Wild Earth 14, no. 1/2
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.
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.
This undated, pseudonymous document is a primer on direct action methods.
Live Wild or Die! no. 7 declares its attempt to be “unity” issue, crossing the boundaries that separate different movements. The issue covers fascism, work as wage-slavery, green anarchy, the millennium bug, and sexual liberation.
In this first issue of Live Wild or Die! the editors ask, “why be modest in the face of impending doom? Live wild or die!” Toby discusses how biocentrism can lead to destruction of nature; Feral Faun explains why there is more to the Earth First! movement and why the name should be left behind; Sneaky Driller sheds light on tree spiking; and Sheriff Jim Weeds explains the deeper meaning of ecoterrorism.
The documentary explores the lives of five young people who have decided to become small-scale farmers.
This film shows how the oil and gas industries, rich with political connections, obtained a position of almost untouchable power and how at-risk communities have united to fight back.
This issue of Earth First! Journal focuses the actions against road building. In addition, Anne R. Key discusses the diversity within the movement, and Kimberly Dawn interviews long time Earth First!er Peg Millett (active since the mid-1980s), who spent two and half years in prison for conspiring to cut down a power line in 1989.
In this issue of Earth First! Journal Mark Lucey talks about the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) in Mexico, Michael Dorsey discusses environmentalism and racism, Lacey Phillabaum sheds light on endangered owls and Goshawks, and Rhys Roth puts focus on depleting fossil fuels to extinction.
In this issue of Earth First! Journal Leslie Hemstreet and Jim Flynn discuss why many former EF! activists walked away from the name Earth First!, Karyn Strickler writes on environmental politics and the Endangered Species Act (ESA), and Kelpie Wilson discusses overpopulation in the twentieth century.
Anti-nuclear activism in Denmark was characterized by information campaigns and peaceful marches.