Managing Water: Avoiding Crisis in California

£30.00

Temporarily Unavailable
Managing Water: Avoiding Crisis in California Author: Format: Paperback / softback First Published: Published By: University of California Press
string(3) "336"
Pages: 336 Illustrations and other contents: 45 line illustrations, 15 tables Language: English ISBN: 9780520253278 Category:

Water in California is controlled, stored, delivered, and managed within a complex network of interlocking and cooperating districts and agencies. Unraveling and understanding this system is not easy. This book describes how the current system works (or doesn’t work) and discusses the issues that face elected officials, water and resource managers, and the general public. Using the Los Angeles area as a microcosm of the state, environmental activist Dorothy Green gathers detailed information on its water systems and applies the lessons learned from this data statewide. A useful primer on watershed and water policy issues, this book provides reasoned, thoughtful, and insightful arguments about sustainability.

Weight0.544 kg
Author

Editor
Photographer
Format

Illustrators
Publisher

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

"Offers much food for thought about the complex world of water management in the Golden State. Provides reasoned, thoughtful and insightful arguments about sustainability." Salinas Californian "This is not a book just for Californians but anyone in the US." Botanical Rsrch Inst Of Tx, Jbrit "A highly valuable resource manual... Useful for practitioners and concerned citizens ... who want to familiarize themselves with water issues." California History

Author Biography

Dorothy Green is founding president of Heal the Bay and among the founders of the Los Angeles & San Gabriel Rivers Watershed Council, of which she is also president emeritus. She has chaired the California Water Policy (POWER) conference for the past 17 years and has helped to found the only non-profit in the state, the California Water Impact Network (c-win.org), totally devoted to water supply issues.