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The ‘great land reshuffle’ that’s transforming property rights | Aeon Essays

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As I cycle from downtown Chicago to my university’s campus, I pass over a complicated and consequential history with the land. Just over two centuries ago, the Chicago area was swampy, fur-trading land for Indigenous tribes. Most prominent among them were the Ojibwe, the Odawa and the Potawatomi, together known as the Council of the Three Fires. These tribes had collective rights to land and rotated hunting grounds. Much has changed since.

After war and disease weakened the tribes, the United States government claimed the grasslands, forests and, most crucially, the land around the Chicago River in the wake of the War of 1812. It then passed into the hands of the state of Illinois, followed by a canal commission, which in turn sold it to private buyers. As I set out on my bike, I ride through a public park that was once a frontier US Army post and later became a dumping ground for charred ruins following the Great Fire of 1871. I then pedal past the site of skirmishes between the US Army and local tribes, and between a set of beaches and neighbourhoods where racialised battles for land zoning and development played out between Black people, white people and the city since the time of the Great Migration. Arriving at my campus, I reach land owned by the University of Chicago that was bought in the late 1800s by the department-store owner Marshall Field, who subsequently donated it to John D Rockefeller to host the university, founded in 1891.

It can be easy to forget the significance of the ground beneath our feet – and how much it has shaped the societies we live in. For most people, their home is their house – or their landlord’s. It is bought, sold or rented along with the land underneath it, passing between families over the years. But at some point – and probably several times – there have been abrupt changes to that seemingly permanent arrangement. Land tenure can be profoundly reshuffled. It has in the past and it will be again in the future.

As a political scientist, I’ve studied how land power has shaped societies all over the world. From Ireland to Italy, from Chile to South Africa, and across the US West, struggles over ownership and land use are etched in family histories and have determined the fate of nations. In windswept mountains near Cuzco, Peru, for instance, I met a woman who recounted growing up as a forced worker on a private estate with colonial roots: in her 20s, that land was seized by the government and passed over to the community, which later broke it up into family plots. Another man I spoke with recently in South Africa told me of his parents’ forced displacement under apartheid. Their land was planted by a sugar company, but in 2008, it was returned to the community, who now lease it to the same company. And in Patagonia National Park in southern Chile, I recently hiked through grass-covered steppe that had, in the course of a century, passed from a natural, episodically transited landscape to an enclosed private ranch, a multi-family government cooperative, back to a private ranch, and then into the hands of a philanthropist who passed it to the government for conservation.

Today we are in the middle of a ‘great reshuffle’ of land. Over the past two centuries, nearly every society has reallocated land ownership and property rights. And because of the power that land confers to those who hold it, this reshuffling has set societies on distinct trajectories of development. It’s helped some countries become more egalitarian and productive, whereas for others it has embedded racial hierarchies, deep inequalities and economic stagnation.

The global population bubble and climate change will amplify the reshuffling, and a picture of how that will happen is starting to emerge. Land will become ever scarcer and more valuable as populations increase – and the opposite could occur in the next century as the world’s population plummets. Meanwhile, a changing climate will make vast areas of land more attractive and productive while rendering other areas uninhabitable. Amid these changes, the question is how to reshuffle land well. One thing is clear: centuries-old approaches to property rights and ownership are not up to that task.

Around 10,000 BCE, the global population was somewhere between that of modern San Diego (1.4 million) and New York City (8.5 million). In all prior human history, small groups had roamed Earth with access to abundant resources, so there was no need to fixate on land ownership. That changed with the rise of farming and sedentary communities. Permanent agricultural towns were established by around 5000 BCE, and in some places even earlier. For the first time, entire settlements of people could sustain themselves through crops and animal husbandry. Land power was born.

The control of land meant the control of production and surplus, and the ability to accumulate status, wealth and power through domination, conquest and the creation of social rules. Land soon became a focus of competition. Accordingly, there are records of land conflict dating to ancient Mesopotamia, as well as land disputes from the Roman Empire.

