Earth First! 30, no. 2
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. 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! 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! 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. 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. 3 features the subjects of old-growth swamps in Florida, the Mexican Leather Expo, child education in a radical community, and the parallels between animal and earth defense.
Earth First! 29, no. 2 features news from the prisoner hunger strike in Greece, and water privatization in Maine, as well as reflections on a primitive lifestyle, on building an anti-capitalist movement for climate justice in Denmark and the US, and on “vengeful animals.”
Earth First! 29, no. 1 reports on the movement’s victory against the Pacific Lumber Company, the climate and anti-racist camp in Germany, the Northeast Climate Confluence, the international movement of camps and convergences for climate action, and repression against animal activists in Austria.
Earth First! 28, no. 6 features news from the Round River Rendezvous in Ohio, from Climate Camp Australia, the West Coast Climate Convergence, the G8 protests, and the actions against the superhighway I-69.
Earth First! 28, no. 5 looks at topics such as the legacies of race and colonialism, strategies for disrupting the Democratic and Republican National Conventions, and the shortcomings of “green” capitalism.
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.