BachT.M., and LarsonB.M.H.2017. Speaking about Weeds: Indigenous Elders' Metaphors for Invasive Species and Their Management. Environmental Values26 (5): 561–581. Crossref.
2.
FragnièreA.2018. How Demanding is Our Climate Duty? An Application of the No-Harm Principle to Individual Emissions. Environmental Values27 (6): 645–663.
3.
GammonA.R.2018. The many meanings of rewilding: An introduction and the case for a broad conceptualisation. Environmental Values27 (4): 331–350. Crossref.
4.
GodoyE.S.2017. Sharing Responsibility for Divesting from Fossil Fuels. Environmental Values26 (6): 693–710. Crossref.
5.
GreavesT.2014. Elizabeth Cripps Climate Change and the Moral Agent: Individual Duties in an Interdependent World. Journal of Contemporary European Studies22.3 (September): 347–349.
6.
GreavesT.2016 Natural phenomena. In BannonB.E., (ed.) Nature and experience: Phenomenology and the environmnent, Rowman & Littlefield: London and New York.
7.
Hoły-ŁuczajM.2018. In Search of Allies for Postnatural Environmentalism, or Revisiting an Ecophilosophical Reading of Heidegger. Environmental Values27 (6): 603–621.
8.
KopecM.2017. Game Theory and the Self-Fulfilling Climate Tragedy. Environmental Values26 (2): 203–221. Crossref.
9.
LenziD.2017. Relativism, Ambiguity and the Environmental Virtues. Environmental Values26 (1): 91–109. Crossref.
10.
ManelaT.2018. Gratitude to Nature. Environmental Values27 (6): 623–644.
11.
MonaghanJ. and SmithM.. 2018. Ecology, Community and Food Sovereignty: What's in a Word?Environmental Values27 (6): 665–686.
12.
NietzscheF.W. (2007). On the genealogy of morality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.
13.
OakleyK., WardJ. and ChristieI.. 2018. Engaging the Imagination: ‘New Nature Writing’, Collective Politics and the Environmental Crisis. Environmental Values27 (6): 687–705.
14.
PooleS. (2006). Unspeak. London: Little, Brown.
15.
VogelS. (2015). Thinking like a mall: environmental philosophy after the end of nature. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. Crossref.
16.
WaddellC. ed. (2000). And no birds sing: rhetorical analyses of Rachel Carson's Silent Spring. Carbondale, Ill. Southern Illinois University Press.
17.
ZimmermanM.E.1983. Toward a Heideggerean Ethos for Radical Environmentalism. Environmental Ethics5 (2): 99–131. Crossref.