Earth First! 6, no. 6
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! 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! George Wuerthner and Reed Noss present designs for an ecosystem preserve in Montana and a vast forest wilderness in Ohio. Tom Stoddard contributes an essay on sacred cows in Ethiopia, Andrew Bard Schmookler questions whether anarchy should be a goal within the environmental movement, and Kevin Proescholdt discusses acid rain.
In this issue of Earth First! Dave Foreman attempts to clarify and outline the discussions regarding monkeywrenching. Plant ecologist Gary Paul calls attention to the endangered plants of the arid lands, Lynn Jacobs discusses “gentle” wilderness, and David Seals reports from Big Mountain, Arizona.
In this issue the efforts to protect the Northwest in Alaska and British Columbia are featured, Tom Stoddard, George Wuerthner, and Stephanie Mills contribute provocative essays, and Christoph Manes problematizes the question of technology.
In this issue of Earth First!, Texas EF!’ers give an update on their fight for protecting pine beetles, pecans, and rivers; Holly Jensen discusses the fight for Icelandic whales; George Wuerthner is exploring the importance of the bioregional approach to designate wilderness areas; and Eric Holle debates the relocation of the Navajo-Hopi.
The journal Earth First! celebrates its fifth anniversary and Dave Foreman reflects on the past five years in this issue’s editorial.
This issue of Earth First! discusses the rehabilitation of wilderness and visionary proposals for big wilderness.
In this issue of Earth First! Ron Huber gives an update on the situation on the tree sitters attacked by a giant crane in Millennium Grove. Dave Foreman discusses the conservationists’ lack of vision, Arne Naess describes various lifestyle characteristics of the deep ecology movement in Scandinavia, and much more.
In this issue of Earth First! Mike Roselle and Randy Hayes discuss their work on rainforests, Ron Huber describes the events occurring near Pyramid Creek in Oregon, and America’s leading environmental journalist, Michael Frome, is featured.
In this issue of Earth First! an essay by Bob Spertus on the “Dark Side of Wilderness” is featured; Michael Hamilton discusses professionalism, compromise, and co-option in the environmental movement; and news items from Alaska to Africa, from Florida to British Columbia, about forests, deserts, and beaches are presented.