2024
September
05
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 05, 2024
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TODAY’S INTRO

When cities listen to citizens

Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

The greening, and sometimes the “pedestrianizing,” of pockets of big cities is a long-running international story. It’s one with some clear positives. Green, less traffic-filled cities are cooler and quieter, for example. But doing it right requires a continuity of leadership and a vision that’s inclusive.

As Jingnan Peng reported recently from Louisville, Kentucky, a central requirement is the trust of residents. Reimagining public space affects residential access and needed commerce. Collective aims need to be clear.

Erika Page reports today on how, in Barcelona, Spain, a city increasingly wary of tourism, “superblocks” are being met with hopeful interest, but also with some skepticism. Encouragingly, the city seems to be taking residents’ concerns to heart.

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Parent stress is a national health issue. First step is asking for help.

Parenting has always been stressful. But the crescendo of modern anxieties makes parenting, itself, a health threat, says the U.S. surgeon general. Reaching out for help can be the quickest and most important response.

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It’s the little things that get to Shirley Herbas: watching the minutes tick by while her 7-year-old son fights about what to wear to school, or worrying about what her 2-year-old daughter puts in her mouth. When it gets to be too much, she talks it out with a family friend.

“It’s not that she has all the answers, but she listens,” says Ms. Herbas, who relies on her husband’s extended family for social support. 

That support is crucial to ameliorating parental stress, which U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy last week declared an urgent public health issue. His advisory calls for a cultural shift that recognizes raising a child is key to the health of society as a whole.

And close communities, like Ms. Herbas’ supportive friend, are often the first line of defense if a stressed parent can see asking for help as a strength, not a weakness, the surgeon general says.  

While Dr. Murthy calls on communities, governments, and employers to recognize the importance of parenting through funding and programs aimed at mental health, he said in a New York Times essay, “Individuals – family members, friends, neighbors and co-workers – can play a critical role.”

Parent stress is a national health issue. First step is asking for help.

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Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File
Parents often try to juggle their own work schedules, texts, and social media, while overseeing their children's online activity, homework, and extracurricular activities.

It’s the little things that get to Shirley Herbas: watching the minutes tick by in the morning while her 7-year-old son fights about what to wear to school, or worrying about what her 2-year-old daughter puts in her mouth. When it gets to be too much, she talks it out with a family friend.

“It’s not that she has all the answers,” says the recent Bolivian immigrant, searching for the correct English to explain. “But she listens, and comprende ... she understands.”

Ms. Herbas, who’s been in the United States just two years, relies on her husband’s extended family for social support. 

That extra family support is crucial to ameliorating parental stress, which U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy has declared an urgent public health issue. An advisory released last week calls for a cultural shift that recognizes that raising a child is key to the health of society as a whole.   

“The more we put the whole picture together, it makes it more complicated, but it’s real life,” says Ellen Galinsky, president of Families and Work Institute, a nonprofit that researches changing work, family, and community dynamics. “Paying attention to parents’ well-being is really important if we care about kids’ well-being.”

Tech strains, expectations, and comparisons

Parenting has always had its challenges – budgets, scheduling, health, and safety.  But today, the job is made tougher by the increasing use of technology, financial strains, isolation, and what Dr. Murthy calls a “culture of comparison ... that promotes unrealistic expectations of what parents must do.”  

While he calls on communities, governments, and employers to recognize the importance of parenting through funding and programs aimed at mental health, he said in an Aug. 28 New York Times essay, “Individuals – family members, friends, neighbors and co-workers – can play a critical role.” 

Like Ms. Herbas’ supportive friend, this is often the first line of defense against parenting stress. And Dr. Murthy says asking for help should be seen as a strength, not a weakness; offering help should not wait for an invitation.

Rebecca Blackwell/AP
Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy (left) and his mother, Myetraie Murthy, serve food as friends and family gather at his parents' home near Miami this past July. He says extended family and friends are the first responders when it comes to parental stress.

Feeling it

Parents don’t need to be told they’re stressed out – they’re feeling it.

Dropping off her son at an art class at the Woodland Hills Recreation Center in Los Angeles, Leonora chuckles when asked about stresses she faces as a mom.

She says that she put her son in this art class to counter the time he spent on his electronic tablet over the summer. His online activity fuels one of her biggest worries.

Leonora, who for privacy reasons asked not to use her last name, says she tries to limit the amount of time her 6-year-old spends with electronics but sees other parents being more lenient. It leaves her wondering, “How much is too much, and how much is enough?”

Then there’s the stacked schedule: school, followed by art, then soccer practice, and homework. She keeps her son busy, she says, to manage his anxiety – and her own – with activities to channel his energy. But it leaves no downtime.

Her support network is small – a few friends, whom she says she leans on. And her husband? “Not everyone is born to be a father or mother,” she says. “The one I got, he’s a provider.” 

Leonora mentions school violence, and releases a quiet spring of tears: “I try not to watch news. I try not to put that information into his head because he’s too young. ... I think they have enough to deal with.” Her son’s school, she explains, has a significant Jewish population, and with nationwide clashes over the war in Gaza, she’s terrified the school could be a target.   

