News

New harvests: Skinny trees in the Amazon, tomatoes instead of rice

1. United States

The rate of violent victimization dropped from 79.8 to 16.5 per 1,000 people age 12 or older between 1993 and 2021. The findings measure rape, sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault. Between 2012 and 2021, the violent victimization rate fell by 9.6 cases per 1,000 people, notwithstanding a spike between 2015 and 2018.

The data was published last year by the Bureau of Justice Statistics as part of the Census Bureau’s annual National Crime Victimization Survey.

Why We Wrote This

From Brazil to Bangladesh, our progress roundup highlights land use adaptations that are producing results. Timber harvesting is coexisting with forest restoration, and farmers are finding better vegetable yields from former rice paddies.

In 2021, the shares of violent incidents involving white (60%), Black (14%), and Hispanic (17%) victims were comparable to the population percentages of white (61%), Black (12%), and Hispanic (18%) individuals. The rate for individuals in households making less than $25,000 annually was greater than the rate for all other income groups. Early data from the FBI and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicates a rise in murder in 2020 and 2021, but it remained below previous highs. And Americans age 65 or older saw the lowest rate of violent crime, excluding simple assault, for any age group.

For the past three decades, Gallup surveys show that a majority of the public perceives that crime is up even when the rate declines. Experts attribute the disconnect and people’s related feelings about safety to factors including media coverage, political rhetoric, and the wide range of information in the data.
Sources: U.S. Department of Justice, FiveThirtyEight

2. Brazil

In Brazil’s Atlantic Forest, the harvest of eucalypt timber is also funding reforestation. Conservationists generally opt for native trees when reforesting ecosystems. But fast-growing nonnative eucalypts offer an economically promising alternative. The trees grow thin and tall, allowing for native species to flourish in the understory. The sale of timber brings in revenue while creating jobs locally and along the supply chain. In a 2019 study of three sites, eucalypt logging offset between 44% and 75% of restoration and implementation costs.  

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