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13 Works 156 Members 3 Reviews

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Works by Jr. Norris Hundley

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Common Knowledge

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male
Nationality
USA
Occupations
Professor

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Thoroughly updated and back in print, this is a pioneering study of the relationship between water, law, public policy, and politics in the American Southwest. Hundley demonstrates that the Colorado River is far more important and contested today, in the age of global warming and the rapid population growth in Southern California, than it was in the 1970s.
 
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zenosbooks | 1 other review | Sep 9, 2012 |
Thoroughly updated and back in print, this is a pioneering study of the relationship between water, law, public policy, and politics in the American Southwest. Hundley demonstrates that the Colorado River is far more important and contested today, in the age of global warming and the rapid population growth in Southern California, than it was in the 1970s.
 
Flagged
zenosbooks | 1 other review | Sep 9, 2012 |
An excellent overview of the harnessing of water in California, with particular attention to 20th Century development. Doubtlessly those who have lived in the state for any appreciable time will recognize many of the issues Hundley discusses, however the book nicely summarizes the current state that Californians now find themselves in - one of multiple competing narratives on how to best use an over-tapped resource. The work does not get bogged down in academic jargon, but rather allows for a quick, enjoyable read, even occasionally humorous, as on page 341 with his backhand to Gov. George Deukmejian's lack of strong leadership. The final chapter (Chapter 8, Reflections) gives Hundley opportunity to more heavily editorialize about water issues - the state has never been run by one monolithic single purpose or vision on water policy (407); true reform in a democracy only takes place when the "public has been informed, vigilant, and active," which has therefore produced only piecemeal changes in how water resources are used (414); that the agricultural industry, one that uses 83% of the state's heavily subsidized water, yet only contributes about 3% of the state's economy, must recognize the need to change (417); and that aquifers provide better storage receptacles than reservoirs (417-418). While published nearly twenty years ago, the book is still unfortunately current, as much has not changed - lawsuits still often determine water policy; the Delta is on the brink of collapse; the Peripheral Canal is back on the table; ballot initiatives on water appear in nearly every election; and even in the midst of drought, Californians rarely change their water use habits. Perhaps the one thing current readers can take from Hundley is his call for real leadership on water policy to emerge. Someone or something to bring some order to a highly complicated system. Too much is riding on this overburden and rapidly decaying hydraulic system.… (more)
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waterarchives | Oct 26, 2009 |

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Works
13
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156
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Rating
4.0
Reviews
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ISBNs
18
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