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Book Review
Fluid Arguments: Five Centuries of Western Water
Conflict. Edited by Char Miller. (Tucson: University of Arizona
Press, 2001. Illustrations, tables, notes, index. xxix + 354 pp. $45.)
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In a year when the Rio Grande runs dry in south Texas, and Klamath Basin farmers seethe over federal irrigation reductions, nothing could be more timely than a book analyzing five centuries of western water conflict. With Fluid Arguments, Char Miller and sixteen authors offer just such a book. |
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authors cast their net broadly. They cover the Southwest and Southern
Plains, and, as American historians are increasingly doing, also
cross boundaries, both national and disciplinary. They approach
water conflict from a range of professional backgrounds: geography,
law, political science, and academic and public history. Several
explore water along the Mexican border. The essays also consider
many water users' perspectivesNative Americans, Spaniards,
Mexicans, bureaucrats, farmers, dam builders, irrigators, judges,
ranchers, and environmentalists. |
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