Fresh water has become scarce and will become even more so in the coming
years, as continued population growth places ever greater demands on the
supply of fresh water. At the same time, options for increasing that
supply look to be ever more limited. No longer can we rely on
technological solutions to meet growing demand. What we need is better
management of the available water supply to ensure it goes further
toward meeting basic human needs. But better management requires that we
both understand the history underlying our current water regulation
regime and think seriously about what changes to the law could be
beneficial.
For Golden Rules, Mark Kanazawa draws on previously untapped
historical sources to trace the emergence of the current framework for
resolving water-rights issues to California in the 1850s, when Gold Rush
miners flooded the newly formed state. The need to circumscribe water
use on private property in support of broader societal objectives
brought to light a number of fundamental issues about how water rights
ought to be defined and enforced through a system of laws. Many of these
issues reverberate in today's contentious debates about the relative
merits of government and market regulation. By understanding how these
laws developed across California's mining camps and common-law courts,
we can also gain a better sense of the challenges associated with
adopting new property-rights regimes in the twenty-first century.