
Roundtable on g8 Resistance: Perspectives for the Next Phase of Global Anti-Capitalist Uprisings (Interventions # 1, first appeared in Issue 6 of Upping the Anti: a Journal of Theory and Action)
“Chef, es sind zu viele” (Block G8, Mai 2008)
Dazwischen gehen – Texte zur Offenen Arbeitskonferenz
der Interventionistischen Linken (ak-Redaktion April 2008)
Gewaltbereite Politik und der G8-Gipfel (Komitee für Grundrechte und Demokratie, Dezember 2007)
Feindbild Demonstrant (Republikanischer Anwältinnen- und Anwälteverein | Legal Team, Dezember 2007)
Move into the light? Postscript to a turbulent 2007 (Turbulence, Dezember 2007)
resistance inside – Einblicke in das Innenleben einer Mobilisierung 2.0 (R.O.S.A., November 2007)
Dokumentation zu Migration und G8 (G8-Büro im Hessischen Flüchtlingsrat, Oktober 2007)
Join the winning side – Nachbetrachtung des Antifa-KOK Düsseldorf (Juni 2007)
Turbulence: What would it mean to win? (Juni 2007)
Antikapitalismus für alle! (Mai 2007)
Guide to Resistance (Spontane Redaktionsgruppe, Mai 2007)

Guide to Protest (Hannover Kreis, Mai 2007)
Fußnote #4 (SOBI Rostock, Mai 2007)
Was ist G8? Eine kritische Betrachtung (SOBI Rostock, Mai 2007)
Make G8 History! (AG Globale Soziale Rechte, April 2007)
Stimmen von Anarchistinnen & Anarchisten zu den G8 (April 2007)
solidarität (Mai 2007)
alaska Sondernummer (März 2007)
protest. widerstand. perspektive. (April 2007)
PAULAs Manifest (März 2007)
“G8: Die Deutung der Welt. Kritik. Protest. Widerstand” (arranca! Nr. 36, April 2007)
“Göttinger Gipfelzeitung” zum G8-Gipfel im Juni 2007 in Heiligendamm (April 2007)
“Rostocker Stadtgespräche” Nr. 46/47 (April 2007)
“11. Ausgabe des Antiberliner” zum G8 Gipfel sowie dem Protest dagegen (April 2007)
“Autonomes G8-Info” (Hamburg, April/ Mai 2007)
“Junirevolte” – Zeitung gegen den G8-Gipfel (solid, März 2007)
Informationen und Positionen gegen den G8-Gipfel 2007 (Kieler Netzwerk gegen den G8-Gipfel, März 2007)
“Make capitalism history!” Positionen und Informationen zum G8-Gipfel in Heiligendamm (Avanti, März 2007)
“Widerstand ist fruchtbar. Analysen und Perspektiven für eine nicht-kapitalistische Landwirtschaft” (Aktionsnetzwerk globale Landwirtschaft, März 2007)
“Globalisierung und Krieg” (Informationsstelle Militarisierung/ attac, Anfang 2007)
“Politischer Reiseführer MV” (pdf, Januar 2007, 14 MB)
“dissent! Broschüre” mit (fast) allen Texten rund um die Mobilisierung (92 Seiten, pdf, August 2006)
Reader zu G8 2007 von badespasz (Herbst 2006)
attac Inforeader (2006)
“Inforeader Globalisierung”, Grüne Jugend Bundesvorstand
MANILA, Sept 11 (Reuters) - Maoist-led guerrillas raided a state-owned plantation used for biofuel production in the central Philippines, the first attack on an alternative energy investment, an army official said on Thursday.
The rebels left leaflets denouncing the operations of a facility producing biofuels from cassava and jatropha, a drought-resistant plant, which competes for crops with food production in the mainly agricultural Southeast Asian nation.
Communist New People's Army (NPA) rebels stormed a jatropha plantation on Negros island on Tuesday, burning equipment and stopping workers from hauling lumber, Colonel Cesar Yano, a brigade commander on Negros, told reporters.
"The workers were not harmed," Yano said.
The rebels oppose the use of food for energy purposes, targeting the 2-billion peso ($42 million) ethanol project because it would plant jatropha trees instead of sugarcane and rice, the traditional staple, Yano said.
Jatropha is considered to be one of the most promising sources of biofuels.
The 10-hectare jatropha plantation in Tamlang valley also sits on what was a rebel stronghold before troops drove the NPA guerrillas deeper into the mountains.
The biofuel plantation is a joint venture between the government and Tamlang Valley Agri Development Corp, a company formed by a local alcohol firm and a political clan related to the finance secretary.
The government has a 35 percent stake in the plantation. There was no immediate reaction from the owners.
The Philippines has been promoting the cultivation of crops suited for biofuels to lessen its dependence on costly imported crude oil. The country imports nearly all of its crude oil needs.
The rebels have stepped up attacks on Negros after an army battalion was removed from the island a month ago and was sent to reinforce troops fighting Muslim rebels on the southern island of Mindanao, officials said.
Manila has been battling Maoist-led guerrillas active mostly in the main island of Luzon and in the central Philippines for nearly 40 years in a conflict that has killed more than 40,000 people and stunted investment in the resource-rich country.
The rebels target mines, plantations, logging and telephone companies to scare foreign investors and raise funds. (Reporting by Manny Mogato; Editing by Paul Tait)
Source: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/MAN187596.htm