Skip to main content
Home
World Rainforest Movement
Supporting struggles for social justice in the forests
EnglishEspañolFrançaisPortuguês
  • Other
    • German
    • Indonesian
    • Lingála
    • Luganda
    • Malagasy
    • Swahili
    • Thai
Subscribe
  • Issues
    • Resistance
      • Struggles for the Forests
      • Struggles Against Tree Monocultures
      • Seeds of Hope
      • Women in Resistance
      • Indigenous Peoples' Struggles
    • Deforestation: Direct Causes
      • Agribusiness
      • Industrial Logging
      • Mega Dams and Other Infrastructure
      • Large-Scale Mining
      • Large-Scale Tree Plantations
      • Fossil Fuels
    • Deforestation: Underlying Causes
      • FAO Forest Definition
      • Consumption
      • The Green Economy
      • Protected Areas
      • Legal Land Theft
    • False Solutions
      • Carbon offsetting and REDD
      • Biodiversity Offsetting
      • Pricing Nature
      • Certification Schemes
      • Bioeconomy
    • Tree Plantations
      • Pulp and Paper
      • Timber
      • Palm Oil
      • Women and Tree Monocultures
      • Rubber
      • Carbon Storage
      • Biomass
      • GE-Trees
      • FSC and RSPO
    • Global Policies and Actors
      • International Forest Policies
      • The World Bank and Other Financial Institutions
      • Conservationist NGOs
      • The Corporate Sector
  • Bulletin
    • Current Issue
    • Previous Bulletins
    • Subscribe
  • Materials
    • Publications
    • Multimedia
    • Declarations
  • About WRM
  • Subjects menu
    • Issues
      • Resistance
        • Struggles for the Forests
        • Struggles Against Tree Monocultures
        • Seeds of Hope
        • Women in Resistance
        • Indigenous Peoples' Struggles
      • Deforestation: Direct Causes
        • Agribusiness
        • Industrial Logging
        • Mega Dams and Other Infrastructure
        • Large-Scale Mining
        • Large-Scale Tree Plantations
        • Fossil Fuels
      • Deforestation: Underlying Causes
        • FAO Forest Definition
        • Consumption
        • The Green Economy
        • Protected Areas
        • Legal Land Theft
      • False Solutions
        • Carbon offsetting and REDD
        • Biodiversity Offsetting
        • Pricing Nature
        • Certification Schemes
        • Bioeconomy
      • Tree Plantations
        • Pulp and Paper
        • Timber
        • Palm Oil
        • Women and Tree Monocultures
        • Rubber
        • Carbon Storage
        • Biomass
        • GE-Trees
        • FSC and RSPO
      • Global Policies and Actors
        • International Forest Policies
        • The World Bank and Other Financial Institutions
        • Conservationist NGOs
        • The Corporate Sector
    • Bulletin
      • Current Issue
      • Previous Bulletins
      • Subscribe
    • Materials
      • Publications
      • Multimedia
      • Declarations
    • About WRM
Suscribirse al Boletín
S'abonner au Bulletin
Se inscrever ao Boletim
Subscribe to the Bulletin
Supporting struggles for social justice in the forests
  1. Home

Bulletin articles

Financialized capital and palm oil corporations

Brazil– mining company VALE promoting oil palm in Pará: Impacts of the "green economy"

Why the forest concession model does not solve the structural problems of logging and wood extraction?

Logging concessions; basis of an industry, or political control?

Cambya caña de azúcar

Cambodia: Steps to Victory

 

Deforestation funds more plantations: The new Compensatory Afforestation Fund Bill in India

Giving away India’s forests

Palm oil concessions for logging: the case of Herakles Farms in Cameroon

 

The Mundukuru peoples in Brazil: forestry concessions imposed on indigenous lands

 

What do the criticism of the Pope's encyclical by carbon market and REDD proponents reveal?

Relaunching destruction in Papua: monoculture agriculture project threatens indigenous lands and livelihoods

.

Mining activities and environmental protection in Madagascar

    In Madagascar, a big island of 587 000 km2 in the Indian Ocean famous for its exceptional biodiversity and for its subsoil wealth in minerals, more than 6 million hectares nowadays are classified as protected areas for nature conservation. Yet, mining areas are also numerous and expanding. These two kinds of spaces are sometimes close or superimposed.

Why are we in jail? A women’s fight against injustice and domination in India

.

Pagination

  • « First First page
  • ‹‹ Previous page
  • …
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • 40
  • 41
  • 42
  • 43
  • 44
  • 45
  • …
  • ›› Next page
  • Last » Last page

Contact

World Rainforest Movement
Av Bolivia 1962 BIS
CP 11500 – Montevideo, Uruguay
Tel / Fax: +598 2605 6943
Email: wrm@wrm.org.uy

Donate to WRM

Subscribe

Receive the WRM bulletin, action alerts and other publications

Privacy policy

Follow us

Join WRM on social media.