

VOLUME SEVENTEEN
- SPRING 1995
- L. M. Benton: Selling the Natural or Selling Out? Exploring Environmental Merchandising
- Gus diZerga: Individuality, Human and Natural Communities, and the Foundations of Ethics
- William C. French: Against Biospherical Egalitarianism
- Deane Curtin: Making Peace with the Earth: Indigenous Agriculture and the Green Revolution
- Catriona Sandilands: From Natural Identity to Radical Democracy
- Daniel P. Thero: Rawls and Environmental Ethics
- SUMMER 1995
- Judith N. Scoville: Value Theory and Ecology in Environmental Ethics
- Brian K. Steverson: Contextualism and Norton's Convergence Hypothesis
- Deborah Slicer: Is There an Ecofeminism-Deep Ecology "Debate"?
- Leslie Paul Thiele: Nature and Freedom: A Heideggerian Critique of Biocentric and Sociocentric Environmentalism
- James P. Sterba: From Biocentric Individualism to Biocentric Pluralism
- Wim J. van der Steen: The Demise of Monism and Pluralism in Environmental Ethics
- FALL 1995
- Denis Collins and John Barkdull: Capitalism, Environmentalism, and Mediating Structures: From
Adam Smith to Stakeholder Panels
- Andrew Kernohan: Rights against Polluters
- John van Buren: Critical Environmental Hermeneutics
- Troy W. Hartley: Environmental Justice: An Environmental Civil Rights Value Acceptable to All World Views
- Janna Thompson: Aesthetics and the Value of Nature
- Terri Field: Caring Relationships with Natural and Artificial Environments
- WINTER 1995
- Bryan G. Norton: Why I am Not a Nonanthropocentrist: Callicott and the Failure of Monistic Inherentism
- Donald Scherer: Evolution, Human Living, and the Practice of Ecological Restoration
- Judith M. Green: Retrieving the Human Place in Nature
- Nicholas Agar: Valuing Species and Valuing Individuals
- Frederick Ferre: Value, Time, and Nature
- Janis Birkeland: Neutralizing Gender