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'Provides a good look at how institutions play a part in shaping policies and how these policies are implemented, making the work a solid resource for anyone wishing to explore the complexities of public policy and management through the lens of western water management.'
Perspectives on Politics, APSA
'A timely and informative study of conjunctive water management at a time of increasingly scarce water resources. . . . A thoroughly researched, well-presented, and thoughtful analysis of the history and future of recharge and recovery of surplus surface water in three western states.'
Southwest Hydrology
William Blomquist is an associate professor of political science at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI), and is a member of the Research Advisory Board of the National Water Research Institute. His previous publications include Dividing the Waters: Governing Groundwater in Southern California.
Edella Schlager is an associate professor in the School of Public Administration and Policy at the University of Arizona. She has recently published articles in Natural Resources Journal and the American Behavioral Scientist.
Tanya Heikkila is an assistant professor with Columbia University?s MPA program in Environmental Science and Policy in the School of International and Public Affairs. She has recently published articles in Natural Resources Journal (with Schlager and Blomquist) and the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management.
Preface
PART 1
Common Waters: Managing Surface Water and Groundwater Resources Together
1. Water Scarcity, Management, and Institutions
2. The Promise of Conjunctive Water Management
3. Opportunities and Obstacles for Conjunctive Management
PART 2
How Institutions Matter: Institutions and Conjunctive Management in California, Arizona, and Colorado
4. California
5. Arizona
6. Colorado
PART 3
Institutions and Policy Change: Analysis and Recommendations
7. Tracing and Comparing Institutional Effects
8. Future Directions of the Diverging Streams
9. Shaping the Future: Institutional Changes to Improve Water Management
Appendix. The Three States: Why We Chose Them, and What We Did
Notes
Bibliography
Index