Vol. 26 No. 1, March 1996
Index
- Taking and giving: police power, public value, and private right.
- Water rights and the common wealth.
- A civic Republican perspective on the National Environmental Police Act's process for citizen participation.
- International negotiations paralyzed by domestic politics: two-level game theory and the problem of the Pacific Salmon Commission.
- Seven myths of Northwest water law and associated stories.
- Changing the river's course: western water policy reform.
- A watershed issue: the role of streamflow protection in Northwest river basin management.
- Leasing water rights for instream flow uses: a survey of water transfer policy, practices, and problems in the Pacific Northwest.
- The Hanford Reach: protecting the Columbia's last safe haven for salmon.
- Drafting from an overdrawn account: continuing water diversions from the mainstream Columbia and Snake Rivers.
- Tradable emissions programs: implications under the takings clause.
- Of fish, federal dams, and state protections: a state's options against the federal government for dam-related fish kills on the Columbia River.
- Giving sabers to a 'toothless tiger': the Federal Advisory Committee Act.
- The Federal Advisory Committee Act: barrier or boon to effective natural resource management?