Water, Community, and the Culture of Owning Water, Community, and the Culture of Owning
Wallace Stegner Lecture

Water, Community, and the Culture of Owning

    • $4.99
    • $4.99

Publisher Description

In this timely work, Eric Freyfogle probes the long-simmering struggles in the American West to address water-related problem. The big challenge is to resolve water shortages and meet high-valued water needs while also improving river ecosystems. These water conflicts, he suggests, have less to do with our contentious political differences than they do with longstanding core elements of American culture—inherited, shared ways of understanding our place in nature that no longer make good sense. Particularly troublesome are the ways we fragment it, valuing its parts as discrete commodities. Also at play is our cultural inability to think clearly about how best to draw the line between the legitimate use of nature and the abuse of it. 

Building on these cultural critiques, Freyfogle takes up the issue of private property rights, highlighting the longstanding flexibility of this key American institution as well as the moral imperative to ensure that property rights aren’t used in ways that harm communities. Outdated understandings about private property, he concludes, have further confused our understanding and made sensible solutions to water problems even harder to imagine. Water-policy reform won’t happen, Freyfogle argues, until we reconsider how we understand nature and take charge of the institution of ownership, recasting it so as to increase the benefits it generates for everyone. If we can do that, solutions to water troubles could prove easier than we expect. The work concludes with an original, sweeping policy proposal to resolve the West’s water shortages and meet environmental needs in ways fair to all.

This lecture was presented on March 22, 2017, at the 22nd annual symposium sponsored by the Wallace Stegner Center for Land, Resources and the Environment at the S. J. Quinney College of Law, University of Utah.

GENRE
Science & Nature
RELEASED
2019
March 31
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
33
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Utah Press
SELLER
Chicago Distribution Center
SIZE
1.2
MB

More Books Like This

The Tragedy is "the Commons" The Tragedy is "the Commons"
2013
Who Should Own Natural Resources? Who Should Own Natural Resources?
2019
Environmental Political Theory Environmental Political Theory
2020
Justice, Society and Nature Justice, Society and Nature
2002
Boundaries of Order Boundaries of Order
2010
Moderate Conservatism Moderate Conservatism
2022

More Books by Eric T. Freyfogle

Wildlife Law, Second Edition Wildlife Law, Second Edition
2019
A Good That Transcends A Good That Transcends
2017
For the Health of the Land For the Health of the Land
2012
The New Agrarianism The New Agrarianism
2012
Our Oldest Task Our Oldest Task
2017
Why Conservation Is Failing and How It Can Regain Ground Why Conservation Is Failing and How It Can Regain Ground
2008

Other Books in This Series