The still relatively small human population around the start of the Common Era – somewhere between 150 million and 300 million – multiplied to 1 billion around 1800. Land competition accelerated along with its relative scarcity. Entering the 19th century, landholding had become even more unequal in many parts of the world. From the sprawling and abusive haciendas of Latin America to lord/peasant societies in Europe and Russia and deeply unfair landlord/tenant systems in East Asia, many of the world’s wealthiest regions operated on exploitation and coercion. On my paternal side, my ancestors’ lives were caught, like many others’, at the bottom of this hierarchy, toiling under serfdom in parts of Austro-Hungarian and Russian-occupied Poland.

Over the next two centuries, states became strong and organised enough to appropriate, reallocate and reassign land at a massive scale and with considerable precision. Social tensions boiled over into conflict. The result was a dramatic upheaval in who holds the land in societies across the globe.

Within a generation, families were sending their children to schools rather than the fields

This great reshuffle began in different ways. In some cases, it entailed the appropriation of Indigenous lands on the part of settlers. Other times, it involved stripping large landowners of their property and granting it to peasants, whether collectively, in cooperatives or as individuals. My ancestors in southern Poland won a small plot of land – presumably taken from the local noble family – through the 1848 revolutions that swept across Europe.

Land reshuffling rewired nearly every country on Earth and set societies on new trajectories of development, race and gender relations, and treatment of the environment. For some societies, that meant becoming more egalitarian. In the years after the Second World War, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan all adopted sweeping programmes that transferred land from landlords to their tenants in small, family-sized plots. The governments of these countries followed that up with generous subsidies. Within a generation, families were sending their children to schools rather than the fields. Urbanisation and industrialisation followed, vaunting these nations to the forefront of the global economy.

Far more countries stumbled. Following the end of China’s civil war in the late 1940s, the Communist Party seized all private land in the country, nationalised it, and then formed large land collectives that incorporated some 430 million people. It was one of the largest experiments in land reshuffling in human history. And it wreaked havoc as China’s forests were felled and underproductivity in agriculture drove the Great Famine. Walking through the fields of a place like Dali in Yunnan province today, as I have done, paints a different picture of productivity that emerged only after China broke up its collectives and allowed families to farm specific plots of land.

In South Africa, land ownership was dictated by apartheid. The government forcibly removed Black people from their land and dumped them in low-quality areas removed from centres of economic and political power. White people then appropriated the land for themselves. By the end of apartheid, the white minority, which comprised about 11 per cent of the population, held 86 per cent of the country’s farmland.

In the US, land reshuffling had varied consequences. The displacement of Indigenous communities and reallocation of their land to settlers set the stage for a radical experiment in democracy among smallholding settlers in New England, the slavery and plantation system in the South, and a system of Indian reservations in the West. When I did fieldwork at the Agua Caliente Reservation that centres on Palm Springs, California in late 2023, tribal members pointed to repeated land grabs as the root of attempts by outsiders to break down tribal cohesion and cultural preservation.

Around the world today, people are living and breathing the consequences of how the great reshuffle has rewired societies – from resource depletion to racism, gender inequalities, prosperity levels, and the global pecking order. In the coming decades, addressing problems linked to these shifts will require recognising their origins and crafting policies that turn land into a force for positive social change.

After all, land is still the world’s most valuable asset, despite the economic rotation toward technology and manufacturing in advanced economies. Growing populations and the need to feed them and generate resources for them have driven a spiralling demand for land. This is true even in urban areas, where land prices typically skyrocket. Pressure on the land is only going to increase in the coming decades. More land reshuffles are coming.

The same drivers of the onset of the great reshuffle are still operating. Countries like Brazil, Canada, Colombia and South Africa continue reshuffling their land today to address land pressure and to redress prior actions such as the forcible dispossession of Indigenous groups. South Africa, for instance, is still working to return millions of acres of land to meet the demands of Black people dispossessed under apartheid. In late 2023, I worked with several beneficiary Black communities in the Tenbosch area of Mpumalanga province whose members bear witness to both the brutality of apartheid-era displacement and the transformative power of land restitution. Their story is one of thousands.

