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                Seven years ago in these
                pages, we launched an in-depth investigation of
                the mainstream environmental movement. The
                occasion was the widely publicized 20th
                anniversary of the original Earth Day, an event
                which in many ways helped institutionalize the
                widespread corporate co-optation of environmental
                themes. 
                The year 1990 was an
                auspicious one for environmental activists in the
                United States. The widespread popularity of
                environmental concerns was reflected in the rapid
                growth of environmental organizations, the
                appearance of new publications, and some of the
                first glossy catalogs of environmental products.
                Expressions of concern for the environment
                adorned politicians&#8217; stump speeches, both in
                the U.S. and overseas. Environmental scientists
                and activists widely agreed that the 1990s were a
                critical decade to stem the course of
                environmental degradation, and political and
                cultural trends offered many people a renewed
                hope that this was possible.
                Still, the coming Earth Day
                celebrations aroused a curious mixture of hope
                and cynicism on the part of long-time activists.
                The cynicism was fueled by much of the literature
                emanating from the official Earth Day
                organizations that had been established
                throughout the country. They had apparently
                decided that Earth Day was going to be a
                politically safe event, with almost no attention
                toward the institutions or the economic system
                responsible for ecocide, nothing about
                confronting corporate polluters, nothing about
                changing the structures of society. The
                overriding message was simply, "change your
                lifestyle": recycle, drive less, stop
                wasting energy, buy better appliances, etc.
                Celebrations in several major U.S. cities were
                supported by some of the most notorious corporate
                polluters&#8212;companies like Monsanto, Peabody
                Coal, and Georgia Power, to name a few. Everyone
                from the nuclear power industry to the Chemical
                Manufacturers&#8217; Association took out
                full-page advertisements in newspapers and
                magazines proclaiming that, for them, "Every
                day is Earth Day." The now-familiar
                greenwashing of Earth Day had clearly begun.
                Activists across the
                country began exploring the origins of Earth Day
                and also mainstream environmental groups that
                were making the most hay of this anniversary.
                What they found was a mixed message: while Earth
                Day had for many come to symbolize the emergence
                of environmentalism as a social movement in its
                own right, it was dominated from the very
                beginning by those who hoped to dilute the
                movement&#8217;s political focus. In 1970, Ramparts
                magazine, one of the New Left&#8217;s leading
                journals of opinion, called Earth Day, "the
                first step in a con game that will do little more
                than abuse the environment even further."
                Journalist I.F. Stone, in his investigative
                weekly, took a significantly harsher view:
                "...just as the Caesers once used bread and
                circuses so ours were at last learning to use
                rock-and-roll idealism and non-inflammatory
                social issues to turn the youth off from more
                urgent concerns which might really threaten the
                power structure."
                Many activists responded by
                organizing more politicized local Earth Days of
                their own. These events focused on local
                environmental struggles, inner city issues, the
                nature of corporate power and other concerns that
                had been largely excluded from the official Earth
                Day events. The most ambitious was a
                demonstration in New York City called by members
                of the Youth Greens and Left Greens, with the aid
                of environmental justice activists, Earth
                First!ers, ecofeminists, urban squatters, and
                many others. Early Monday morning, April 23,
                1990, the day after millions had participated in
                feel-good Earth Day commemorations, several
                hundred people converged on the nerve center of
                U.S. capitalism, the New York Stock Exchange,
                with the goal of obstructing the opening of
                trading on that day. New York Daily News
                columnist Juan Gonzalez told his 1.2 million
                readers, "Certainly, those who sought to
                co-opt Earth Day into a media and marketing
                extravaganza, to make the public feel good while
                obscuring the corporate root of the Earth&#8217;s
                pollution almost succeeded. It took angry
                Americans from places like Maine and Vermont to
                come to Wall Street on a workday and point the
                blame where it belongs."
                Challenging the
                Mainstream
                The events around Earth Day
                1990 helped provoke an unprecedented scrutiny of
                the habits and institutions of environmental
                politics in the United States. Growing numbers of
                activists began to see the best-known national
                environmental organizations, which had long
                dominated media coverage, fundraising and public
                visibility&#8212;the voices of "official
                environmentalism"&#8212;as hopelessly out of
                step with the thousands of volunteers who largely
                define the leading edge of locally based
                ecological activism.
