This thesis analyses the evolution and development of the water transfer process taking place in the Newlands reclamation project in Nevada. Water transfers from existing agricultural uses to supply environmental needs, primarily the protection and sustainability of endangered species and ecological wetlands, are mandated by federal law. This law, the Truckee-Carson-Pyramid Lake Water Settlement Act (P.L. 101-618), specifically directs the Secretary of the Interior to facilitate the acquisition of water rights through "voluntary" means from "willing sellers." It is argued that the mandated water rights acquisition programs are being implemented in an economic environment that exhibits institutional path dependency and lock-in resulting from the historical use of the doctrine of prior appropriation to allocate scarce water resources in Nevada. The work of Douglass C. North and institutional economics are used to explain this developing water transfer process.
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机译:本文分析了内华达州纽兰兹(Newlands)填海工程中输水过程的演变和发展。联邦法律规定从现有的农业用途转移水以满足环境需求,主要是保护和维持濒危物种和生态湿地的可持续性。这项法律是《特拉基·卡森—金字塔湖水解决法》(P.L. 101-618),具体指示内政部长通过“自愿”手段从“自愿卖方”获得水权的便利。有人认为,强制性的水权获取计划是在经济环境中实施的,这种环境表现出体制路径上的依赖和锁定,这是内华达州以前利用优先拨款原则分配稀缺水资源的历史原因。 Douglass C. North的工作和制度经济学被用来解释这种不断发展的水转移过程。
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