Earth First! Journal 32, no. 2
Earth First! Journal 32, no. 2 features essays on “Colonial Louisiana in the 20th Century,” digital eco-defense, greenwashing, and solidarity in a biocentric movement.
Earth First! Journal 32, no. 2 features essays on “Colonial Louisiana in the 20th Century,” digital eco-defense, greenwashing, and solidarity in a biocentric movement.
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.
Emily O’Gorman examines the ways in which ducks as well as people negotiated the changing water landscapes of the Murrumbidgee River caused by the creation of rice paddies.
In Earth First! Journal 23, no. 2 Justin Ruben writes about the protests against the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) in Ecuador, Klee Benally explains the native resistance against developments in the Arizona Snowbowl, and Loki expresses solidarity with the US West Coast dockworkers.
In Earth First! Journal 22, no. 3 George Sexton recommends not to buy the Northwest Forest pass, Cat Hemlock reflects on the UK’s new Terrorism Bill, and john johnson reports on neoliberalism in the American South.
Jungleburgers is a documentary about the rainforest in Costa Rica being destroyed for the sake of low-cost beef for the US hamburger market.
Situating Australia’s history within global environmental humanities conversations, this book argues that we need to understand wetlands as socioecological landscapes that transcend the nature-culture divide and to embrace non-Western ways of knowing and being.
In issue two of Earth First! the editors confirm their seriousness and invite readers to radicalize the conservation movement.
Issue three of Earth First! celebrates the movement’s diversity.
In ¡Vivan las Antipodas!, award-winning documentary filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky visits four rare inhabited regions of the world that are antipodal to other landmasses and creates unexpected images that turn our view of the world upside-down.