                Throughout the 1970s and
                1980s, representatives of environmental groups,
                from the National Wildlife Federation to the
                Sierra Club, had become an increasingly visible
                and entrenched part of the Washington political
                scene. As the appearance of success within the
                system grew, organizations restructured and
                altered their personnel so as to enhance their
                ability to play the insider game. The
                environmental movement became a stepping stone in
                the careers of a new generation of Washington
                lawyers and lobbyists, and official
                environmentalism came to accept the role long
                established for other public regulatory
                advocates: that of helping to sustain the smooth
                functioning of the existing political system.
                Environmentalism was redefined, in the words of
                author and historian Robert Gottlieb, as "a
                kind of interest group politics tied to the
                maintenance of the environmental policy
                system." 
                The mainstream groups grew
                especially rapidly during the late 1980s. The
                Sierra Club grew from 80,000 to 630,000 members,
                and the conservative National Wildlife Federation
                reported membership gains of up to 8,000 a month,
                totaling nearly one million. The World Wildlife
                Fund, best known for its efforts to establish
                national parks on the U.S. model in Third World
                countries, grew almost tenfold, while the Natural
                Resources Defense Council (NRDC) had doubled its
                membership since 1985. The total budget of the
                ten largest environmental groups grew from less
                than $10 million in 1965, to $218 million in 1985
                and $514 million in 1990. Journalist Mark Dowie
                discovered that of the approximately $3 billion
                contributed to environmental advocates each year,
                the 25 largest organizations get 70 percent,
                while the remaining share is divided among some
                10,000 smaller, more local groups. Many groups
                have become extremely dependent on direct mail,
                using each new environmental disaster to gain
                members for their organization, whether the
                organization was meaningfully addressing the
                issue or not.
                In light of these
                developments, activists began to investigate
                environmental movement using the tools of
                corporate research. An examination of the Annual
                Reports of the major environmental organizations
                revealed an extent of overt corporate influence
                upon the leading national environmental groups
                that surprised all but the most jaded activists.
                Almost all of the leading groups were receiving
                substantial contributions from the most polluting
                corporations. Many had restructured their
                operations so as to become more attractive to
                such donors, and the National Wildlife
                Federation, in particular, saw
                "dialogue" with "key industrial
                leaders" as a central part of its mission.
                Few were surprised when NWF later became the
                first U.S. environmental group to support the
                North American Free Trade Agreement.
                Others began examining the
                boards of directors of the leading environmental
                groups. The Multinational Monitor found
                that 23 directors and council members from
                Audubon, NRDC, the Wilderness Society, the World
                Resources Institute, and World Wildlife Fund were
                associated with 19 corporations cited in a recent
                survey of the 500 worst industrial polluters.
                These companies included such recognized
                environmental offenders as Union Carbide, Exxon,
                Monsanto, Weyerhaeuser, DuPont, and Waste
                Management, Inc. Furthermore, some 67 individuals
                associated with just 7 environmental groups
                served as CEOs, chairpersons, presidents,
                consultants or directors for 92 major
                corporations.
                Feminist environmentalist
                Joni Seager surveyed 30 leading environmental
                groups and found that only three (the National
                Audubon Society, Earth Island Institute, and
                WorldWatch Institute) had even 30 percent female
                members on their boards. Women, in most
                mainstream groups, remain relegated to
                traditionally female administrative roles, and
                none of 30 groups she surveyed had more than 5
                staff members from any racial minority. Seager
                described the widening schism in the
                environmental movement as "increasingly
                between a mostly male-led professional elite and
                a mostly female-led grassroots movement." A
                widely quoted 1990 letter, initiated by Richard
                Moore of New Mexico&#8217;s Southwest Organizing
                Project and signed by 100 leading community
                activists, criticized the dearth of people of
                color on the boards and staff of the major
                environmental groups, as well as these
                groups&#8217; growing reliance on corporate
                funding.
                The Saga
                Continues
                Today, analyses of the
                political and financial ties that have corrupted
                mainstream environmentalism have become almost
                commonplace. Mainstream journalists, business
                schools, and even anti-environmental "wise
                use" organizations have published their own
                studies of environmental groups finances, and
                have used the data to support their own often
                questionable political agendas. As the largest
                environmental groups came to resemble the
                corporations they opposed, this kind of research
                found uses well across the political spectrum.
