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The patchwork governance of ecologically available water: A case study in the Upper Missouri Headwaters, Montana, United States

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Amanda E Cravens, Julia (Contractor) B Goolsby, Theresa Jedd, Deborah J. Bathke, Shelley Crausbay, Ashley (Contractor) E Cooper, Jason Dunham, Tonya Haigh, Kim Hall, Michael Hayes, Jamie McEvoy, Rebecca Nelson, Markéta Poděbradská, Aaron Ramirez, Elliot Wickham, Dionne Zoanni, and National CASC, 2021-09-12, The patchwork governance of ecologically available water: A case study in the Upper Missouri Headwaters, Montana, United States: .

Summary

Institutional authority and responsibility for allocating water to ecosystems (“ecologically available water” [EAW]) is spread across local, state, and federal agencies, which operate under a range of statutes, mandates, and planning processes. We use a case study of the Upper Missouri Headwaters Basin in southwestern Montana, United States, to illustrate this fragmented institutional landscape. Our goals are to (a) describe the patchwork of agencies and institutional actors whose intersecting authorities and actions influence the EAW in the study basin; (b) describe the range of governance mechanisms these agencies use, including laws, policies, administrative programs, and planning processes; and (c) assess the extent to which the [...]

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  • National CASC
  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers

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citationTypeJournal Article
conferenceJournal of the American Water Resources Association
parts
typeDOI
valuedoi.org/10.1111/1752-1688.13167
typePaper Number
valueJAWR-22-0074-P

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