VIDEO: Session 5: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons

SESSION FIVE: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons 1:20 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Panelists (for a facilitated audience Q&A session) Moderator: Doug Kenney, Getches-Wilkinson Center Panelists: John Fleck, University of New Mexico Kathy Jacobs, University of Arizona Kelsey Leona...

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Main Authors: Fleck, John, Jacobs, Kathy, Leonard, Kelsey, Tharme, Rebecca, McLeod, Tony
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Colorado Law Scholarly Commons 2016
Subjects:
CAP
40
80
Online Access:https://scholar.law.colorado.edu/coping-with-water-scarcity-in-river-basins-worldwide/31
https://youtu.be/NeTDB4LjESk
id ftunicolboulawl:oai:scholar.law.colorado.edu:coping-with-water-scarcity-in-river-basins-worldwide-1030
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Colorado Boulder, Law School: Scholarly Commons
op_collection_id ftunicolboulawl
language unknown
topic Rio Grande
Colorado River Basin
water governance
human network boundaries
scarcity issues
shared understanding
social capital
litigation between Texas and New Mexico
integration of groundwater and surface water management
aquifers
surface water flows
functioning institutions
monitoring
evaluation of success
Arizona
potential for policy interventions
cross-scale tension
local scale
state scale
federal scale
Indigenous peoples as nations
equitable role in decision making process
justice concerns
seat at the table
water resource management arenas
First Nation consultation policy
federal agency requirement
Canada
Australia
university level
diplomatic policy
principles of UNDRIP
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
informed consent
water scarcity
social aspects
water back into rivers
environmental flow conversation
science level
implementation level
collaboration with Indigenous peoples
river basin projects
values and needs
social-science integration
effective use of knowledge and experience
problem definition
solutions from conversations
social framework
voice at the table
Murray-Darling Basin Cap
gold standard
basin plan
embracing of markets
Murray-Darling Basin case
evolution of interesting tools and approaches
river basin management
flow needs
prioritization of flows
environmental sustainability
water delivery
benchmarking performance
essential elements of an ideal process
water rights system
expand and contract
water supply availability
government funding
solutions
Central Arizona Project
CAP
Colorado River management system
protection of existing right holders
habitat restoration
species
water for domestic uses
basin transferability
grants
entitlements
reserved rights
doctrine of discovery
Aboriginal water rights
government role
context
toolbox
cultural flows
federal system
states
design of institutional arrangements
planning process
geographical scale of process
ideal management system
ethical framework
trust
relationships
foundation of good governance
pluralistic society
empowerment of people
insider conversations
universal problem
nature of the word shortage
sophisticated adaptive capacity
municipal water use declining
rising agricultural productivity
scarcity crises
have less water
use less water
new sets of values and needs
information
thriving agricultural economies
sharing arrangements
cultural industry
water supply
water access
water users
informal networks
issue resolution
proper alignment with issues
prior appropriation systems
shifts toward flexibility
traditional knowledge
applied science over thousands of years
tribal water quality codes
Clean Water Act
tribal sovereign rights
spiritual context
EPA’s framework
position of fear
Indigenous people as strongest allies in basin management
infrastructure projects
spiritual values
proactive problem solving
bringing people together
receptivity
openness
global community
third stakeholder
New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
64 land councils
freehold title
largest Indigenous water holder
trading
leasing water assets
temporary water market
legislation
National Native Title Act
New South Wales
1993 Aboriginal Land Rights Act
James Anaya
Basin Plan submissions
NBAN
message in the water
greedy irrigators
40
000 years of science
collaborative partnerships and networks
unified vision
framing the problem
compromises
power struggle avoidance
system of checks and balances
feedback loop
procedural due process
same mistakes
respect
pathway to success
network expansion toward inclusion
relationship between First Nations and federal government in Canada
US changing administrations
best management practices
standard of good performance
water management
irrigation districts
basin knowledge
cost of past mistakes
protective view of natural environment
environmental water management