                While grassroots activists view corporate
                contributions as a symbol of co-optation, and of
                the dangers inherent in a strategy of working
                entirely within the existing political system,
                those seeking to discredit environmental
                protection see these contributions as evidence
                for simple corruption, greed, and a cynical
                response to changing public opinion.
                Anti-environmental advocates have articulated a
                rather distorted theory of the decline of
                mainstream environmentalism, asserting despite
                all evidence to the contrary that the mainstream
                groups are bound to an "extremist"
                agenda which is at odds with the views of a
                majority of the public.
                For example, the
                Washington-based Environmental Working Group
                reported in July of last year on the annual
                lobbying week of the virulently
                anti-environmental Alliance for America. Amidst
                presentations by oil industry lobbyists, property
                rights agitators, and House Speaker Newt
                Gingrich, was a talk by Jonathan Adler of the
                well-endowed anti-environmental think tank, the
                Competitive Enterprise Institute. Adler described
                his own version of a split between "Big
                Green" and the "grassroots," in
                which dependence on direct mail, foundation
                support, and government grants are signs of
                dwindling "grassroots" support for an
                environmental agenda.
                In 1994, the Center for the
                Study of American Business at Washington
                University in St. Louis examined the established
                environmental groups&#8217; stock portfolios,
                ostensibly developed as a hedge against
                fluctuating memberships, and found that the
                Wilderness Society, for example, held stock in
                Dow Chemical, Kerr McGee, and General Motors, and
                the NRDC in Dow, Westinghouse, and General
                Electric. For organizations committed to
                protecting the environment and combating
                pollution to become financially dependent on the
                stock values of major polluters may represent the
                ultimate corruption of ecological values. The
                same study confirmed that membership dues
                represented an ever declining share of the income
                of groups like the Wilderness Society and
                National Audubon. But while the political
                influence wielded by these groups has fallen
                considerably since the early 1900s, income and
                membership levels have in most cases only leveled
                off, or continued to rise at a slower rate.
                Though corporate
                contributions rarely represent a very large
                overall share of the budgets of the best known
                environmental groups, they have conferred
                influence and political results well beyond their
                statistical measure. As Brian Lipsett, a leading
                researcher and editor for the environmental
                justice movement has written, "The
                corporations get a good return from their
                contributions to environmental causes... Beyond
                public relations dividends and tax deductions,
                and even increased business opportunities,
                corporate sponsorship fractures internal
                consensus within recipient groups, divides
                grantees from other environmental groups, blunts
                criticism from grantee groups, and creates
                openings for future influence by securing
                corporate representation on the groups&#8217;
                boards of directors." This helps explain why
                corporations give to environmental organizations
                at nearly two and a half times the rate of
                overall public charitable donations to the
                environmental movement. Environmental giving
                amounts to 6 percent of corporate philanthropy,
                while it only accounts for 2.5 percent of all
                charitable donations.
                My review of the 1993 and
                1994 Annual Reports of some of the best known
                environmental groups revealed a generally higher
                level of corporate influence than existed five
                years earlier. For example, the National Audubon
                Society, with similar budget totals and share of
                member contributions as in 1988, had expanded its
                list of corporate donors to include large gifts
                from Bechtel, AT&amp;T, Citibank, Honda, Martin
                Marietta, Wheelabrator, Ciba-Geigy, Dow, and
                Scott Paper, with smaller donations (less than
                $5,000) from Monsanto, Mobil, and Shell Oil. The
                Audubon  Society&#8217;s major capital
                project, the conversion of an historic building
                in New York&#8217;s Greenwich Village to a new
                Society headquarters&#8212;and a showcase of
                energy efficiency and recycled materials
                use&#8212;was supported by grants of over $100,000
                each from WMX (formerly Waste Management, Inc.)
                and Wheelabrator. The former is the world&#8217;s
                largest processor of toxic chemical waste, and
                has been the subject of numerous bribery and
                anti-trust convictions, as well as countless
                environmental violations. The latter is a leading
                supplier of incinerator technologies that have
                been widely opposed by activists across the
                country due to serious environmental and public
                health concerns.
                The World Wildlife
                Fund&#8217;s corporate contributors are now led by
                the likes of the Bank of America, Kodak, and J.P.