Ask for help

Parents everywhere are unnerved by the 24/7 news cycle of gun violence and war, says Susan Newman, a social psychologist who specializes in parenting. Isolation and loneliness compound it, plus there’s the constant barrage of curated images on Instagram that ramp up parenting as a competitive sport. 

In the swirl, many parents overlook a simple aid: ask for help. 

“[Parents] don’t want to be viewed as incompetent,” says Dr. Newman, adding that they “feel they can do it all. Well, in this society, women in particular can’t do it all. You need help, and there are people who can help.” 

Neighbors, friends, or partners are probably willing to run an errand or pick up a child from school, she says, echoing Dr. Murthy’s call to recognize the critical role of individuals. But, she adds, “People don’t know what you need unless you verbalize it.” 

Just those little moments can provide big relief. So can online support groups, which offer targeted advice and communities of support like babysitting cooperatives and church-organized parent groups. 

Experts also recognize a helpful shift in parenting norms, to empower children by giving them a role in family tasks and decisions. This engagement, they say, strengthens the parent-child bond and can buffer against input from peers or the internet.

“It makes the family unit feel more like a unit and a force – that they can tackle ... whatever mountain they’re climbing at the moment,” says Dr. Newman.

“Mom guilt”

Adriane Orje is running after her little girl, who just escaped from a fenced-in playground at the same recreation center. Ms. Orje recently found out she’s losing her interior design job, exacerbating her biggest worry as a parent: money. 

Ali Martin/The Christian Science Monitor
Adriane Orje visits a Los Angeles playground with her toddler. She says she manages the stress of parenting by exercising and getting out to play with her daughter. That makes her daughter happy, which Ms. Orje adds is "helpful to me."

She works from home, where boundaries are hypothetical to a child who only knows her mom is in the next room paying attention to something else. She also participates in some online parent groups, and her mother helps with child care. But in-person meetups can be difficult. Either the timing isn’t right – most of the groups seem to be run by stay-at-home moms who can get together during the day – or she just doesn’t feel like it when the time comes.

She copes by exercising, and leaning into her role as a parent. “Take her to the playground, make her happy,” she says, adding that it helps quiet her “mom guilt” – the relentless feeling of falling short of expectations, whether they’re society’s or one’s own. 

Tied together 

By all accounts, poverty makes parenting harder. “Poverty is quite bad,” says Ms. Galinsky, who recently wrote a book about raising teenagers called “The Breakthrough Years.” “There’s nothing good about worrying about whether you’re going to be able to eat.” 

For parents with few resources, Los Angeles County offers a range of support services and programs, from parenting classes to support groups and family fun nights. To encourage people to seek help, the county’s Department of Mental Health enlists community members to share information about assistance – in 13 languages – with their neighbors.   

“They speak the language; they know the culture. They’re able to get in areas where maybe some of our staff cannot,” says Mary Barraza, senior deputy director for prevention and child well-being for the county’s Department of Mental Health. “We’re getting people who are now reaching out for help that probably never would have before, because the services and the outreach is culturally sensitive.”

The department also works with local schools, because a parent’s mental health is so closely tied to their children’s. 

“It’s just like being on an airplane and you put your oxygen mask on first,” says Ms. Barraza. “As a parent, you have to make sure that your mental health is OK, that you have the supports that you need to then support your child.”

Today’s news briefs

• Georgia school shooting: The 14-year-old suspect in the killing of two fellow students and two teachers, and the wounding of nine others, in a Sept. 4 shooting at a high school had been interviewed by law enforcement last year over online threats.
• New French prime minister: President Emmanuel Macron names Michel Barnier, the European Union’s Brexit negotiator, as France’s new prime minister after more than 50 days of caretaker government. 
• U.S. labor market cools: With layoffs low, workers are less likely to lose jobs. For job hunters, the search is tough. Since peaking in March 2022, the number of listed job openings has dropped by more than a third. 
• U.S. hunger rises: It reached its highest point in nearly a decade last year, with 18 million households, or 13.5%, struggling at some point to secure enough food, according to a Sept. 4 report from the Department of Agriculture. 
• India as plastic polluter: A new study in the journal Nature finds that India leads the world in generating plastic pollution, producing 10.2 million tons a year, far more than double the next big-polluting nations, Nigeria and Indonesia.

Read these news briefs.

College students are back. Here are 4 issues to watch on campuses.

Did the summer offer a reset to roiled college campuses? As classes resume, students face new rules around protesting – and some flux around financial aid, artificial intelligence, and the viability of higher ed. 

Caitlin Ochs/Reuters
Pro-Palestinian protesters gather in front of a main gate at Columbia University in New York amid the ongoing conflict in Gaza between Israel and Hamas, Aug. 25, 2024.
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Fall term usually signals a fresh start on college campuses. But continued protests over the war in Gaza, and the related recent resignation of the Columbia University president, are reminders of how tough the spring semester was.

Add enrollment and financial aid processing concerns, and you get a sense of the issues that some schools – and students and families – may contend with in the coming year.

In New York, Columbia University started classes Tuesday with dozens of pro-Palestinian student picketers blocking a campus gate. So far nothing has been on the order of what the school faced in the spring, when it was the site of mass arrests. Demonstrations have happened elsewhere in the United States, too, including at the University of Michigan and Cornell University. Protesters continue to want schools to divest from companies with connections to Israel. 