Meanwhile, the global population is growing, crowding the land and raising calls for governments to accommodate the landless. Towards the end of the century, demographers expect the global population will reach a peak of around 10 billion people – a tenfold increase since 1800. However, growth will be uneven. The populations of countries like Japan and China are already shrinking. Meanwhile, sub-Saharan Africa is anticipating a population boom that will dramatically increase pressure on agricultural land, echoing events in Europe several hundred years ago and in Latin America a century ago. Nigeria, with a fertility rate of 5.2 births per woman, could surpass China’s population before 2100. And the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia and Tanzania could become among the 10 most populous countries on Earth.

Climate change is beginning to drive a new surge of migration and competition over land

Popular demands to reshuffle land and political desires to do so will be overwhelming in these countries. It’s already happening in conflict areas like Sudan. Some decisions could have salutary effects, shifting land from illegitimate elites into the hands of families and clans that face insecure land tenure or land displacement. Reshuffling, however, could just as easily become weaponised: a violent economic tool of ethnic conflict or political domination.

And just as the world is going through its population crunch, a potent new factor – climate change – is beginning to drive a new surge of migration and competition over land. As the planet warms and resources dwindle, land is poised to change hands and uses at an increasing rate.

The future lies to the north. Latitudes north of the 45th parallel make up only 15 per cent of the world’s surface area but have 29 per cent of its ice-free land and are very sparsely populated. Even more northern land is set to shed its ice and permafrost in the coming decades and become more temperate and productive. Much of this land is owned directly by governments and Indigenous communities, often with colliding claims; little of it is privately owned.

Canada and Russia, the world’s two largest northerly countries, will undergo the most dramatic changes. Agriculture could dramatically expand through longer growing seasons, warmer temperatures and the melting of millions of acres of permafrost. One recent climate model shows Canada gaining 4.2 million square kilometres of arable land suitable for growing crops like wheat, corn and potatoes by 2080 – a fourfold increase of its current stock of suitable land. A comparable amount of land will become newly arable in Russia, positioning these two countries as the world’s key breadbaskets of the future. At the same time, these changes will threaten expansive boreal forests and the forestry industry.

The more temperate climate and increased economic activity in these countries will drive population growth and migration, placing pressure to reshuffle lands. In Canada, 89 per cent of all land is ‘Crown land’ – publicly owned by the federal government and provincial governments. Indigenous First Nations people lay claim to large portions, so tensions could boil over as private interest strengthens.

A growing share of Alaska’s land will become arable within decades

It would also come at a time when Canada is aiming to conserve more of its land through a new set of national parks. Such land conservation is part of a growing trend. The Chilean government, for instance, in 2018 created a new system of 17 national parks located over 2,800 kilometres between the southern port city of Puerto Montt and the southern tip of South America at Cabo de Hornos. The parks system – including Patagonia National Park, a rugged and windswept patchwork of mountains and grasslands that I recently visited to document this transformation – covers nearly 30 million acres of land. From 2014 to 2018, Chile went from protecting just 4 per cent of its land and sea area to protecting 36 per cent. Meanwhile, China now aims to create the world’s largest national park system by 2035, and countries like Norway are poised to expand their national parklands.

In 2016, the Russian president Vladimir Putin began a programme to encourage settlement in Russia’s Far East, much of which is anticipated to gain from climate change. The Far-Eastern Hectare programme, similar to the US Homestead Act of 1862 but double in size, opened hundreds of millions of acres of public land to prospective settlers. So long as they stay there for five years, they can gain a small plot of land and a grant to work it. Although it had a slow start, more than 100,000 Russians had won grants as of 2023, and Putin started a similar Arctic Hectare programme in 2021 to settle Arctic regions. Both of these programmes could expand in the coming years and rewire land ownership in Russia’s periphery, while simultaneously posing a threat to Indigenous territorial claims.

As for the US, the picture in Alaska parallels that in Canada. The US federal government owns 61 per cent of Alaska’s land, and a growing share will become arable within decades. With Indigenous claims to a large portion, there will be campaigns to reallocate this land – for instance by privatising more federal land – as it becomes more attractive for settlement and economic activity.

