Water Law and Policy for the Twenty-First Century

Course Information

Registration Information

Meeting Times

Day Time Location
THU 3:30 - 5:20 pm CCJ 3.306

Evaluation Method

Type Date Time Location
Paper

Description

It is hard to escape hearing or reading about major problems that are arising all over the world, including right here in Texas, about "blue gold" -- that is, water. These problems involve significant demands for greater access to water (quantity and its diversion: welcome to Dallas and Las Vegas!); failures to protect water quality at the source (aquifers, reservoirs, rivers, and streams); the improvident management of urban, suburban and rural supply and demand; and hazardous or wasteful consumer practices, to name just a few. Concerns are also mounting about water uses by and for humans that conflict with the protection of species and habitat not our own, including those on which we depend for food. These issues are driven by complexities that include chronic drought and other adverse, predictably worsening weather conditions; deteriorating infrastructure; and budgetary constraints that could become severe. We will study a number of these issues, each in a particular context, together with a sample of the inventive responses that are just now being tried out, litigated over, devised as political solutions, mounted as popular campaigns, or academically proposed. Observing, understanding, and learning how to critically evaluate the relationships between the problems at hand and the responses that they are generating will be our primary task. In some instances, water problems here in Texas will turn our state and locality into our living laboratory and we will have local experts join us for the discussion of these. This is a limited-enrollment, supervised writing course for IL students only. There will be limited-length paper requirements (the first, a 3-to-5 page paper; the second, an 8-to-10 page paper; and the third, a 10-to-12 page paper) in lieu of an exam. It may be possible to write the third paper as a joint project with one or more class members, each student's segment to fulfill the page requirement, under terms that we will work out. This class will meet together with the upper-class seminar of the same name. There are no prerequisites for this course. This course does not conflict or overlap with the upperclass Water Law course (LAW 276L or LAW 376L). In other words, students who take this course may also take LAW 276L or LAW 376L for credit.