“The election and war in the Middle East are divisive topics that will continue to stir emotions, and many will protest,” says Joe Sallustio, a former administrator and host of the “EdUp Experience” podcast. “However, I expect colleges and universities to run much tighter and have less tolerance for open, elongated engagement with protesters.” 

College students are back. Here are 4 issues to watch on campuses.

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Fall term usually signals a fresh start on college campuses. But continued protests over the Israel-Hamas war, and the related resignation of another president in the past month, are reminders of how tough the spring semester was. Add enrollment and financial aid processing concerns, and you get a sense of the issues that some schools – and students and families – may contend with in the coming year.

In New York, Columbia University started classes Tuesday with dozens of pro-Palestinian student picketers blocking a campus gate, and a campus statue, Alma Mater, being doused with red paint. None of that so far has been on the order of what the school faced in the spring, when it was the site of mass arrests. Demonstrations have happened elsewhere in the United States recently, too, including at the University of Michigan and Cornell University. Protesters continue to want schools to divest from companies with connections to Israel.  

“I think that students will find a way to express themselves, but ... many institutions changed their policies and security protocols during the summer,” says Joe Sallustio, a former administrator, and host and co-founder of the “EdUp Experience” podcast. 

Changes to campus security are one way collegiate life will be different this year. Here’s more on that and other campus topics to keep an eye on this year.

How are Israel-Hamas war protests affecting campus life?

A few weeks before students returned to school, Columbia’s president resigned. Minouche Shafik is one of a trio of women leaders –the others from Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania – who left their positions in 2024, a year that included scrutiny of their handling of antisemitism and protests. Backlash ignited after the heads of Harvard, Penn, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology faced intense questioning from a congressional committee in December. Dr. Shafik appeared before the committee separately in April.

Columbia is among a plethora of schools that updated student codes of conduct and tightened security measures in anticipation of more protests and campus disruptions. The school now requires an official university ID to get onto campus or inside any building. Those not affiliated with Columbia must fill out guest registrations. The University of Southern California instituted the same policy and limited vehicle traffic onto the campus to two entrances at certain points of the day. Other campuses, such as the University of Pennsylvania, won’t allow amplification devices, chalking, and light projections.

“The election and war in the Middle East are divisive topics that will continue to stir emotions, and many will protest. However, I expect colleges and universities to run much tighter and have less tolerance for open, elongated engagement with protesters,” says Dr. Sallustio.

Caitlin Ochs/Reuters
A woman refuses a flyer as protesters gather in front of Columbia University in New York City, Aug. 25, 2024.

The American Association of University Professors has said that new policies, some of which require students to inform when they plan to protest, severely limit speech and freedom of expression.

Many universities have lifted suspensions for students who participated in encampments and protests last spring, while others have left those decisions up to local law enforcement agencies.  

Will the FAFSA form work in 2024?

Perhaps the biggest problem facing colleges and universities are the continued hiccups from the failed rollout of a revamped Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) last year. The application was delayed in its release for months, and also had technical glitches. All of that delayed families and colleges from making decisions, and left students without knowing if they could afford to go to schools of their choice. Some students are still waiting to get award letters and have not matriculated. Some students with non-U.S. parents, or parents who didn’t have Social Security numbers, had trouble filling out the form.

The U.S. Department of Education has overhauled the system again for the 2025-2026 school year. It will conduct beta tests in October and November with real students, affecting thousands of families in total. It plans to have the new application ready no later than Dec. 1. Senior officials from the Education Department have said that by doing this phase testing, they are more likely to uncover issues that they can have fixed by the deadline for rolling it out.

Dr. Sallustio says that the FAFSA situation has caused major problems in budgets for midsize schools, and will result in program and technology cuts.

“A lot of schools are waiting to see how many students show up. Typically you would know already, so they’re still waiting to see that class solidify,” he says. “The revenue line for a lot of midsize to smaller institutions is going to be a lot less than they thought it would be. So now you’ve got to figure out what you’re going to do with your expense line.”

He predicts the FAFSA problems will affect next school year also, and that there will be cuts, possibly to administrators, faculty, and staff. Student-to-staff ratios will be affected, because fewer students means fewer employees.

“It’s a good time to look at program cuts, because you have the value of a college degree that’s in question,” Dr. Sallustio says.

Some schools are also seeing the rollback of gains they had made in diverse student enrollment as a result of the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision ending affirmative action. The highly selective Massachusetts Institute of Technology announced that it experienced sharp declines in racial diversity in its incoming class, and that they are directly tied to the recent high-court decision. The number of Black students, for example, fell from 13% to 5%. At Yale University, the percentage of Black/African American students held steady. The flip side is that historically Black colleges and universities have experienced enrollment increases, and in some cases, record applications.

Colleges brace for the coming enrollment cliff 

Enrollment issues from FAFSA forms or affirmative action’s end have nothing to do with the enrollment cliff that is predicted for 2025. Fewer young Americans are attending college, with the number of high school grads expected to decline in the coming years. Fewer students believe the expensive price tag of a college education is worth it. And fewer international students are studying in the U.S. American colleges first saw enrollment declines during the pandemic, but 2023 brought a boost. Those gains are expected to be lost. 

