Earth First! 9, no. 7
In this issue of Earth First! editor John Davis attempts to mediate between various local EF! groups who have differing ideas on activism within the Earth First! movement.
In this issue of Earth First! editor John Davis attempts to mediate between various local EF! groups who have differing ideas on activism within the Earth First! movement.
The documentary contrasts the results of using genetically-modified crops purchased from multinational agrochemical corporations with the maintenance of community seedbanks and biodiversity.
Owain Jones raises questions about the relationships between self, time, memory, materiality, and place, using a non-representational creative approach based on image and textual collage.
Earth First! Journal 32, no. 1 features issues concerning monkeywrenching, “Colonialism, Biofuels and Land Rights in Central America,” ecological warfare, and the merging of deep green resistance and the occupy movement.
Earth First! Journal 21, no. 6 features essays about the desecration of Mount Graham, wolf genocide in Sweden, Colombian resistance against globalization, and biotechnology and human identity.
Wild Earth 5, no. 2 discusses the environmental consequences of having a baby in the United States; bumblebee ecology; and the Nevada Biodiversity Research and Conservation Initiative.
This issue of Earth First! focuses on wilderness recovery in New England. Also, Roger Sansterre calls attention to stopping ski area development in Quebec, Canada, Dan Dagget puts light on the endangered American jaguars, and Alan R. Drengson contributes an essay about paganism, nature, and deep ecology.
This issue of Earth First! is filled with essays about various themes such as sustainable agriculture, nuclear disarmament, and deep ecology.
In this issue of Earth First! Mike Roselle tells the story of 15 protesters who were arrested for taking action against logging in the Middle Santiam, Oregon.
Wild Earth 14, no. 1/2 features essays on protecting the national forest wilderness after the Wilderness Act, natural history going extinct, carnivore conservation in the Rocky Mountains, and questions of fertility.