Montana Water Law


Book Description




Cases and Materials on Water Law


Book Description

Cases and Materials on Water Law, steeped in water history, honors its distinguished author lineage by maintaining the book's longstanding tradition of focused instruction on property rights in water, covering appropriative and riparian principles, groundwater, interstate allocation, and federal-state relations. The Tenth Edition integrates these principles into today's regulatory framework, addressing the need for sustainable management and increased protection of the environment and public rights. The new edition is reorganized to prioritize student learning, with fewer and more focused notes and several new principal cases.




Legal Control of Water Resources


Book Description

Legal Control of Water Resources highlights the cutting edge issues of water law, while providing a comprehensive survey of the field. The book has been thoroughly updated major water marketing developments. There is extended coverage of ongoing efforts to settle Indian water rights claims. Finally, the new edition will include revised introductory materials on topics such as climate change and desalination developments. to reflect major new court decisions and legislation. The Fourth Edition deals with cutting-edge issues such as interstate water disputes on the Great Lakes, the Rio Grande, and in the Southeastern United States. New material has been added on water and urban growth management, environment/property rights conflicts, and




Montana Water Rights


Book Description

Partial summary. Hearings relative to federal suits to secure Flathead basin water for the Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes held in Ronan, on August 31, 1979 (p. 451-567). Includes statements by Evelyn Stevenson, E.W. Morigeau, and Lucille Otter.




Managing the Columbia River


Book Description

Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com).




Indian Reserved Water Rights


Book Description

In its 1908 decision for Winters v. United States, the Supreme Court affirmed a lower-court ruling that the United States and the Gros Ventre and Assiniboine Indians had reserved rights to water in the Milk River through an 1888 treaty which created the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation in Montana. Since 1908 the Winters decision, or Indian reserved water rights doctrine, has played an important and controversial role in the West. Indian Reserved Water Rights is the first book-length historical study of the Winters case and the early use of the reserved water doctrine. In the book, John Shurts explains how the litigation and its outcome fit well within the existing legal context and into ongoing efforts at water development in the Milk River Valley. He also examines the life of the Winters Doctrine during its earliest years, primarily through a study of water-rights litigation on the Uintah Reservation in Utah.




House Joint Resolutions


Book Description