2014
DOI: 10.5209/rev_obmd.2014.v17.47201
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Planificación y gestión del agua en España, en la actualidad

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…As we have already mentioned, Spain has been revolutionary and pioneering insofar as the regulation of water flows is concerned, especially if we consider that the first manifestations thereof appeared in the first Spanish Law of Waters in 1866, effectively the first attempt to regulate Spanish territorial waters. This Law included among its basic principles the public domain of all natural streams, watercourses and riverbanks [8], given that previously, although 19th century liberalism had tried to create a legal framework defining water as a public asset, it was a rather imprecise framework that maintained the privatising nature of the previous governments of the Enlightenment [9]. Hence, the Law of 1866, together with that of 1879, marked a milestone in the legislative history of water in Spain, as they unified and homogenised the somewhat disperse previous regulation and were responsible for declaring the public nature of all surface water, although for the public dominion of all water to be recognised (now including groundwater which had been excluded in the past) it was necessary to wait for the great Water Law of 1985 [10].…”
Section: The Legal and Regulatory Regulation Of Water Resources In Spmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As we have already mentioned, Spain has been revolutionary and pioneering insofar as the regulation of water flows is concerned, especially if we consider that the first manifestations thereof appeared in the first Spanish Law of Waters in 1866, effectively the first attempt to regulate Spanish territorial waters. This Law included among its basic principles the public domain of all natural streams, watercourses and riverbanks [8], given that previously, although 19th century liberalism had tried to create a legal framework defining water as a public asset, it was a rather imprecise framework that maintained the privatising nature of the previous governments of the Enlightenment [9]. Hence, the Law of 1866, together with that of 1879, marked a milestone in the legislative history of water in Spain, as they unified and homogenised the somewhat disperse previous regulation and were responsible for declaring the public nature of all surface water, although for the public dominion of all water to be recognised (now including groundwater which had been excluded in the past) it was necessary to wait for the great Water Law of 1985 [10].…”
Section: The Legal and Regulatory Regulation Of Water Resources In Spmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…La presión demográfica presente en determinados territorios de Europa plantea un nuevo escenario. El reto de la planificación hídrica aborda la sostenibilidad en la explotación y la eficiencia en su uso cumpliendo con lo requerido por la DMA (Sotelo, 2014). Al igual que en la mayoría de las zonas costeras españolas, las Islas Baleares experimentaron transformaciones sociales, urbanísticas y económicas vinculadas al turismo .…”
Section: Introductionunclassified