In the first part of 2024, about one college or university per week on average announced that it was closing or merging, according to the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association. In a report with data from 2004 to 2020, SHEEO said that more than 100,000 students experienced school closures without adequate notice or a teach-out plan. The result was that 71.3% of those students were less likely to reenroll at another school within a month, and 50.1% less likely to earn a credential than students who didn’t experience a closure. Schools that closed abruptly recently have included University of the Arts in Philadelphia, Notre Dame College in Cleveland, and the College of Saint Rose in Albany, New York.

Many students and parents are left trying to recover tuition paid to schools and get records, such as transcripts, released. Occasionally, a school finds its way back to solvency.

What role will artificial intelligence play on campus?

As artificial intelligence takes root, faculty members at colleges across the U.S. have been concerned (think cheating) and cautious about its use. Students are embracing it faster than faculty; administrators are using it as a tool for admissions. And at least one English professor argues that AI’s arrival could make the first-year writing course obsolete. 

As the technology becomes more a part of the conversation, some at universities are seeing how they can benefit from it. AI needs guardrails, and educators should be involved in creating parameters for acceptable use, says Kyle Jensen, English professor at Arizona State University and director of its writing programs.

Dr. Jensen says it’s time to accept the fact that AI will affect the way people write in the future.

“If you accept that as a premise, then you can start to ask yourself the question, ‘OK, how do we teach students to use it responsibly in a way that is consistent with all the research that we’ve conducted to this point?’” he says. 

The focus needs to be on best practices and being creative about responding to the challenges that the technology presents, he adds. 

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Curbs on social media? Judges make it about criminal justice.

Many governments would like to regulate social media giants more closely, but are wary of free speech implications. Three recent court cases offer an alternative route to tighter control – criminal justice law.

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Judges on both sides of the Atlantic, in Britain, France, and Brazil, have taken on social media titans such as Elon Musk in recent weeks, even as governments hesitate to impose broad regulation that might infringe on freedom of speech.

British courts sent hundreds of people to jail, including for inciting riotous behavior by spreading false rumors online that a man who had killed three little girls was an unauthorized immigrant.

French police arrested and charged the owner of Telegram, an encrypted messaging and networking site, on charges of complicity in the distribution of child pornography. And a Brazilian Supreme Court justice ordered the nationwide suspension of X when it did not close a number of accounts the court had ruled should be shuttered.

In all these cases, the authorities have been careful to define their targets narrowly. They have simply ruled on specific violations of their nations’ criminal law.

Their actions have refocused attention on the one major international effort underway to regulate the giant social media sites – the European Union’s 2022 Digital Services Act, which requires online operators to show they are limiting disinformation.

No company has yet been prosecuted under this act. The EU too seems to believe, for now, that the well-targeted use of national law is more impactful.

Curbs on social media? Judges make it about criminal justice.

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Eraldo Peres/AP
An ad by Valor media shows a photo of Elon Musk at a shopping center in Brasília, Brazil, Sept. 2, 2024. The sign reads in Portuguese, "Musk creates profile on X against Moraes to leak confidential decisions of the Supreme Court," referring to Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who ordered X blocked for having failed to name a local legal representative as required by law.

The gloves are off. And this time, recent dramatic legal rulings suggest, Western governments are boxing clever.

They have been engaged in a long and largely fruitless effort to combat the use of social media networks to promote hate speech, incite violence, or spread politically incendiary lies and conspiracy theories.

That effort continues. But major obstacles stand in the way of the tighter oversight and regulation that governments would like to get from the owners of the most impactful sites such as X and the messaging and networking site Telegram.

A key challenge, however, is how to make such regulation compatible with the core democratic principle of free expression.

And that concern is being amplified by voices on the political right – including X’s owner, Elon Musk – who accuse would-be regulators of trying to squelch dissent on important political issues such as the war in Ukraine, climate change, and immigration.

That’s where the recent court rulings – in Britain, in France, and last week in Brazil – could signal a new approach.

Their target has been more narrowly drawn. The judges have simply ruled on specific violations of their own nations’ criminal legislation.

They have, in effect, served notice to tech titans like Mr. Musk and Telegram’s expatriate Russian owner Pavel Durov: You may be enormously wealthy, and your media networks may have hundreds of millions of users worldwide, but inside our own borders, our laws still apply.

Albert Gea/Reuters/File
Pavel Durov, the founder and CEO of Telegram, delivers a keynote speech to the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, Feb. 23, 2016. A French citizen, Mr. Durov was arrested and faces charges in France over alleged illegal activity on Telegram.

In Britain, judges were responding to the worst bout of race rioting for years, which began after a brutal knife attack on a children’s dance class in the seaside town of Southport.

The catalyst for the violence was a claim, originating on X, that the attacker was a Muslim asylum-seeker who had entered Britain illegally from France – none of which was true.

Attacks on mosques and asylum-seekers’ accommodation were soon being organized on other networks, including Telegram.

When Prime Minister Keir Starmer ordered a police crackdown, in which hundreds of people were arrested and prosecuted, Mr. Musk himself weighed in, declaring that “civil war is inevitable” and accusing Mr. Starmer of Soviet-style tactics.

