Volume 25

William & Mary Environmental Law & Policy Review

Volume 25

Issue 1 | Issue 2

Issue 1

Symposium Issue: Water Rights and Watershed Management: Planning for the Future

Articles

Robert W. Adler & Michele Straube:
WATERSHEDS AND THE INTEGRATION OF U.S. WATER LAW AND POLICY: BRIDGING THE GREAT DIVIDES

A. Dan Tarlock:
RECONNECTING PROPERTY RIGHTS TO WATERSHEDS

Robert E. Beck:
THE REGULATED RIPARIAN MODEL WATER CODE: BLUEPRINT FOR TWENTY FIRST CENTURY WATER MANAGEMENT

Judith V. Royster:
WINTERS IN THE EAST: TRIBAL RESERVED RIGHTS TO WATER IN RIPARIAN STATES

Barton H. Thompson, Jr.:
MARKETS FOR NATURE

Joseph W. Dellapenna:
THE IMPORTANCE OF GETTING NAMES RIGHT: THE MYTHS OF MARKETS FOR WATER

Jon Cannon:
CHOICES AND INSTITUTIONS IN WATERSHED MANAGEMENT

Wendy E. Wagner:
RESTORING POLLUTED WATERS WITH PUBLIC VALUES

Kurt Stephenson:
TAKING NATURE INTO ACCOUNT: OBSERVATIONS ABOUT THE CHANGING ROLE OF ANALYSIS AND NEGOTIATIONS IN HYDROPOWER RELICENSING

Notes

Elizabeth Weldon:
PRACTICALY IRRIGABLE ACREAGE STANDARD: A POOR PARTNER FOR THE WEST’S WATER FUTURE

Robert A. Fisher:
BETTER AMERICA BONDS: BETTER IS IN THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER

Sarah C. Richardson:
THE CHANGING POLITICAL LANDSCAPE OF HYDROPOWER PROJECT RELICENSING

Michael Kantro:
SHALL IT BE SAID THAT MY DUSK WAS IN TRUTH MY DAWN?: WHAT STATES CAN GLEAM FROM THE ENVIRONMENTAL CONSEQUENCES OF DEREGULATING ELECTRICITY IN CALIFORNIA

Issue 2

Articles

John D. Echeverria:
SUCCESS LIKE FAILURE: THE PLATTE RIVER COLLABORATIVE WATERSHED PLANNING PROCESS

Jean O. Melious:
ENFORCING THE ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT AGAINST THE STATES

Nancy K. Kubasek & Chaz A. Giles:
DAMMED TO BE DIVIDED: RESOLVING THE CONTROVERSY OVER THE DESTRUCTION OF THE SNAKE RIVER DAMS AND PROVIDING A MODEL FOR FUTURE DECISION-MAKING

Notes

Mary Lynne Kupchella:
AGRICULTURAL BIOTECHNOLOGY: WHY IT CAN SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPING NATIONS, BUT MAY NEVER GET A CHANCE

Edward M. McDonald Jr.:
THE FOOD QUALITY PROTECTION ACT OF 1996: BY REMOVING CHEMICAL IRRITANTS FROM OUR ENVIRONMENT WILL IT GENERATE TRADE IRRITANTS TO REPLACE THEM?

Brian J. Perron:
WHEN TRIBAL TREATY FISHING RIGHTS BECOME A MERE OPPORTUNITY TO DIP ONE’S NET INTO THE WATER AND PULL IT OUT EMPTY: THE CASE FOR MONEY DAMAGES WHEN TREATY-RESERVED FISH HABITATS IS DEGRADED