Earth First! 27, no. 6
Keywords:
activism, anti-nuclear movement, journalism, conservation, deforestation, environmentalism, nonviolent resistance, political ecology, protests, wildernessAbstract
Donny, Josh, Sasha, Sophia, and Star, eds., Earth First! 27, no. 6 (1 September 2007). Republished by the Environment & Society Portal, Multimedia Library. http://www.environmentandsociety.org/node/7246.
FEATURES- Defending the Wild in the Land of Fire and Ice
Saving Iceland takes Action - What Goes Around Comes Around
Day of Action Against 1-69 - Brazil’s Landless Workers’ Movement
- Anti-Nuclear Activist Murdered in Siberia
- Discussions and Diving With Wingnuts
2007 EF! Rendezvous Review - Trans’ and Wimmin’s Action Camp 2007 Review
- Answering the Call of the Wild Earth
2007 Wild Earth Gathering Review - Rising Tide Tour Reportback
- Rising Tide Visits Pine Ridge
- The Weak Points of Caterpillar
A Guide to Heavy Machinery - The Journal’s Anti-Oppression Policy
- EF! Defeats NATO in the Netherlands
- Forest Defense in Oaxaca
- The Environmental Impacts of the G8 Protests
- Asheville Cyclists Protest the G8
- Gazing After the G8A
View From the Black Bloc - Assembly of First Nations Day of Action
Reclaiming Land Rights in Canada - EF! Weekly World News
Get the Real Scoop - Global Waming will Release the Blob
- Peak Denial
Using Forests for Biofuel - The Return of Nature
Review of A World Without Us - A Beacon in the Darkness: The Animal Liberation Movement
Review of From Dusk ‘til Dawn - Burning in the Night
Review of Earth Liberation Front: 1997-2002 - Awakening From the Nightmare of Zoos
Review of Thought to Exist in the Wild - Phoenix From the Flames
The First Epestle From Sade and Exile - Symbolic Struggle or Meaningful Change?
- An Inside Look at Women’s Prisons
- Miffed by Miffy
What do you get when you fuse the most brutal landowners of the Global South with some of the most powerful corporations of the North […]? You get transnational corporations that reap billions of dollars in profits, […] the devastation of Brazil’s precious ecosystems, and a people who inherit polluted aquifers, exhausted soils and genetically contaminated agricultural systems.
— Juan Reardon
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