Brushing off that allegation, the prime minister told colleagues to steer clear of engaging with the X boss and focus instead on ensuring swift judgment in the courts for everyone involved in the violence.

And that, it soon became clear, would include more than those who actually rioted.

Others have been arrested, tried, and jailed for their social media posts encouraging violent attacks.

The woman suspected of posting the first false description of the Southport attacker has also been questioned, and released on bail.

France’s legal action two weeks later was even more dramatic.

The authorities arrested Telegram’s owner, Mr. Durov, on his arrival in France, where he is a citizen, and last week an investigating magistrate brought charges against him.

The French, too, have steered clear of the broader principles surrounding content regulation.

K.M. Chaudary/AP
Plainclothes police officers escort Farhan Asif (center) a freelance web developer, after his court appearance, in Lahore, Pakistan, Aug. 22, 2024. He was arrested and charged with cyberterrorism for his alleged role in spreading misinformation that led to widespread rioting in the U.K. earlier in August.

The legal charges focused on alleged activity that clearly contravened French criminal law: being complicit in the distribution of images of child sexual abuse, facilitating the operations of organized crime groups, and refusing to share relevant information with law enforcement authorities.

More dramatic yet was the action taken over the weekend in Brazil.

There, Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered the shutdown of X countrywide – making Brazil the first democratic state to do so.

He, too, emphasized he was merely applying the law, enforcing a court order that X should suspend a number of accounts after Mr. Musk had refused to do so.

Still, the Brazilian case was different in one key respect from the more targeted actions in Britain and France.

That’s because it was about political content. Justice Moraes has been leading a Supreme Court campaign to root out what he describes as online “disinformation, hate speech and attacks on the democratic rule of law”– especially since the refusal of former President Jair Bolsonaro to concede defeat in the country’s 2022 election.

Among the accounts he ordered closed are those of prominent right-wing commentators and legislators – proof, Mr. Musk declared after the shutdown, that “an unelected pseudo-judge in Brazil” was “destroying free speech for political purposes.”

The ongoing tug-of-war in Brazil is a reminder of the political issues Western governments will have to navigate if they’re to regulate content on the giant social media sites.

It has also refocused attention on the one major international effort that is underway: the Digital Services Act, enacted by the 27-nation European Union in 2022.

How effective that will be remains to be seen. But it requires the largest online operators to show how they are limiting disinformation, material endangering women and children, and attempts to manipulate elections – with potential fines in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

For now, however, even the EU seems to view the strict, well-targeted use of national law, on display in Britain and France, as likely to have a more immediate and impactful effect.

Asked to comment on Mr. Durov’s arrest, an EU spokesman hastened to say that the case had nothing to do with the still untested Europe-wide legislation.

“It’s a criminal investigation,” he declared, “based on French criminal law.”

How Barcelona is turning highways into havens of green

Barcelona’s groundbreaking green drive to make its streets more livable has attracted international attention. But it’s local residents who are the focus of its concerns.

Erika Page/The Christian Science Monitor
Ana Castillo reads a book at one of the intersections in the Sant Antoni superblock, in Barcelona, Spain, July 7, 2024.
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Jordi Martin can hardly remember what his Barcelona neighborhood used to look like. Ten years ago, his apartment overlooked six asphalted lanes of noisy traffic leading to and from the city center.

Now they have been transformed into a quiet pedestrian street shaded by trees, where children kick a ball around.

He lives in one of the “superblocks” that dot the capital of Catalonia. They were created by taking nine normal city blocks and turning them into havens of peace by banning through traffic, resurfacing or decorating the newly-pedestrianized streets, and planting greenery.

The last city administration envisaged more than 500 of these superblocks revolutionizing the city’s urban landscape. The new government has scaled the project back, but proponents of the original, more ambitious, plan say that it has already raised important questions about the purpose of public space in the city.

“These are projects that affect the cultural habits of the city’s people, daily habits of how they move and act,” says Xavier Matilla, chief architect of Barcelona until 2023. 

“What has characterized the city throughout history,” he says, “is daring to do things that are not easy a priori, but which are understood to be necessary.” 

How Barcelona is turning highways into havens of green

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As Jordi Martin steps out of his apartment building on a sunny Barcelona morning, he finds it hard to remember what his neighborhood looked like ten years ago.

His apartment used to overlook six asphalted lanes of noisy traffic leading to and from the city center. Today, he looks around with pride at a quiet pedestrian street shaded by trees, where children kick a ball around.

A three-block-square chunk of this postindustrial neighborhood, where combustion engines once ruled, has become home to picnic tables, benches, planter boxes, playgrounds, and in one corner, a community garden. 

“It felt like a revolution,” says Mr. Martin, a former adviser to the local councillor who got involved in neighborhood politics in the early 2010s. “Suddenly, the street became alive again.”

Mr. Martin lives on the edge of the city’s first superilla, or superblock, an urban planning innovation that made international waves when the city began implementing the idea here in Poblenou in 2016.

To create a superblock, the authorities take nine normal city blocks and turn them into a haven, banning through traffic, resurfacing or decorating the newly pedestrianized streets, and planting greenery.

