Cadillac Desert: The American West And Its Disa... -

Marc Reisner's (1986) is a seminal work of environmental history and advocacy journalism that remains more pertinent than ever. It chronicles the aggressive, often hubristic transformation of the arid American West into a "garden" through massive engineering and political maneuvering. Core Themes and Arguments

Water development was driven less by necessity and more by political capital, bureaucratic rivalry (specifically between the Bureau of Reclamation and the Army Corps of Engineers ), and class interests. Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disa...

The quest for water led to the systematic displacement of rural and indigenous communities, such as the diversion of water from the Owens Valley to Los Angeles and the flooding of tribal lands for the Garrison Dam . 'Cadillac Desert' Reconsidered - The American Prospect Marc Reisner's (1986) is a seminal work of

Reisner argues that the West's hydroclimate is inherently incapable of supporting the vast cities and industrial agriculture established there. The quest for water led to the systematic

The book's central thesis is that the settlement of the West was largely a mistake, creating a "beachhead" civilization that is ecologically unsustainable.

Many projects, while costing taxpayers billions, disproportionately benefited a small number of large-scale farmers who relied on artificially cheap water.