These EXIT Times, No. 1
These EXIT Times is the authoritative voice of the Voluntary Human Extinction Movement (VHEMT, pronounced “vehement”). The VHEMT slogan is “May we live long and die out.”
These EXIT Times is the authoritative voice of the Voluntary Human Extinction Movement (VHEMT, pronounced “vehement”). The VHEMT slogan is “May we live long and die out.”
The urbanization of Bangalore transformed the once-strong relationship between communities and the lakes that they once created and maintained.
The transformation of the Sampangi Lake into the present-day Sri Kanteerava Stadium.
This article investigates how plants are supported by systems of ethno-political, military, and neoliberal power in urban Pakistan.
Outdoor recreational access in the form of Swedish right to public access may provide people with the opportunity to connect to nature.
Xenia Cherkaev and Elena Tipikina examine the institutions of the Stalinist state that planned the distribution, raising, and breeding of family dogs for military service. The investigate how the program affected human-dog relations.
This article explores the prospects and politics of indigenous participation in multi-sector conservation, using the case of the Boreal Leadership Council (BLC) in Canada. It concludes that multi-sector conservation creates both new possibilities for indigenous empowerment and new forms of marginalization through the reproduction of a (post)colonial geography of exclusion.
Erin Ryan shares her work on negotiated federalism, exploring how good multiscalar governance is often the product of intergovernmental bargaining among decision makers at various levels of government.
This article tells the epic tale of the fall and rise of Mono Lake— the strange and beautiful Dead Sea of California—which fostered some of the most important environmental law developments of the last century.
Billie Lythberg and Wayne Ngata explore what it means to be whale people in the modern whaling period.