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Welcome to the Future: essays on climate change

Green cover, black and white photograph of river.
A series of 3 essays by anarchist activist and writer Peter Gelderloos. His essays lay the context of where were at in a world crumbling under the weight of capitalism induced climate change, the false solutions capitalism offers, and what anarchist thinking and praxis can provide in the age of climate catastrophe.

The 3 essays:
Before the Big Change
More Wood for the Fire: Capitalist Solutions to Global Warming
An Anarchist Solution to Global Warming

Zine layout by Rise Like Lions

Prisoners' Dilemma #3: Examining Labor

"This issue of Prisoners' Dilemma focuses on the idea of labor, examining the destructive impacts of exploitive labor practices, as well as groups that are working to lessen the damage caused by hierarchical worker/boss relationships. This issue also examines the practices of some groups and establishments that have struggled to re0imagine what labor means, making themselves their own bosses, using their energy and resources in a way that benefits their communities rather than enriching the owning class."

Includes interviews with CASA Latina, University of Washington SLAP, Left Bank Books.

Social War on Stolen Native Land

The title is written in black sans-serif text on a white background that says "Social War On Stolen Native Land", accompanied by a colour photograph of two individuals dressed in all black burning a Canadian flag at an indigenous gathering. Below, in black
A half-page colour zine detailing the perspectives, struggles, triumphs, and stories of various groups of anarchists, indigenous people of Turtle Island (specifically the occupied lands classed as "Canada") and how their struggles are interconnected. These stories come from all over "Canada", with a particular focus on articles from the west coast, and "Quebec". The zine, though compiled and released in 2016, is comprised of various blog posts and editorials from as far back as 2003, compiling over a decade and a half of indigenous stories, anarchist stories, their mutual struggles, and constructively addressing fundamental differences in their mindsets towards societal structuring, reconciliation and land back movements.