The original plan for Barcelona envisioned 503 superblocks revolutionizing the city’s urban landscape, part of a growing global movement to reduce the presence of cars in cities. The project attracted attention worldwide: The city of Los Angeles announced plans to implement its own superblock pilot last year. 

At home, a newly-elected city government has scaled back the superblock scheme, opting instead to pedestrianize individual streets around Barcelona that it calls “green axes.” But proponents of the original, more ambitious, project say that it has raised important questions about the purpose of public space in the city.

Erika Page/The Christian Science Monitor
Jordi Martin sits outside his apartment in the Poblenou superblock, in Barcelona, Spain, July 7, 2024.

“We have to remember that these are projects that affect the cultural habits of the city’s people, daily habits of how they move and act,” says Xavier Matilla, chief architect of Barcelona until 2023. 

“It is normal for there to be reticence and reactions and controversies,” he adds. “What has characterized the city throughout history is daring to do things that are not easy a priori, but which are understood to be necessary.” 

Back to green for Barcelona 

This is not the first time a plan for the 2,000-year-old city has struggled to meet its ideals.

The Eixample district of Barcelona owes its characteristic grid of long blocks and wide streets to an urban expansion plan crafted in the mid-19th century.

That scheme left ample room for green public space within and around each block. But commercial pressures gradually overrode that priority, and most blocks were built up and filled in. Today, Barcelona has only 75 square feet of green space per inhabitant, about half that of New York City. 

The superblock concept, spearheaded by urban ecologist Salvador Rueda, was intended to restore the original vision of a city able to nurture its public health. The goal was to green one in every three streets of the original grid, which would have converted nearly 11 million square feet of roadway to community use.

The city’s second superblock remodeled the Sant Antoni neighborhood in the Eixample. It has become a daily refuge for resident Ana Castillo, who on a recent Sunday was reading a book in the sun. On that day she was alone, but often her daughter joins her to roller-skate nearby. 

“For me it’s crucial,” says Ms. Castillo, who moved from the island of Tenerife to Barcelona for work, but who misses the tranquility of island life. “This is where I can feel relaxed and at ease. We should be building more.”

Erika Page/The Christian Science Monitor
The streets of Poblenou's superblock have been pedestrianized and greened, in Barcelona, Spain, July 7, 2024.

The benefits of greening cities are numerous, from reducing noise and air pollution and fostering community life to improving biodiversity and climate resilience, says Isabelle Anguelovski, an urbanism expert at the Institute of Environmental Sciences and Technology in Barcelona. 

In the Sant Antoni superblock, pollutants such as nitrogen dioxide and particles called PM10 – both commonly found in vehicle exhaust – fell by 25% and 17% respectively, according to a 2021 report by the Barcelona Public Health Agency. And while newly planted trees have yet to reach their full height, summer temperatures are several degrees cooler on these greener streets. 

A retired couple sits on a bench outside the Sant Antoni Market, relaxing at what used to be a busy intersection. They like how the square has turned out, but they note the challenge of making sure public spaces are respected, especially given the city’s party scene. 

“Sometimes when I walk by in the morning, the tables are covered in cups and trash,” says Gloria Lavedan. “Why don’t people clean up after themselves?”

Greener is cleaner, but not cheaper …

Others have criticized the move toward making vehicle transport more difficult in a growing city, though Barcelona is simply following an international trend in this respect.

Cities around the world are prioritizing biking, walking, and public transport. Oslo, Norway, has largely removed cars from its downtown, while cities from Brussels to Paris and Montreal are restricting car use and pedestrianizing more streets. 

One thing everyone agrees on is that superblocks and green axes are becoming more expensive to live in, in a process that has been dubbed green gentrification, as wealthier residents, digital nomads, and tourists are drawn to the transformed areas. 

On the newly pedestrianized green axis of Consell de Cent, rental prices surged nearly 80% between 2022 and 2023, while they rose just 12% on a nearby parallel street, according to data from the real estate agency CBRE.

Locals knew that greener streets would “benefit them over the very short term,” says professor Anguelovski. “But in the medium term, real estate speculation … is going to push people away,” and risks creating “enclaves of privilege,” unless the city encourages the creation of more affordable housing, she worries.

Still, the higher prices point to demand for more people-centered spaces. If at the beginning, residents were skeptical of the idea, now more and more neighborhoods are asking for a superblock of their own, says Mr. Matilla, the architect. 

“We can’t stop improving the city, just as we can’t stop building libraries or schools,” he says. “The goal is to bring about systemic improvement, not just on one or two isolated streets, but throughout the city.”

Film

Burton and Keaton resurrect the fun in ‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’

Tim Burton and Michael Keaton are clearly having a good time in this sequel to the 1980s cult classic “Beetlejuice.” Fans of the original will welcome Burton’s beguiling gothic vibe, but there are Great Pumpkin-sized plot holes.

Warner Bros. Pictures/AP
Michael Keaton reprises the title role in “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.”

Burton and Keaton resurrect the fun in ‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’

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In an era of cash-grab sequels, Tim Burton knows how to keep his fans entertained. Thirty-six years after “Beetlejuice” became an improbable cult classic, the director and stars Michael Keaton, Winona Ryder, and Catherine O’Hara are all back for a Harry Belafonte-scored party.

