“Dave Foreman: Wise Guy”
An essay by Bron Taylor on Dave Foreman first published in the edited volume Wildeor: The Wild Life and Living Legacy of Dave Foreman (Essex Editions, 2023).
An essay by Bron Taylor on Dave Foreman first published in the edited volume Wildeor: The Wild Life and Living Legacy of Dave Foreman (Essex Editions, 2023).
In this issue of Earth First! news from the campaigns of various EF!ers throughout the US are featured. Natural diversity and the future of monkeywrenching are also discussed.
In this issue of Earth First! focus is put on women’s roles within the EF! movement and also within the journal. In addition, Mark Alain Watson gives an update on the arrest of activists in Malaysia, Christi Stevens reports on the effort against a golf tournament on Baron Creek, and James Barnes discusses the consequences of environmental action.
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.
In this issue of Earth First! Journal Karen Pickett calls for attention to the real purpose of the EF! journal and movement. In addition, Gene Lawhorn presents a native peoples’ perspective on environmentalism, and Don Smith and Mike Roselle contribute “Deep Ecology, Animal Rights, and Native People: A Perspective.”
In Earth First! 23, no. 4 Patrick Reinsborough reports on the massive uprising in San Francisco against the US invasion of Iraq, James John Bell draws the connections between literature and eco-resistance, Sprig reflects on water and civilization, and Stiki presents the “ecoherbalist’s manifesto.”
The journal Earth First! celebrates its fifth anniversary and Dave Foreman reflects on the past five years in this issue’s editorial.
In this issue of Earth First! three essays connecting environmental concerns with political theory are featured. George Wuerthner discusses range abuse and its ecological effects, Mike Roselle gives an update on Greenpeace’s campaign against nuclear testing in Nevada, and Christoph Manes defends anarchy as a means to a healthy planet.
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.”
In this issue of Earth First!, Abe Ringel discusses environmental awarness, Karen Picket gives an update from the Earth First!ers serving time in Arizona, and Charles Sullivan offers a reflection on humanism, emotions, and environmental activism.