conversations between Australia and South Africa
replicable knowledge
calculation of environmental water needs
methodological tools
data poor
information poor
water insecurity
private sector
market approach
robust institutional and management system
broad societal interests
Colorado River governance
role of Indigenous communities
adequate voice
Native American constitutions
United States Constitution
Third Sovereign
sovereign First Nations
80
000 Navajos
water hauling
share the burden
water ethics
inherent violent impacts
Seneca Nation
Kinzua Dam
Pennsylvania
neotropics
research
studies
language
decolonization
African Studies
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Asian Studies
Climate
Comparative and Foreign Law
Environmental Health and Protection
Environmental Policy
Hydrology
Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Indigenous Studies
International Law
Latin American Studies
Law and Society
Natural Resources and Conservation
Natural Resources Management and Policy
Social Policy
Sustainability
Transnational Law
Water Law
Water Resource Management
spellingShingle Rio Grande
Colorado River Basin
water governance
human network boundaries
scarcity issues
shared understanding
social capital
litigation between Texas and New Mexico
integration of groundwater and surface water management
aquifers
surface water flows
functioning institutions
monitoring
evaluation of success
Arizona
potential for policy interventions
cross-scale tension
local scale
state scale
federal scale
Indigenous peoples as nations
equitable role in decision making process
justice concerns
seat at the table
water resource management arenas
First Nation consultation policy
federal agency requirement
Canada
Australia
university level
diplomatic policy
principles of UNDRIP
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
informed consent
water scarcity
social aspects
water back into rivers
environmental flow conversation
science level
implementation level
collaboration with Indigenous peoples
river basin projects
values and needs
social-science integration
effective use of knowledge and experience
problem definition
solutions from conversations
social framework
voice at the table
Murray-Darling Basin Cap
gold standard
basin plan
embracing of markets
Murray-Darling Basin case
evolution of interesting tools and approaches
river basin management
flow needs
prioritization of flows
environmental sustainability
water delivery
benchmarking performance
essential elements of an ideal process
water rights system
expand and contract
water supply availability
government funding
solutions
Central Arizona Project
CAP
Colorado River management system
protection of existing right holders
habitat restoration
species
water for domestic uses
basin transferability
grants
entitlements
reserved rights
doctrine of discovery
Aboriginal water rights
government role
context
toolbox
cultural flows
federal system
states
design of institutional arrangements
planning process
geographical scale of process
ideal management system
ethical framework
trust
relationships
foundation of good governance
pluralistic society
empowerment of people
insider conversations
universal problem
nature of the word shortage
sophisticated adaptive capacity
municipal water use declining
rising agricultural productivity
scarcity crises
have less water
use less water
new sets of values and needs
information
thriving agricultural economies
sharing arrangements
cultural industry
water supply
water access
water users
informal networks
issue resolution
proper alignment with issues
prior appropriation systems
shifts toward flexibility
traditional knowledge
applied science over thousands of years
tribal water quality codes
Clean Water Act
tribal sovereign rights
spiritual context
EPA’s framework
position of fear
Indigenous people as strongest allies in basin management
infrastructure projects
spiritual values
proactive problem solving
bringing people together
receptivity
openness
global community
third stakeholder
New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
64 land councils
freehold title
largest Indigenous water holder
trading
leasing water assets
temporary water market
legislation
National Native Title Act
New South Wales
1993 Aboriginal Land Rights Act
James Anaya
Basin Plan submissions
NBAN
message in the water
greedy irrigators
40
000 years of science
collaborative partnerships and networks
unified vision
framing the problem
compromises
power struggle avoidance
system of checks and balances
feedback loop
procedural due process
same mistakes
respect
pathway to success
network expansion toward inclusion
relationship between First Nations and federal government in Canada
US changing administrations
best management practices
standard of good performance
water management
irrigation districts
basin knowledge
cost of past mistakes