And alongside this thawing, governments, private interests and, where present, Indigenous communities, are poised to clash over sparsely populated territories like Greenland and Antarctica with weak, absent or transitional sovereignty. Indeed, under President Donald Trump, that has already begun.

While looming northern land reshuffles will catch outsized attention, climate change will also foster internal reshuffles on the land in countries across the globe. That dynamic could be scary and destabilising, but it is also an opportunity. Changing land relationships and migration patterns associated with climate change present a possibility to put land in service of society in ways that have rarely been attempted in human history.

The coming global land reshuffle will produce winners and losers, but it can be positive-sum if we make it so. Reshuffling the nature of property rights must be a cornerstone of those efforts.

Over the past few centuries, Western notions of individual, exclusive and alienable property spread across the world via colonialism and globalisation, replacing more complex and conditional rights to land. However, in recent decades, a range of different approaches have emerged.

One approach entails a shift toward ‘layered’ property rights. Countries like Mexico and Peru now recognise community territorial claims over large areas of land while also allowing for private property. Members of Mexican communal lands that I have spoken to in community meetings, on street corners and at their homes in the southern states of Oaxaca and Chiapas can seamlessly and readily identify individual versus communal property within their communities, and recognise the different value and purposes of each. The same is true in remote Indigenous villages I’ve hiked through near the peaks of the Andes in Peru.

Property owners can voluntarily enter into legal agreements that limit land use for certain activities

Australia in recent decades has recognised the concept of ‘native title’ over land on the part of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and has allowed this concept to overlap with government leases of land to private pastoralists. The US, in the landmark 2020 case McGirt v Oklahoma, recognised tribal jurisdiction over certain criminal cases in a massive swathe of eastern Oklahoma. These examples demonstrate the flexibility in delegating a variety of rights and autonomies to different occupants and interest-holders in the same land.

Another approach involves restricting individual property rights for greater social purposes. For instance, property owners can voluntarily enter into legal agreements known as conservation easements that limit land use for certain activities (like draining wetlands or clearing land for grazing). Government agencies and conservation organisations like land trusts (eg, the Nature Conservancy) engage in these agreements with private landowners at an increasingly large scale – more than 30 million acres across the US alone.

There will inevitably be mistakes and growing pains associated with such approaches. But these efforts will be increasingly important if we are going to manage future land reshuffling to the benefit of societies as a whole, and without systemic conflict. Everyone from Aboriginal Australian leaders to Minnesotan farmers have expressed excitement to me about this future under new land arrangements.

In the 22nd century, the great reshuffle will shift once again. There will be major changes in the size of human populations, the climate, technology and, inevitably, in politics. The result will be new relationships with the land that could look foreign to what we experience today. Experiments with new forms of property rights will need to go mainstream in order to accommodate shifting populations and climate change in an orderly and equitable fashion.

There is considerable uncertainty in population projections beyond 2100 but, if fertility rates continue their steady decline, the several-millennia-old human population boom is most likely going to bust. If the world converges to today’s average low fertility rate in East Asia, the 22nd century would be one of rapid depopulation, tracing back to some 2 billion people.

Having grown up in the suburbs of Detroit, I have seen firsthand how population decline can hollow out a city. At its peak in 1950, Detroit’s population was 1.85 million. It has since declined to barely over 600,000. In 2013, this tipped the city into the largest municipal bankruptcy in US history. The Detroit Land Bank Authority now owns a vast array of vacant property that it seeks to offload, in part through a programme that offers residents vacant lots for a mere $250.

In the 22nd century, many cities may trace Detroit’s trajectory. If housing remains dense, city footprints will have to shrink dramatically. Meanwhile, in the countryside, there will be far more land to go around, but that land may be degraded if it was not adequately protected.

