Golden Gate University Environmental Law Journal
Abstract
Forty-one of the past hundred years in California have been part of multi-year drought sequences. The 2012–2015 drought was one of the worst of the last hundred years, and there are increasing concerns that climate change will increase the frequency of drought in California. This article deals with ten regulatory and cultural principles developed in the last decade that are becoming embedded in drought planning in California.
Recommended Citation
Chris Shutes,
Ten Regulatory and Cultural Principles That Improve California's Drought Planning, 9 Golden Gate U. Envtl. L.J. 171
(2016).
https://digitalcommons.law.ggu.edu/gguelj/vol9/iss2/5