protective view of natural environment
environmental water management
conversations between Australia and South Africa
replicable knowledge
calculation of environmental water needs
methodological tools
data poor
information poor
water insecurity
private sector
market approach
robust institutional and management system
broad societal interests
Colorado River governance
role of Indigenous communities
adequate voice
Native American constitutions
United States Constitution
Third Sovereign
sovereign First Nations
80
000 Navajos
water hauling
share the burden
water ethics
inherent violent impacts
Seneca Nation
Kinzua Dam
Pennsylvania
neotropics
research
studies
language
decolonization
African Studies
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Asian Studies
Climate
Comparative and Foreign Law
Environmental Health and Protection
Environmental Policy
Hydrology
Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Indigenous Studies
International Law
Latin American Studies
Law and Society
Natural Resources and Conservation
Natural Resources Management and Policy
Social Policy
Sustainability
Transnational Law
Water Law
Water Resource Management
Fleck, John
Jacobs, Kathy
Leonard, Kelsey
Tharme, Rebecca
McLeod, Tony
VIDEO: Session 5: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons
topic_facet Rio Grande
Colorado River Basin
water governance
human network boundaries
scarcity issues
shared understanding
social capital
litigation between Texas and New Mexico
integration of groundwater and surface water management
aquifers
surface water flows
functioning institutions
monitoring
evaluation of success
Arizona
potential for policy interventions
cross-scale tension
local scale
state scale
federal scale
Indigenous peoples as nations
equitable role in decision making process
justice concerns
seat at the table
water resource management arenas
First Nation consultation policy
federal agency requirement
Canada
Australia
university level
diplomatic policy
principles of UNDRIP
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
informed consent
water scarcity
social aspects
water back into rivers
environmental flow conversation
science level
implementation level
collaboration with Indigenous peoples
river basin projects
values and needs
social-science integration
effective use of knowledge and experience
problem definition
solutions from conversations
social framework
voice at the table
Murray-Darling Basin Cap
gold standard
basin plan
embracing of markets
Murray-Darling Basin case
evolution of interesting tools and approaches
river basin management
flow needs
prioritization of flows
environmental sustainability
water delivery
benchmarking performance
essential elements of an ideal process
water rights system
expand and contract
water supply availability
government funding
solutions
Central Arizona Project
CAP
Colorado River management system
protection of existing right holders
habitat restoration
species
water for domestic uses
basin transferability
grants
entitlements
reserved rights
doctrine of discovery
Aboriginal water rights
government role
context
toolbox
cultural flows
federal system
states
design of institutional arrangements
planning process
geographical scale of process
ideal management system
ethical framework
trust
relationships
foundation of good governance
pluralistic society
empowerment of people
insider conversations
universal problem
nature of the word shortage
sophisticated adaptive capacity
municipal water use declining
rising agricultural productivity
scarcity crises
have less water
use less water
new sets of values and needs
information
thriving agricultural economies
sharing arrangements
cultural industry
water supply
water access
water users
informal networks
issue resolution
proper alignment with issues
prior appropriation systems
shifts toward flexibility
traditional knowledge
applied science over thousands of years
tribal water quality codes
Clean Water Act
tribal sovereign rights
spiritual context
EPA’s framework
position of fear
Indigenous people as strongest allies in basin management
infrastructure projects
spiritual values
proactive problem solving
bringing people together
receptivity
openness
global community
third stakeholder
New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
64 land councils
freehold title
largest Indigenous water holder
trading
leasing water assets
temporary water market
legislation
National Native Title Act
New South Wales
1993 Aboriginal Land Rights Act
James Anaya
Basin Plan submissions
NBAN
message in the water
greedy irrigators
40
000 years of science
collaborative partnerships and networks
unified vision
framing the problem
compromises
power struggle avoidance
system of checks and balances
feedback loop
procedural due process
same mistakes
respect
pathway to success
network expansion toward inclusion
