News

Keeping it wild: Tokyo farms and Europe’s last undammed river

1. United States

Seattle banned caste discrimination, the first city in the country to do so. While discrimination by caste is illegal in much of South Asia, the systems of hierarchical categorization determined at birth persist there and around the world, often leading to mistreatment of people in “lower” castes.

As South Asian immigrant populations have grown in the United States, so have accusations of caste discrimination in employment, housing, and social life in these communities – along with calls for change.

Why We Wrote This

Our progress roundup this week is an appreciation of extremes. Plots of growing food are surrounded by skyscrapers, Albania keeps a river wild, and populations of a lynx unique to Spain and Portugal are rebounding.

In the first formal documentation in the U.S. of caste in the diaspora, a 2016 survey found that one-third of Dalits reported being discriminated against in education, and two-thirds said they were treated unfairly at work. Since Brandeis University added caste to their anti-discrimination policies in 2019, other U.S. colleges have as well, including the California State University system.

John Froschauer/AP

People celebrate the City Council’s passing of an ordinance to add caste to the city’s anti-discrimination laws, Feb. 21, 2023, in Seattle.

Critics of the Seattle law, including Hindu organizations, said it could lead to discrimination against Hindus and dissuade companies from hiring Indians. But Seattle City Council member Kshama Sawant, the council’s only Indian American member and the one who proposed the ordinance, said, “We oppose religion being used as an excuse to abuse others.”
Sources: The Associated Press, The Conversation, Equality Labs, Article14

2. Spain and Portugal

Endangered Iberian lynx populations are rebounding. The wild cat – which was by 2002 reduced to fewer than 200 felines – is making a comeback, with a population of 1,400 now spread across the Iberian Peninsula. From one captive breeding program started in Spain in 2003, 59 lynxes were introduced to Portugal between 2015 and 2022.

Much of Portugal’s forest is privately owned, and activists worked to persuade landowners that a reintroduction of the lynx would have its advantages: Lynxes prey on foxes that threaten livestock, and a tamped-down fox population in turn could help increase depleted populations of rabbits to benefit farmers, hunters, and ecosystems. European rabbits on the peninsula are a keystone species that raptors rely on for food, and small animals use rabbit burrows for nesting.

Marcelo del Pozo/Reuters/File

An Iberian lynx, part of a species recovery project in southern Spain, is released in Doñana National Park, 2016.

“If we succeed in lynx conservation, then we’ve succeeded in securing their habitat, which they share with a countless number of other species – including other threatened species,” said Olga Martins, regional director at the Institute for Nature Conservation and Forests. “It’s important to create this community of practice with local communities and landowners and other stakeholders in the region, so that in the long term we can get this to be self-sufficient.”
Sources: Biographic, University of East Anglia

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