A significant portion of the world’s population could end up as renters

The climate picture in the 22nd century will also drastically alter where people live on the land and how they relate to it. Even if emissions slow considerably, global temperatures and sea levels will rise, and weather patterns will be more extreme. As we explored earlier, a thawing North will continue to open up to agriculture, but land elsewhere will undergo drastic change. Arid and drought-prone areas like northeastern Brazil, the US Southwest and the African Sahel will become increasingly hot and pose a challenge for human livelihoods. Crop yields in the US Southwest are already declining and farmers are struggling to access water for their fields. Some are giving up and fallowing or leaving the land. Meanwhile, low-lying coastal areas in places like Florida and Bangladesh will disappear, as well as entire island nations like the Maldives.

That changing land use will inform the political landscape. Some countries may trace the path that Canada envisions for itself: welcoming immigrants into a dynamic economy. An influential group of Canadian leaders are already organising around an idea known as the Century Initiative that aims to triple the country’s population by 2100, largely by supercharging immigration. Other countries may wall themselves off to protect existing landholdings, resources and wealth from outsiders.

Growing wealth inequality could directly impact who owns the land, too. Powerful multinational companies have increasingly amassed land in order to secure their supply chains, crowding out local populations. If wealthy individuals and investors buy up land at a large scale, a significant portion of the world’s population could end up as renters, mimicking patterns of concentrated large landholding and widespread landlessness that prevailed prior to the onset of the great reshuffle.

Amid all these climatic and economic changes, future generations will make choices once again about whether to spread out on the land or to concentrate in shrinking cities. Land will once more undergo a radical reshuffle in either scenario.

If humanity is to flourish, the next century and beyond will again require a rethink of land relationships. From their origins several centuries ago to their global spread in recent decades, notions of exclusive, individual and alienable private property have gone hand in hand with population growth and land reshuffling. That will not be a sustainable way to pass through the bursting of the population bubble and impending climate change.

If the next chapter of the great reshuffle is to go well, we must incorporate considerations of community, prosperity, dignity and the environment. This isn’t so radical as it sounds. I see glimpses of this vision, and its advocates are already emerging. The ground beneath our feet may always be shifting, but by rethinking traditional notions of who owns the land, we can approach the future on a firmer footing.

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Haitians face record hunger as gang violence grips country in throes of economic crisis | AP News

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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — More than half of Haiti’s population is expected to experience severe hunger through June, and another 8,400 people living in makeshift shelters are projected to starve, according to a new report released this week.

Relentless gang violence and an ongoing economic collapse is to blame, according to an analysis from the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, a multi-partner U.N. initiative that analyzes food insecurity and malnutrition around the world.

It noted that the number of those facing severe hunger increased by more than 300,000 people to some 5.7 million since last year.

Among those going hungry is Jackie Jean-Jacques, his wife and their three sons, who lost their home to gang violence and have lived in a crowded makeshift shelter for more than a year.

“There are days where the kids have to live on sugar water and bread,” he said. “It hurts me to see that.”

Jean-Jacques, 52, used to work as a bus driver but could no longer afford to rent the bus or buy gasoline. Besides, he worries that one day gangs would open fire on his public transportation vehicle like they have on others.

Meanwhile, his wife sells small items like plastic cups and lunch boxes on the street.

“This is not enough to feed us,” he said.

Dwindling aid

While food and potable water were commonly distributed at shelters, aid began to dwindle after the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump in late February decided to terminate 90% of USAID foreign aid contracts.

“Since March 2025, funding has no longer been guaranteed,” according to the report issued Monday.

It said that from August 2024 to February 2025, nearly 977,000 Haitians received humanitarian food aid monthly, although rations have been reduced by up to half.

“The assistance you get is not enough,” Jean-Jacques said.

UNICEF said Thursday that an estimated 2.85 million children — one quarter of Haiti’s entire child population — “are facing consistently high levels of food insecurity.”

The agency warned that it faces a 70% funding shortfall. It said it has helped more than 4,600 children this year with severe acute malnutrition, which represents only 4% of the estimated 129,000 children expected to need life-saving treatment this year.

Meanwhile, the U.N.’s World Food Program said it urgently needs $53.7 million to “continue its life-saving operations in Haiti over the next six months.”

