Water Law Reform in the Face of Climate Change: Learning from Drought in Australia and the Western United States

Barbara Cosens, University of Idaho College of Law

Abstract

Western societies have developed three approaches to governance of common pool resources such as water: (1) the division of the resource into private property; (2) government regulation; and (3) local self-organisation. This article asserts that all three are needed in varying combinations to rise to the challenges presented by the impact of climate change on water supply and demand. Drought presents a preview of potential future climate scenarios and Australia and the western United States are both responding to its harshness through innovation in water governance. These experiments present an opportunity to compare the approaches of Australia and the western United States to begin to understand the combination of governance approaches that lead to greater adaptive capacity.