Redistricting News Today: Federal court invalidates part of Texas congressional map
Free Law has put up 1.8 million free opinions from PACER. What's PACER you ask. From PACER's website:
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Teaching Tolerance has lots of resources for educators.
Do trees lower crime? That's the claim a Chicago group is making after mapping tree density in 284 municipalities in the Chicago area. My reaction was 'whoa, that's correlation, not causation.' My take would be it's the other way around: Where there's less crime, people plant more trees. Where people have more money they have bigger lots, more trees and more park area. And where there are already lots of trees, the property values are higher, and wealthier people buy the land. But the article expected people like me:
"Of course, skeptics might argue that this sort of data is only correlation, rather than causation. Underserved communities have high crime and fewer trees—not high crime in part due to fewer trees. So to support their claims, CRTI compiled all the benefits that trees provide, with citations for the various studies backing up the claims. One of those studies suggests that trees 'may deter crime both by increasing informal surveillance and by mitigating some of the psychological precursors to violence.'”Yes, I've posted about the psychological benefits of trees, but I'm still skeptical. Trees may, to a certain extent 'sooth' a community, but I'm still guessing that there's an economic correlation between low income and fewer trees and that the economic factor is the bigger driver of crime. I would guess that Anchorage has a pretty high level of trees per people and a fair amount of crime. And much crime happens where trees give cover for the homeless who commit crimes in the greenbelt areas. But it's interesting research. And I'd love to be wrong on this.
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