                Morgan (over $250,000), with the Bank of Tokyo,
                Philip Morris, WMX, DuPont, and numerous others
                playing supporting roles. Its budget grew from
                $17 million in 1985 to $62 million in 1993, with
                roughly half of its revenues coming from
                individual contributions. The National Wildlife
                Federation&#8217;s budget had increased by more
                than 50 percent since 1988, to $96 million in
                1994. Major corporate donors included Bristol
                Myers Squibb, Ciba-Geigy, DuPont, and Pennzoil,
                and an additional 161 companies participated in
                the Federation&#8217;s matching gift program, in
                which individuals&#8217; gifts to the organization
                are matched by their employer. Other
                organizations, such as the Sierra Club, have made
                contributor information more difficult to obtain,
                but it is noteworthy that their annual budget had
                leveled off at $39 million, after peaking at $52
                million in 1991. Membership dues had fallen to 32
                percent of the Sierra Club&#8217;s annual budget,
                half of the 1988 figure.
                The Money Chase
                One consistent factor in
                the institutionalization of official
                environmentalism has been the role of influential
                foundations in helping to frame the agendas of
                the leading organizations. Large foundations like
                the Ford Foundation and the various Rockefeller
                funds played a forceful role in the development
                of environmental organizations since the 1940s,
                leading some 1960s activists to dismiss
                environmental concerns as a mere creation of
                corporate philanthropists.
                Foundations often play a
                controversial role in movements for social
                change. Organizations that wish to sustain
                themselves over time, initiate new projects, and
                offer salaries to staff members invariably need
                to attract large donations, and the established
                foundations have long been the most available
                source of these. Political scientist Joan Roelofs
                has demonstrated the role of foundations in the
                decline of 1960s-era activism, arguing that
                grants were systematically allocated to assure
                "that radical energies were being channeled
                into safe, legalistic, bureaucratic and
                occasionally profit-making activities." This
                pattern has been repeated in anti-poverty groups,
                women&#8217;s groups, and in the African American,
                Latino, and Native American communities, as well
                as in the environmental movement.
                In the 1990s, large donors
                have begun to intervene more directly to set the
                course of environmental activism. For example, a
                $275,000 grant to the Sierra Club in 1990 to
                support work on population issues made population
                advocacy the highest-funded program in the
                Club&#8217;s budget. This raised concern among
                activists who feared the effort would
                inadvertently support the rising wave of
                anti-immigration sentiment that was just
                beginning to sweep the country. In 1993, officers
                of the Pew Charitable Trusts brought together
                representatives from some of the leading regional
                and national forest protection groups in an
                effort to create a unified nationwide forest
                campaign. While the participants initially seized
                the opportunity to help develop such a unified
                effort, they soon learned that Pew had a very
                particular agenda in mind.
                "Pew was only
                interested in funding a campaign focused on
                legislation that would be passed by a Democratic
                Congress and that Clinton would sign,"
                explains Andy Mahler of the Indiana-based
                Heartwood organization, who served as an interim
                chair of the effort. Pew expressed little
                interest in aiding ongoing efforts at grassroots
                organizing, public education, or legal
                intervention by the member groups, suggesting to
                many that the potential effectiveness of the
                campaign was merely a secondary concern. 
                Ultimately, Pew put its
                resources into a series of regional, rather than
                national efforts. One of these was in the
                Northeastern states, where a two-year
                Congressional study had failed to raise
                sufficient political momentum for the protection
                of the endangered Northern Forest region.
                Representatives of mainstream environmental
                groups and leading foundations created the
                Northern Forest Alliance, with a stated mission
                of protecting the forests of northern New England
                and New York, while promoting economic
                diversification. Groups in the region that depend
                on foundation grants were subsequently pressured
                to join the Alliance, and mute their criticisms
                of its rather bland, non-controversial, and
                rather piecemeal approach to the environmental
                health of a region that is threatened with
                significant, short-term increases in destructive
                logging and commercial development.
                The 1994 Annual Report of
                the Pew Charitable Trusts, describes the strategy
                behind these efforts. A "team of
                professionals," the report declares, stands
                behind the Trusts&#8217; environmental programs.
                This team, consisting of lawyers, scientists, and
                outside consultants, will "play a key role
                in generating many of the ideas behind the
                programs we support, participating with
                colleagues from the environmental community in
                defining the goals and objectives of these
                programs, designing their operating structures,
                hiring key staff and, in some cases, being
                directly involved in program execution."
