@cedar It's better than I thought. I haven't been reading much green anarchist stuff lately because so much seems to be just like Desert-esque climate doomerism and absolute pessimism about anything we might call "civ." This felt much closer to how I feel about ecology.
One of the best parts was how it talked about the ecology of the city. I've met people who think that because they're not "indigenous" or living somewhere rural or even are "from" where they currently live that they can't *really* fight for nature as if that only falls on people who have some mythologized connection to the land. It's very weird because Europe isn't North America, and trying to map dominant narratives from that continent here always seems to leave something lacking (not just ecological narratives).
I think the text was also nice that it didn't romanticise indigenousness into something that uniquely and inherently has some connection to the land and went with something more moderate which is that simply being around it and observing (especially over generations) creates knowledge and a relationship that anyone can have.
Def something I'll be recommending in the future