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Governing Water: The Semicommons of Fluid Property Rights

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2008

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Henry E. Smith, Governing Water: The Semicommons of Fluid Property Rights, 50 Arizona Law Review 445 (2008).

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This Article applies an information-cost theory of property to water law. Because of its fluidity, exclusion is difficult in the case of water and gives way to rule of proper use, i.e., governance regimes. Looking at water through this lens reveals that prior appropriation employs more governance and riparianism rests more on a foundation of exclusion than is commonly thought. The development of increasing amounts of exclusion and governance are both compatible with a broadly Demsetzian account that is sensitive to the nature of the resource. Moreover, hybrids between prior appropriation and riparianism are not anomalous. Exclusion strategies based on boundaries and quantification allow for rights to be formal and modular, but this approach is particularly challenging in the case of water and other fugitive resources. The challenges of exclusion that water and other fugitive resources present often lead to a semicommons in which elements of private and common property both coexist and interact.

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Governing Water: The Semicommons of Fluid… : DASH Story 2015-03-25
I am a law student. I share law review articles with friends in arts and media about information, property, and citizenship. I am currently in Los Angeles reading about water rights and the semicommons at a public airport that is having me watch advertisements to access the internet to do so. This is a bizarre incentive structure. A democracy functions on easy access to information. The knowledge enclosure has no place in the open society. Thank you for not being an impediment to civic life.