Earth First! 28, no. 1
Earth First! 28, no. 1 features reports on governmental and jurisdictional sanctions against activists, forest defense in Indiana state forests, and climate action in the UK, the northwest and the southeast US.
Earth First! 28, no. 1 features reports on governmental and jurisdictional sanctions against activists, forest defense in Indiana state forests, and climate action in the UK, the northwest and the southeast US.
Earth First! 28, no. 4 reports on the Longest Walk, a five-month journey from San Francisco to Washington, DC, where indigenous people draw public attention to environmental and cultural perils, and on the 2008 winter rendezvous of the People of Color Caucus, where anti-racist environmental activism was discussed.
Earth First! 29, no. 4 features articles on the new Wilderness Act, the myth of clean coal, coal in West Virginia, the endangered species wolf and lynx in the United States, and fur farm raids and investigations in Utah.
Earth First! 29, no. 5 reports on the Earth First!’s Canopy Communique #1, British Columbia’s Gateway Project, the protest against the O’Odham Lands dump, and the Franklin Rosemont obituary.
Earth First! 29, no. 6 features essays on military pollution, practical ideas for an anti-racist radical ecological movement, the fight for Tasmania’s forests, and Tarnac 9, a French group fighting against “the falsities of sustainability and green capitalism”.
Earth First! 30, no. 2 reports on the Copenhagen climate conference in December, the endangered American grey wolf, how industrial windpower threatens Maine’s mountains, and nuclear renaissance and the necessary resistance.
Earth First! 30, no. 3 reports on Dakota people occupying land, disaster capitalism in Haiti, how insurrectionist Mexico celebrates Black Christmas, forest occupation in Catalonia, and the Navaho-Hopi relocation.
The 30th anniversary edition of Earth First! presents essays on “Deep Green Resistance,” “The Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act and the Assault on Academic Freedom,” and “Connecting Biological and Linguistic Diversity Crises.”
The second volume of the 30th anniversary edition of Earth First! features the topics of industrial agriculture, history and resistance to MTE in Appalachia, direct action for Orangutans in Borneo, and native perspectives on ecology.
Earth First! Journal 31, no. 4 features “An EF!ers Guide to Citizen Monitoring of Water Pollution Discharge Permits,” as well as essays on GPS tracking, border policy, and “Canopy Occupation Against Coal.”