relationship between First Nations and federal government in Canada
US changing administrations
best management practices
standard of good performance
water management
irrigation districts
basin knowledge
cost of past mistakes
protective view of natural environment
environmental water management
conversations between Australia and South Africa
replicable knowledge
calculation of environmental water needs
methodological tools
data poor
information poor
water insecurity
private sector
market approach
robust institutional and management system
broad societal interests
Colorado River governance
role of Indigenous communities
adequate voice
Native American constitutions
United States Constitution
Third Sovereign
sovereign First Nations
80
000 Navajos
water hauling
share the burden
water ethics
inherent violent impacts
Seneca Nation
Kinzua Dam
Pennsylvania
neotropics
research
studies
language
decolonization
African Studies
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Asian Studies
Climate
Comparative and Foreign Law
Environmental Health and Protection
Environmental Policy
Hydrology
Indigenous
Indian
and Aboriginal Law
Indigenous Studies
International Law
Latin American Studies
Law and Society
Natural Resources and Conservation
Natural Resources Management and Policy
Social Policy
Sustainability
Transnational Law
Water Law
Water Resource Management
description SESSION FIVE: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons 1:20 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Panelists (for a facilitated audience Q&A session) Moderator: Doug Kenney, Getches-Wilkinson Center Panelists: John Fleck, University of New Mexico Kathy Jacobs, University of Arizona Kelsey Leonard, McMaster University Rebecca Tharme, Riverfutures Ltd. Tony McLeod, MDBA, Murray-Darling Basin Authority
format Text
author Fleck, John
Jacobs, Kathy
Leonard, Kelsey
Tharme, Rebecca
McLeod, Tony
author_facet Fleck, John
Jacobs, Kathy
Leonard, Kelsey
Tharme, Rebecca
McLeod, Tony
author_sort Fleck, John
title VIDEO: Session 5: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons
title_short VIDEO: Session 5: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons
title_full VIDEO: Session 5: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons
title_fullStr VIDEO: Session 5: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons
title_full_unstemmed VIDEO: Session 5: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons
title_sort video: session 5: wrap-up: themes, cross-cutting issues, and transferable lessons
publisher Colorado Law Scholarly Commons
publishDate 2016
url https://scholar.law.colorado.edu/coping-with-water-scarcity-in-river-basins-worldwide/31
https://youtu.be/NeTDB4LjESk
long_lat ENVELOPE(-96.542,-96.542,56.040,56.040)
ENVELOPE(-175.467,-175.467,-84.733,-84.733)
ENVELOPE(-127.689,-127.689,55.254,55.254)
ENVELOPE(-66.200,-66.200,-66.817,-66.817)
geographic Canada
Indian
Kelsey
Kenney
McLeod
Wilkinson
geographic_facet Canada
Indian
Kelsey
Kenney
McLeod
Wilkinson
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Coping with Water Scarcity in River Basins Worldwide: Lessons Learned from Shared Experiences (Martz Summer Conference, June 9-10)
op_relation https://scholar.law.colorado.edu/coping-with-water-scarcity-in-river-basins-worldwide/31
https://youtu.be/NeTDB4LjESk
_version_ 1766002985640394752
spelling ftunicolboulawl:oai:scholar.law.colorado.edu:coping-with-water-scarcity-in-river-basins-worldwide-1030 2023-05-15T16:17:09+02:00 VIDEO: Session 5: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons Fleck, John Jacobs, Kathy Leonard, Kelsey Tharme, Rebecca McLeod, Tony 2016-06-10T07:00:00Z https://scholar.law.colorado.edu/coping-with-water-scarcity-in-river-basins-worldwide/31 https://youtu.be/NeTDB4LjESk unknown Colorado Law Scholarly Commons https://scholar.law.colorado.edu/coping-with-water-scarcity-in-river-basins-worldwide/31 https://youtu.be/NeTDB4LjESk Coping with Water Scarcity in River Basins Worldwide: Lessons Learned from Shared Experiences (Martz Summer Conference, June 9-10) Rio Grande Colorado River Basin water governance human network boundaries scarcity issues shared understanding social capital litigation between Texas and New Mexico integration of groundwater and surface water management aquifers surface water flows functioning institutions monitoring evaluation of success Arizona potential for policy interventions cross-scale tension local scale state scale federal scale Indigenous peoples as nations equitable role in decision making process justice concerns seat at the table water resource management arenas First Nation consultation policy federal agency requirement Canada Australia university level diplomatic policy principles of UNDRIP United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples informed consent water scarcity social aspects water back