Just don’t linger on the plot holes, some of which are big enough for a sandworm to slither through. 

“Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” returns to the scary-good campiness that made the original comedy horror so iconic. For die-hards, the film delivers visually on the zany, nightmarish imagination of Burton. Filled with references to the original, the comedy horror is a roller coaster ride of fan service. But some of the jokes feel like they’ve been marinating in their own juices for 36 years. While the sequel is not as heartfelt as “Frankenweenie” or “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” or as inventive as “Edward Scissorhands,” the “Batman” director is clearly having a good time – and so will his fans.

The film picks up with Lydia Deetz (Winona Ryder), now channeling her punk look and rebellious nature into a popular television show on which she uses her ability to communicate with the dead. Meanwhile, Lydia’s daughter, Astrid (Jenna Ortega), wants nothing to do with the family’s supernatural legacy – or with her mother’s sleazy business manager/boyfriend Rory (Justin Theroux). Then there’s Lydia’s stepmother, Delia (Catherine O’Hara), a pretentious multimedia artist. The three generations of women are drawn back together by the death of patriarch Charles, played in the first movie by now disgraced sex offender Jeffrey Jones. The women find themselves returning to the haunted house in Winter River and its resident undead chaos agent. (There is no sign of Geena Davis or Alec Baldwin – and no room in the plot for them anyway.)

Keaton seems to relish reprising his role as the ghost with the most, reviving the irreverent creepiness that made the original so memorable. The mischievous demon gives the audience a backstory to his former life, through a hilarious cutaway to an Italian film-noir dream sequence. Once a grave robber – although his vibe is much more used car salesman – he falls in love with cult leader Delores (Monica Bellucci). After a killer entrance in which she stitches herself back together, Belluci is off on an underwritten revenge tour that doesn’t give the actor enough to do.

In the film, Ryder and Ortega’s mother-daughter bond spans the generational gap without missing a calypso beat. Ortega is an easy fit as Astrid, given her role as Wednesday Addams in the Netflix series for which Burton was executive producer. For a younger audience that wasn’t around in the 1980s, Ortega serves as a spirit guide to the ghosts in the attic. 

Still sporting the same truly terrible bangs from the original, Ryder is caught here between a skull and a gravestone. Her daughter believes she’s a total fraud, and her boyfriend doesn’t care if she can see ghosts, as long as he can make money off them. Then there’s her artist mom, played again by O’Hara with charming self-centeredness. 

Willem Dafoe is a hilarious standout in the film’s menagerie of madness. As Wolf Jackson, a B-list action star who once played a detective, Dafoe in his turn as the ghostly top cop adds a burst of fun and frivolity, making the movie far more enjoyable whenever he is on screen.

At the sold-out screening I attended, fans showed up in costume, snatching up poster memorabilia and taking pictures to commemorate the moment. The movie is infused with enough of Burton’s beguiling gothic vibe to kick off the Halloween season, but the plot holes are large enough for the Great Pumpkin to fill. 

“Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” is rated PG-13 for violent content, macabre and bloody images, strong language, some suggestive material, and brief drug use. 

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One way to foil school shootings

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After the school shooting in Winder, Georgia, much of the attention has been on what failed. Most of all, officials acknowledge they knew about the troubled teen and had questioned him a year earlier. At the time, they said, they could not definitively connect him to threats posted online.

Yet this focus on how to better predict violence may mask a simpler approach to preventing it. A growing body of evidence shows that teaching empathy toward people who are troubled is more effective in curbing gun violence than trying to profile would-be assailants. And it taps into resources already at hand – neighbors, community leaders, and students.

“We don’t have to leave it up to the police to make sure our people are all right,” said Jahsani Peters, a high school senior in New York City who has worked at a community-based program countering violence. “We just try to help people see the good in life.”

Forty-one U.S. states now fund violence intervention programs. They rely on people within communities to defuse conflict through presence and listening. Such intervention has reduced gun violence by as much as 60%.

One way to foil school shootings

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A woman in Winder, Ga., holds a Bible as she mourns the students and teachers slain at Apalachee High School, Sept. 5.

After the school shooting in Winder, Georgia, on Wednesday, much of the attention has been on what failed. Most of all, federal and local officials acknowledge they knew about the troubled teen, who is accused of killing four people, and had questioned him a year earlier. At the time, they said, they could not definitively connect him to threats posted online.

Yet this focus on how to better predict violence may mask a simpler approach to preventing it. A growing body of evidence shows that teaching empathy toward people who are troubled is more effective in curbing gun violence than trying to profile would-be assailants. And it taps into resources already at hand – neighbors, community leaders, and students.

“We don’t have to leave it up to the police to make sure our people are all right,” said Jahsani Peters, a high school senior in New York City who has worked at a community-based program countering violence. “We just try to help people see the good in life. That there are other ways to handle problems without violence or having to raise your voice and get crazy with somebody,” he told Chalkbeat, an education journal.

While still rare, school shootings have risen sharply in recent years, but so have two other trends. Forty-one U.S. states now fund violence intervention programs. They rely on people within communities – often former perpetrators of gun violence and those directly affected by it – to defuse conflict through presence and listening. Such intervention has reduced gun violence by as much as 60%, according to the Center for American Progress.

