Defending Rivers: Vilcabamba in the South of Ecuador
Berros describes some of the first cases in which Rights of Nature was directly referenced in the courts of Ecuador.
Berros describes some of the first cases in which Rights of Nature was directly referenced in the courts of Ecuador.
Kalantzakos describes how flawed policy decisions damaged Greece’s Archeloos river, and how Rights of Nature could have mitigated the damage.
This article looks afresh at the environmental history of Russia by starting from the perspective of some bears in Siberia.
This article thinks differently about the belonging of rabbits in Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park, Australia.
This issue of Mendocino Environmental Center Newsletter includes a report on Headwaters Forest and articles on “Minorities, the Poor & Ending Corporate Rule” and “The Struggle For Democratic Control of Corporations: Taking The Offensive.”
This article investigates the transition of water supply in Bangalore, where wells were gradually replaced by piped water.
This issue of Mendocino Environmental Center Newsletter covers the Wise Use Movement, Coho salmon, companies of the Global Forest Management Group and “pests” of Russian boreal forests. Gary Ball describes the domination of multinational corporations as the outcome of what was effectively “World War III,” with dire consequences for the planet.
In 1966, a stray beluga whale swimming up and down the polluted Lower Rhine caught the media’s attention in West Germany.
This article studies the “Neste war,” 1970–1972, the first major victory of the environmental movement in Finland.
The urbanization of Bangalore transformed the once-strong relationship between communities and the lakes that they once created and maintained.