into rivers environmental flow conversation science level implementation level collaboration with Indigenous peoples river basin projects values and needs social-science integration effective use of knowledge and experience problem definition solutions from conversations social framework voice at the table Murray-Darling Basin Cap gold standard basin plan embracing of markets Murray-Darling Basin case evolution of interesting tools and approaches river basin management flow needs prioritization of flows environmental sustainability water delivery benchmarking performance essential elements of an ideal process water rights system expand and contract water supply availability government funding solutions Central Arizona Project CAP Colorado River management system protection of existing right holders habitat restoration species water for domestic uses basin transferability grants entitlements reserved rights doctrine of discovery Aboriginal water rights government role context toolbox cultural flows federal system states design of institutional arrangements planning process geographical scale of process ideal management system ethical framework trust relationships foundation of good governance pluralistic society empowerment of people insider conversations universal problem nature of the word shortage sophisticated adaptive capacity municipal water use declining rising agricultural productivity scarcity crises have less water use less water new sets of values and needs information thriving agricultural economies sharing arrangements cultural industry water supply water access water users informal networks issue resolution proper alignment with issues prior appropriation systems shifts toward flexibility traditional knowledge applied science over thousands of years tribal water quality codes Clean Water Act tribal sovereign rights spiritual context EPA’s framework position of fear Indigenous people as strongest allies in basin management infrastructure projects spiritual values proactive problem solving bringing people together receptivity openness global community third stakeholder New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council 64 land councils freehold title largest Indigenous water holder trading leasing water assets temporary water market legislation National Native Title Act New South Wales 1993 Aboriginal Land Rights Act James Anaya Basin Plan submissions NBAN message in the water greedy irrigators 40 000 years of science collaborative partnerships and networks unified vision framing the problem compromises power struggle avoidance system of checks and balances feedback loop procedural due process same mistakes respect pathway to success network expansion toward inclusion relationship between First Nations and federal government in Canada US changing administrations best management practices standard of good performance water management irrigation districts basin knowledge cost of past mistakes protective view of natural environment environmental water management conversations between Australia and South Africa replicable knowledge calculation of environmental water needs methodological tools data poor information poor water insecurity private sector market approach robust institutional and management system broad societal interests Colorado River governance role of Indigenous communities adequate voice Native American constitutions United States Constitution Third Sovereign sovereign First Nations 80 000 Navajos water hauling share the burden water ethics inherent violent impacts Seneca Nation Kinzua Dam Pennsylvania neotropics research studies language decolonization African Studies Aquaculture and Fisheries Asian Studies Climate Comparative and Foreign Law Environmental Health and Protection Environmental Policy Hydrology Indigenous Indian and Aboriginal Law Indigenous Studies International Law Latin American Studies Law and Society Natural Resources and Conservation Natural Resources Management and Policy Social Policy Sustainability Transnational Law Water Law Water Resource Management text 2016 ftunicolboulawl 2022-02-13T08:20:38Z SESSION FIVE: Wrap-Up: Themes, Cross-Cutting Issues, and Transferable Lessons 1:20 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Panelists (for a facilitated audience Q&A session) Moderator: Doug Kenney, Getches-Wilkinson Center Panelists: John Fleck, University of New Mexico Kathy Jacobs, University of Arizona Kelsey Leonard, McMaster University Rebecca Tharme, Riverfutures Ltd. Tony McLeod, MDBA, Murray-Darling Basin Authority Text First Nations University of Colorado Boulder, Law School: Scholarly Commons Canada Indian Kelsey ENVELOPE(-96.542,-96.542,56.040,56.040) Kenney ENVELOPE(-175.467,-175.467,-84.733,-84.733) McLeod ENVELOPE(-127.689,-127.689,55.254,55.254) Wilkinson ENVELOPE(-66.200,-66.200,-66.817,-66.817)