Earth First! 6, no. 8
This issue of Earth First! is filled with essays about various themes such as sustainable agriculture, nuclear disarmament, and deep ecology.
This issue of Earth First! is filled with essays about various themes such as sustainable agriculture, nuclear disarmament, and deep ecology.
In this issue of Earth First! Mike Roselle tells the story of 15 protesters who were arrested for taking action against logging in the Middle Santiam, Oregon.
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.
Earth First! Journal 22, no. 2 features essays on the Gorleben nuke protest, insects as sustainable food, an analysis of the events of 9.11, and Afghanistan wildlife.
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.
In this issue of Earth First!, the EF! women are taking a greater role in the journal than ever before. Barbara Dugelby and Christi Stevens give an update on the occupation of caves in Texas in order to protect endangered bugs, and Reed F. Noss calls for attention to forestry in the Pacific Northwest.
In this issue of Earth First!, Tom Skeele gives an update on the wolf campaign in British Columbia, Salmo Salar and Jonathan von Ranson shed light on salmon revival in the Connecticut river, Christoph Manes provides with an essay on critical mythology of civilization, and Roland Knapp argues how ecology can fulfill the functions of myths.
In this issue of Earth First!, David Cross brings positive news from the Sinkyone Wilderness, Mike Bader calls for attention to the oil well plans in the “America’s Serengeti,” George Wuerthner reports from the conference “Beyond Boundaries: Saving Whole Ecosystems,” and much more.