“Right now, we’re fighting to just hold the line on hunger,” Wanja Kaaria, WFP’s country director in Haiti, said in a statement Thursday.

‘I can barely feed them’

In 2014, only 2% of Haiti’s population was food insecure, with gang violence largely under control and most people enjoying the successful spring harvests from the previous year, according to a previous report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification.

Hunger at that time affected mostly those in poor rural areas.

But in 2016, Hurricane Matthew battered Haiti as a Category 4 storm, destroying crops and livelihoods.

By 2018, more than 386,000 Haitians were experiencing severe hunger, a number that has since grown to an estimated 5.7 million.

“This is very alarming,” said Martin Dickler, Haiti director for the nonprofit CARE. “It really is an extremely serious food crisis, and Haiti is one of the worst in the world.”

The growing hunger coincides with a surge in the price of goods, with inflation reaching more than 30% in recent months.

Experts also blame gang violence, with gunmen controlling the main roads leading in and out of the capital, Port-au-Prince, disrupting the transportation of goods from the countryside.

Jean Rose-Bertha, a single, 40-year-old mother of two boys, said they have lived almost a year at a makeshift shelter after gangs chased them from their home.

“I can barely feed them. I sometimes do things I’m not supposed to do,” she said, explaining that she prostitutes herself on occasion.

Dickler said women and girls have been disproportionately affected by the crisis, facing greater obstacles in accessing both food and livelihoods..

“They are left to manage the daily family survival,” he said. “In food crises, women often eat least and last.”

___

Coto reported from San Juan, Puerto Rico.

____

Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

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U.S.-born man held for ICE under Florida's new anti-immigration law • Florida Phoenix

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Juan Carlos Lopez-Gomez, a 20-year-old U.S. citizen, was being held in the Leon County Jail Thursday, charged with illegally entering Florida as an “unauthorized alien” — even as a supporter waved his U.S. birth certificate in court.

A Florida Highway Patrol trooper arrested Lopez-Gomez after a traffic stop in which he was a passenger. The 20-year-old is set to remain in jail for the next 48 hours, waiting for federal immigration officials to pick him up despite his first-degree misdemeanor charge being dropped.

His mother, Sebastiana Gomez-Perez, burst into tears at the sight of her son, who appeared virtually for his first hearing at the Leon County Courthouse. She left the courtroom distraught because she could do nothing to help her son, who was born and lives in Grady County, Georgia.

“I wanted to tell them, ‘Where are you going to take him? He is from here,'” his mother told the Phoenix in Spanish moments after exiting the courtroom. “I felt immense helplessness because I couldn’t do anything, and I am desperate to get my son out of there.”

She continued through tears: “It hurts so much. I’m sorry, I can’t.”

A lieutenant working in the Leon County Jail didn’t allow the mother to see Lopez-Gomez on Thursday and told her officials were working with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on how to proceed. A Phoenix reporter accompanied Gomez-Perez to the jail.

Leon County Judge LaShawn Riggans held Lopez-Gomez’s birth certificate up to the light after community advocate Silvia Alba silently waved the document in the courtroom.

“In looking at it, and feeling it, and holding it up to the light, the court can clearly see the watermark to show that this is indeed an authentic document,” Riggans said.

Based on her inspection of his birth certificate and Social Security card, Riggans said she found no probable cause for the charge. However, the state prosecutor insisted the court lacked jurisdiction over Lopez-Gomez’s release because U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement had formally asked the jail to hold him.

“This court does not have any jurisdiction other than what I’ve already done,” Riggans said.

Riggans said she was very sorry as Lopez-Gomez’s mother left.

‘I can’t do anything for their brother’

The 20-year-old’s first language is Tzotzil, a Mayan language, and he took a long pause when he was asked if he wanted to hire a private attorney or obtain a public defender. He lived in Mexico from the time he was 1-year-old until four years ago, when he returned to Georgia, his mother told the Phoenix.

