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About Paul
Paul Kingsnorth has worked in an orang utan rehabilitation
centre in Borneo, as a peace observer in the rebel Zapatista
villages of Mexico, as a floor-sweeper in McDonalds
and as an assistant lock-keeper on the river Thames.
He studied history at Oxford University between 1991
and 1994, was arrested during the Twyford Down road
protests of 1993 and was named one of Britain's 'top
ten troublemakers' by the New Statesman magazine in
2001.
Paul has worked on the comment desk of the Independent,
as commissioning editor for opendemocracy.net
and as deputy editor of The
Ecologist, the world's longest-running environmental
magazine. He is also an award-winning poet, and an honorary member of the Lani tribe of New Guinea.
Paul has written for or contributed to the Guardian,
Independent, Daily Telegraph, Daily Express, Le Monde,
New Statesman, Ecologist, New Internationalist, Big
Issue, Adbusters, BBC Wildlife, openDemocracy, BBC Radio
4, BBC Radio 2, BBC4, ITV and Resonance FM. He is the
author of Your
Countryside, Your Choice, a major report on the
future of the countryside, published in 2005 by the
Campaign to Protect Rural England.
Paul's first book, One
No, Many Yeses (Simon and Schuster, 2003), an investigative
journey through the 'anti-globalisation' movement, was
published in six languages in thirteen countries. His second book, Real England,
was published by
Portobello Books
in April 2008, and is out in paperback in summer 2009. His debut poetry collection, Kidland, is forthcoming from Salmon Poetry.
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