A similar emphasis is finding its way into classrooms. A curriculum developed by the Harvard Graduate School of Education, for example, includes teaching caring and compassion starting in elementary school. Two recent international studies measured the social benefits of such learning.

One, a University of Galway study published in June, concluded that teaching empathy “enables individuals to relate to one another in ways that promote trust, care, and cooperation.” The other, in China, found that early lessons in empathy result in “mindfulness and caring for others.” One lasting effect from that, it noted, was a greater sensitivity toward people who appear to be isolated or outcast.

Predicting the next school shooting or identifying the next potential shooter may never be completely possible. But one strong defense is already plain. It involves seeing students, not as targets or vulnerable, but as able to help create a welcoming and safe environment in schools.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

God’s presence and healing power, here and now

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As we’re receptive to the spiritual light of God that is ever present, we find that troubles such as sickness dissolve.

God’s presence and healing power, here and now

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Today's Christian Science Perspective audio edition

People everywhere are looking for health and peace of mind, and many are finding it in the only place it can be found and stay secure – in the ever-present, infinite Love that is God.

Some years ago, I had a remarkable experience that was tangible proof to me that God heals. In March 2020, the week before the governor of my state instructed everyone to “shelter at home” as a result of the pandemic, I became quite ill with what I thought was a head cold but later learned were the symptoms of Covid. I worked to find healing through my own prayers, but after four days of worsening symptoms, I knew it was time to call a Christian Science practitioner for metaphysical treatment.

During the call, I listened carefully, receptively, as she reminded me of my spiritual origin and identity, and of the fact that no element of discord or disease – being unlike good, or God, who is All – could infect or contaminate me. As the reflection of God – which we all are – I was completely spiritual and safe in divine Love’s care. We were on the phone for only a few minutes.

I then walked into my bedroom to lie down. Suddenly, I had a tangible sense of God’s presence. The symptoms of illness lifted off me as if a heavy burden had been released. I was immensely grateful. I called the practitioner back immediately to let her know of this sudden turnaround resulting from her healing prayer.

In the Scriptures, the concepts of light and radiance are used when describing the divine presence. For instance, a burning bush appeared to Moses and was not consumed. In the book of Revelation, John speaks of the holy city, New Jerusalem, as having “no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to shine in it: for the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof” (21:23).

More than anyone, Christ Jesus felt the radiant presence of God. In the Christian Science textbook, “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,” Mary Baker Eddy wrote, “The nature of Christianity is peaceful and blessed, but in order to enter into the kingdom, the anchor of hope must be cast beyond the veil of matter into the Shekinah into which Jesus has passed before us; and this advance beyond matter must come through the joys and triumphs of the righteous as well as through their sorrows and afflictions.”

She continued, “Like our Master, we must depart from material sense into the spiritual sense of being” (pp. 40-41). The term “shekinah” comes from the Hebrew word “shakan” (to dwell), and it is used to describe “the majestic presence or manifestation of God” (Kaufmann Kohler, Ludwig Blau, jewishencyclopedia.com).

It’s undeniable to me that this was what I had experienced. As my thought had opened and I had been receptive to the spiritual truths the practitioner was declaring, it was as if a veil had been lifted from thought, and I glimpsed that all true being is spiritual and eternal and reflects God’s perfection.

This necessary departure from material-mindedness – from the insistent belief that there is life in matter – occurs continually, as moment by moment we humbly listen for and accept the holy ideas of Truth, God. It is a divine demand, and one that anyone seeking healing in Christian Science can meet.

As I have considered this, I’ve come to realize the importance of Jesus’ solitary retreats into desert places and mountaintops to commune with God. If Jesus needed to take time away from the noise and busyness of the day to be alone with God, then I certainly do. That’s true for anyone who wishes to follow the path Jesus pointed out and do the healing works he did – and even greater works.

In his Sermon on the Mount, Jesus instructed his followers, “When you pray, go away by yourself, shut the door behind you, and pray to your Father in private. Then your Father, who sees everything, will reward you” (Matthew 6:6, New Living Translation).

During Jesus’ alone times with God, in prayer, he must have felt divine Love’s presence – the glory of the Lord shining round about him – and its transforming power. His prayers were not superficial pleas to an unknown God but strong affirmations of our spiritual identity and unity with our divine Parent. In the same way, we can feel and know God today.

Adapted from an article published in the March 2024 issue of The Christian Science Journal.

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Extended reach

Maja Smiejkowska/Reuters
Ian Seidenfeld of the United States competes against Matteo Parenzan of Italy in the table tennis class 6 semifinal during the 2024 Paris Paralympics Sept. 5, 2024. Mr. Parenzan won the match and will compete for gold Sept. 6, while Mr. Seidenfeld took the bronze. According to a report from Team USA, Mr. Seidenfeld is the only competitor who uses a wooden extension when facing opponents who choose to deploy short serves.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for engaging with your Monitor Daily today. For tomorrow, we’re working on a couple of pieces about immigration. One looks at efforts to confront human traffickers in source points such as Guatemala. Can those steps succeed? And on our “Why We Wrote This” podcast, we talk to Denver-based writer Sarah Matusek about her coverage of immigration issues, and how she works to keep fairness at the fore.

More issues

2024
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