                Investigative journalist
                Stephan Salisbury of the Philadelphia Inquirer
                described the strategy of a growing sector of
                leading environmental funders when he described
                Pew&#8217;s having "created and funded dozens
                of programs and independent organizations to
                carry out agendas determined by the foundation
                and its consultants. It has promoted its own
                causes, pursued its own initiatives, bankrolled
                its own research and imposed its own order."
                Salisbury, writing in Pew&#8217;s home city of
                Philadelphia, examined the Trusts&#8217;
                increasingly controversial activities in areas
                from journalism and school reform to tourism
                marketing and restructuring local arts
                organizations, as well as in the environmental
                movement. He described Pew&#8217;s overall
                philosophy as "professionalized,
                self-promoting corporate liberalism."
                In 1995, Northwest forest
                activist and journalist Jeffrey St. Clair joined
                with Alexander Cockburn to investigate the stock
                holdings of the three foundations that play the
                largest institutional role in supporting
                mainstream environmentalism. The three
                foundations, each the product of leading
                transnational oil fortunes, are the Pew
                Charitable Trusts (Sun Oil Co.), W. Alton Jones
                Foundation (Cities Service/CITGO), and the
                Rockefeller Family Fund. St. Clair and Cockburn
                found that the Pew endowment, with a total of
                $3.8 billion in holdings, is heavily invested in
                timber firms, mining companies, arms
                manufacturers, and chemical companies, as well as
                oil exploration. Alton Jones&#8217; timber
                investments include a subsidiary of the notorious
                Maxxam conglomerate, which is attempting to
                liquidate the largest single expanse of old
                growth redwood forest that remains in private
                hands, along with Louisiana Pacific, the largest
                purchaser of timber from the National Forests.
                The foundation also holds a $1 million share in
                the controversial gold mining giant, the FMC
                Corporation. The Rockefeller fund holds
                investments in no less than 28 oil and gas
                development companies, as well as timber giants
                Weyerhaeuser and Boise Cascade. St. Clair and
                Cockburn traced a number of instances in which
                environmental compromises engineered by the
                Clinton administration, and by groups such as the
                Wilderness Society, directly benefited these
                foundations&#8217; holdings.
                The Nationals
                Respond
                The mid-1990s saw the
                beginnings of a shakeup at the top among some of
                the largest Washington-based environmental
                groups. In some cases it was a response to
                persistent grassroots criticism; more often it
                was a reflection of the persistent decline in the
                influence of the environmental movement in
                Washington. This loss of influence began well
                before the Republican takeover of Congress in
                1994, and has been exacerbated by the Clinton
                administration&#8217;s often duplicitous approach
                to environmental policy. Some of the mainstream
                groups have made concerted efforts to cast their
                efforts in more grassroots terms. For example,
                when environmental lawyer Mark van Putten assumed
                the position of CEO of the National Wildlife
                Federation in 1996, he described his mission as
                one to "reinvigorate the real roots of the
                conservation movement."
                The Wilderness Society also
                chose a new top officer in 1996, and the Sierra
                Club elected a 23-year-old activist and founder
                of the Sierra Student Coalition as its new
                president. The Sierra Club has gradually, though
                often reluctantly, strengthened its positions on
                some issues of primary concern to grassroots Club
                members. A five-year campaign by Sierra Club
                members to press the Club to take a stand against
                all commercial logging in the National Forests
                culminated in a 1996 membership referendum that
                passed by a margin of 2 to 1 in favor of the
                proposal. This despite the opposition of some
                notable Sierra Club board members, including
                Earth First! co-founder Dave Foreman, who
                condemned the Club&#8217;s "true believers
                who hold onto some idealistic notion of no
                compromise," apparently with little intended
                irony. Spurred in part by widespread outrage at
                the devastating effects of expanded
                "salvage" logging during the past two
                years, the referendum may have added some much
                needed teeth to the Club&#8217;s efforts to recast
                itself in more grassroots terms.
