Conflict on the Rio Grande

Conflict on the Rio Grande

Author: Douglas R. Littlefield

Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press

Published: 2012-11-27

Total Pages: 314

ISBN-13: 0806185910

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The history of the Rio Grande since the late nineteenth century reflects the evolution of water-resource management in the West. It was here that the earliest interstate and international water-allocation problems pitted irrigators in southern New Mexico against farmers downstream in El Paso and Juarez, with the voluntary resolution of that conflict setting important precedents for national and international water law. In this first scholarly treatment of the politics of water law along the Rio Grande, Douglas R. Littlefield describes those early interstate and international water- apportionment conflicts and explains how they relate to the development of western water law and policy and to international relations with Mexico. Littlefield embraces environmental, legal, and social history to offer clear analyses of appropriation and riparian water rights doctrines, along with lucid accounts of court cases and laws. Examining events that led up to the 1904 settlement among U.S. and Mexican communities and the formation of the Rio Grande Compact in 1938, Littlefield describes how communities grappled over water issues as much with one another as with governmental authorities. Conflict on the Rio Grande reveals the transformation of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century law, traces changing attitudes about the role of government, and examines the ways these changes affected the use and eventual protection of natural resources. Rio Grande water policy, Littlefield shows, represents federalism at work—and shows the West, in one locale at least, coming to grips with its unique problems through negotiation and compromise.


Rio Grande Compact Papers

Rio Grande Compact Papers

Author: Charles R. Corlett

Publisher:

Published: 1924

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Correspondence, memoranda, reports, and other papers, relating to the Rio Grande Compact, compiled and retained by Corlett and his law partner, George M. Corlett, on behalf of clients.


Reining in the Rio Grande

Reining in the Rio Grande

Author: Fred M. Phillips

Publisher: UNM Press

Published: 2015-07-15

Total Pages: 296

ISBN-13: 0826349455

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The Rio Grande was ancient long before the first humans reached its banks. These days, the highly regulated river looks nothing like it did to those early settlers. Alternately viewed as a valuable ecosystem and life-sustaining foundation of community welfare or a commodity to be engineered to yield maximum economic benefit, the Rio Grande has brought many advantages to those who live in its valley, but the benefits have come at a price. This study examines human interactions with the Rio Grande from prehistoric time to the present day and explores what possibilities remain for the desert river. From the perspectives of law, development, tradition, and geology, the authors weigh what has been gained and lost by reining in the Rio Grande.