Water in the Hispanic Southwest: A Social and Legal History, 1550-1850

Author:   Michael C. Meyer
Publisher:   University of Arizona Press
ISBN:  

9780816515950


Pages:   209
Publication Date:   30 June 1996
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Water in the Hispanic Southwest: A Social and Legal History, 1550-1850


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Full Product Details

Author:   Michael C. Meyer
Publisher:   University of Arizona Press
Imprint:   University of Arizona Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.70cm
Weight:   0.456kg
ISBN:  

9780816515950


ISBN 10:   0816515956
Pages:   209
Publication Date:   30 June 1996
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

Michael Meyer has given us [an eloquent, well-researched book. Water in the Hispanic Southwest deals for the first time with the single natural resource of paramount importance in this region. The book does so based on far-ranging, extensive research into primary and secondary documents. It does so clearly and eloquently. It is mercifully brief and fundamentally important. -- Natural Resources Journal This down-to-earth history is marked by excellent background information, pertinent theory, and analytical skills and rests on hundreds of manuscripts from a dozen archives in Spain, Mexico, and the Southwest, with thorough use of the best literature. . . . indispensable for the study of regions where the water supply does not meet human needs. -- American Historical Review This book should find favor not only with historians, lawyers, and hydrologists, but also with sociologists and political scientists. . . . The relevance of these Spanish and Mexican legal precedents to current water rights issues is self-evident. -- Southeastern Latin Americanist


Michael Meyer has given us [an] eloquent, well-researched book. Water in the Hispanic Southwest deals for the first time with the single natural resource of paramount importance in this region. The book does so based on far-ranging, extensive research into primary and secondary documents. It does so clearly and eloquently. It is mercifully brief and fundamentally important. --Natural Resources Journal This down-to-earth history is marked by excellent background information, pertinent theory, and analytical skills and rests on hundreds of manuscripts from a dozen archives in Spain, Mexico, and the Southwest, with thorough use of the best literature. . . . indispensable for the study of regions where the water supply does not meet human needs. --American Historical Review This book should find favor not only with historians, lawyers, and hydrologists, but also with sociologists and political scientists. . . . The relevance of these Spanish and Mexican legal precedents to current water rights issues is self-evident. --Southeastern Latin Americanist


Michael Meyer has given us [an] eloquent, well-researched book. Water in the Hispanic Southwest deals for the first time with the single natural resource of paramount importance in this region. The book does so based on far-ranging, extensive research into primary and secondary documents. It does so clearly and eloquently. It is mercifully brief and fundamentally important. -- Natural Resources Journal This down-to-earth history is marked by excellent background information, pertinent theory, and analytical skills and rests on hundreds of manuscripts from a dozen archives in Spain, Mexico, and the Southwest, with thorough use of the best literature. . . . indispensable for the study of regions where the water supply does not meet human needs. -- American Historical Review This book should find favor not only with historians, lawyers, and hydrologists, but also with sociologists and political scientists. . . . The relevance of these Spanish and Mexican legal precedents to current


Michael Meyer has given us [an] eloquent, well-researched book. Water in the Hispanic Southwest deals for the first time with the single natural resource of paramount importance in this region. The book does so based on far-ranging, extensive research into primary and secondary documents. It does so clearly and eloquently. It is mercifully brief and fundamentally important. Natural Resources Journal This down-to-earth history is marked by excellent background information, pertinent theory, and analytical skills and rests on hundreds of manuscripts from a dozen archives in Spain, Mexico, and the Southwest, with thorough use of the best literature. . . . indispensable for the study of regions where the water supply does not meet human needs. American Historical Review This book should find favor not only with historians, lawyers, and hydrologists, but also with sociologists and political scientists. . . . The relevance of these Spanish and Mexican legal precedents to current water rights issues is self-evident. Southeastern Latin Americanist


Michael Meyer has given us [an eloquent, well-researched book. Water in the Hispanic Southwest deals for the first time with the single natural resource of paramount importance in this region. The book does so based on far-ranging, extensive research into primary and secondary documents. It does so clearly and eloquently. It is mercifully brief and fundamentally important. -- Natural Resources Journal This down-to-earth history is marked by excellent background information, pertinent theory, and analytical skills and rests on hundreds of manuscripts from a dozen archives in Spain, Mexico, and the Southwest, with thorough use of the best literature. . . . indispensable for the study of regions where the water supply does not meet human needs. -- American Historical Review This book should find favor not only with historians, lawyers, and hydrologists, but also with sociologists and political scientists. . . . The relevance of these Spanish and Mexican legal precedents to current water rights issues is self-evident. -- Southeastern Latin Americanist Michael Meyer has given us [an] eloquent, well-researched book. Water in the Hispanic Southwest deals for the first time with the single natural resource of paramount importance in this region. The book does so based on far-ranging, extensive research into primary and secondary documents. It does so clearly and eloquently. It is mercifully brief and fundamentally important. --Natural Resources Journal This down-to-earth history is marked by excellent background information, pertinent theory, and analytical skills and rests on hundreds of manuscripts from a dozen archives in Spain, Mexico, and the Southwest, with thorough use of the best literature. . . . indispensable for the study of regions where the water supply does not meet human needs. --American Historical Review This book should find favor not only with historians, lawyers, and hydrologists, but also with sociologists and political scientists. . . . The relevance of these Spanish and Mexican legal precedents to current water rights issues is self-evident. --Southeastern Latin Americanist


Author Information

Michael C. Meyer is a professor of history at the University of Arizona and is a former president of PROFMEX, the Consortium of United States Research Programs for Mexico.

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