                The mainstream
                environmental movement also played a more visible
                role in the 1996 congressional elections than
                ever before. The League of Conservation Voters
                targeted a dozen members of Congress for defeat,
                highlighting their role in promoting a virulently
                anti-environmental agenda. Of these, six were
                defeated in their re-election bids, most
                significantly Larry Pressler of South Dakota, who
                was the only incumbent U.S. Senator to be
                defeated in 1996. A seventh, Rep. Steve Stockman
                of Texas, was defeated in a December runoff. The
                Sierra Club spent ten times as much as ever
                before in support of pro-environment candidates,
                a total of $7.5 million. However, such efforts
                have proved far from sufficient to alter the
                terms of environmental debate in official
                Washington circles. The most noticeable result
                may have been to encourage candidates on both
                sides of the issues to drape their campaigns in
                green cloth, advancing the corporate greenwash by
                promoting environmental images over substance.
                Bill Clinton&#8217;s various
                high-profile environmental proclamations during
                the campaign season&#8212;from Yellowstone Park to
                Utah to the California redwoods&#8212;not only
                affirmed the trend toward image over substance,
                but each featured measures to handsomely
                compensate corporations for not fully exercising
                their "property rights" to expand
                mining and timber cutting on corporate-owned
                lands. Last year, the federal government offered
                trades of federal land with a combined value of
                several hundred million dollars to mining
                companies in Arizona, timber companies in the
                Northwest, and the Houston-based conglomerate
                Maxxam, in exchange for the protection of a
                portion of their California redwood forest
                holdings. A subsidiary of the Canadian mining
                conglomerate Noranda was offered nearly $65
                million in federal property to withdraw its
                proposal for a massive gold mining operation just
                north of Yellowstone National Park. The
                Environmental Defense Fund, which has been the
                leading proponent of an unabashedly
                "market-oriented" approach to
                environmentalism, described tradeoffs of federal
                land as the best "source of revenue on the
                horizon that is going to enable us to protect
                these sensitive areas as quickly as we have
                to," according to the New York Times.
                This despite a large reserve of unspent federal
                funds designated specifically for
                conservation-related land purchases.
                To challenge the hegemony
                of the voices of official environmentalism on the
                national level will ultimately require more
                active and diverse networks of grassroots
                activists, organized and coordinated from the
                ground up. Such networks have begun to appear in
                the environmental justice movement, as well as
                among grassroots forest activists. Activists
                working on similar issues and facing an
                increasingly unified corporate agenda need to
                find ways to join forces across boundaries of
                geography, ethnicity, class, and specific-issue
                focus. Local groups may have ties to several
                regional and national networks, sometimes sharing
                legal and technical resources with larger,
                better-funded organizations. However, it is
                essential that they retain the prerogative to set
                their own agendas and speak to their own
                communities&#8217; priorities, while steadfastly
                resisting the pressures of cooptation that the
                existing larger organizations so frequently
                succumb to&#8212;sometimes unwittingly but often
                with unabashed enthusiasm.
                In 1995, the long-awaited
                25th anniversary of Earth Day came and went with
                considerably less fanfare than five years
                earlier. Controversies over corporate
                contributions largely derailed plans for the
                biggest&#8212;and the most utterly
                compromised&#8212;Earth Day ever. Earth Day
                organizers hired a corporate public relations
                firm, Dorf &amp; Stanton, to coordinate program
                development and communications, and established a
                short-lived "Earth Day Corporate Team"
                to actively solicit corporate participation. The
                organization was rocked with dissent and
                underwent two complete reorganizations before a
                revived Earth Day organization raised $6.5
                million in corporate contributions.
                The official Earth Day 1995
                petition, addressed with a puzzling
                forthrightness to House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
                began, "With major polluters such as Texaco
                and Monsanto attempting to &#8216;sponsor&#8217;
                Earth Day, and every politician in the nation
                claiming to be &#8216;for the environment,&#8217;
                it is getting hard to figure out who is really
                protecting the planet and who is poisoning
                it." The corporate co-optation of Earth Day,
                an idea that provoked intense controversy in
                1990, and brought hundreds of people to
                demonstrate on Wall Street, had become
                conventional wisdom by mid-decade. Will activists
                in 1997 begin to chart a different path?
                                                                     
                Tokar is a faculty member
                at Goddard College, has been active in local
                environmental movements since the 1970s, and has
                written extensively on ecology issues. This
                article is adapted from Brian Tokar&#8217;s
                &lt;W0&gt;Earth for Sale: Reclaiming Ecology in
                the Age of Corporate Greenwash (South End
                Press).&lt;W0&gt; 
            
        
    


 

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