt Hall School of Law and Water Policy in the West at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California–Berkeley. Kibel holds an LLM from the University of California–Berkeley Boalt Hall School of Law and a BA from Colgate University in New York. He is also natural resource counsel to the Water and Power Law Group. Kibel previously published two books, The Earth on Trial: Environmental Law on the International Stage (Routledge) and Rivertown: Rethinking Urban Rivers (MIT Press), and his articles have appeared in such journals as the Stanford Environmental Law Journal, Georgetown International Environmental Law Review, Columbia Journal of Transnational Law, Berkeley Journal of International Law, Ecology Law Quarterly, NYU Environmental Law Journal, Virginia Environmental Law Journal, UCLA Journal of International Law & Foreign Affairs, and the William and Mary Environmental Law & Policy Review.
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- RiverflowThe Right to Keep Water Instream, pp. 280Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021