The Homeland Security Investigations Office in Tampa issued the 48-hour ICE detainer on Thursday. An ICE officer whose name and phone number appear in the detainer refused to speak with the Phoenix.

“He hasn’t committed a crime for them to hold him, that’s what I don’t understand. I’m feeling bad because my daughters are asking me how their brother is. It hurts because I can’t do anything for their brother,” she said.

At issue is a recently passed law that a federal judge has temporarily barred the state from enforcing, further calling into question the validity of his arrest, the charge, and detention. Gov. Ron DeSantis signed SB 4-C into law on Feb. 14, and U.S. District Court Judge Kathleen Williams blocked its enforcement on April 4.

The law makes it a misdemeanor for undocumented immigrants over age 18 to “knowingly” enter Florida “after entering the United States by eluding or avoiding examination or inspection by immigration officers.”

Two other men who were in the car with Lopez-Gomez, the driver and another passenger, also had their first appearances on the same charges on Thursday. The driver was also charged with driving without a license.

The state trooper pulled over the car Lopez-Gomez was in because the driver was going 78 mph in a 65 mph zone, according to the arrest report. Lopez-Gomez gave his Georgia state ID to the trooper, who wrote in his report that Lopez-Gomez said he was in the country illegally.

Wednesday marked the second time Lopez-Gomez has been arrested. The Grady County Sheriff’s office took him into custody on Sunday and charged him with driving under the influence, his mother said. ICE also requested that the Georgia jail hold Lopez-Gomez, but he won release after his family showed officials his birth certificate and Social Security card, Gomez-Perez said.

Thomas Kennedy, a policy analyst for the Florida Immigrant Coalition, met Gomez-Perez at the courthouse. He said Lopez-Gomez’s case is exactly what his organization has been warning lawmakers would happen.

“It was just really sad seeing the mother distraught over her son, and the fact that she acknowledged that this is very likely a case of racial profiling against a U.S. citizen who can’t speak English,” he said in a phone interview with the Phoenix.

The Georgia Recorder, a partner of Florida Phoenix, has submitted a public records request to obtain more information about his arrest Sunday. This story was updated with information from the arrest report at 4:55 p.m. 

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Last updated 5:10 p.m., Apr. 17, 2025

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A woman's greatest enemy? A lack of time to herself | Brigid Schulte | The Guardian

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A few months ago, as I struggled to carve out time in my crowded days for writing, a colleague suggested I read a book about the daily rituals of great artists. But instead of offering me the inspiration I’d hoped for, what struck me most about these creative geniuses – mostly men – was not their schedules and daily routines, but those of the women in their lives.

Their wives protected them from interruptions; their housekeepers and maids brought them breakfast and coffee at odd hours; their nannies kept their children out of their hair. Martha Freud not only laid out Sigmund’s clothes every morning, she even put the toothpaste on his toothbrush. Marcel Proust’s housekeeper, Celeste, not only brought him his daily coffee, croissants, newspapers and mail on a silver tray, but was always on hand whenever he wanted to chat, sometimes for hours. Some women are mentioned only for what they put up with, like Karl Marx’s wife – unnamed in the book – who lived in squalor with the surviving three of their six children while he spent his days writing at the British Museum.

Gustav Mahler married a promising young composer named Alma, then forbade her from composing, saying there could be only one in the family. Instead, she was expected to keep the house utterly silent for him. After his midday swim, he’d whistle for Alma to join him on long, silent walks while he composed in his head. She’d sit for hours on a branch or in the grass, not daring to disturb him. “There’s such a struggle going on in me!” Alma wrote in her diary. “And a miserable longing for someone who thinks OF ME, who helps me to find MYSELF! I’ve sunk to the level of a housekeeper!”

Unlike the male artists, who moved through life as if unfettered time to themselves were a birthright, the days and life trajectories of the handful of female artists featured in the book were often limited by the expectations and duties of home and care. George Sand always worked late at night, a practice that started when she was a teenager and needed to take care of her grandmother. Starting out, Francine Prose’s writing day was defined by the departure and return of her children on the school bus. Alice Munro wrote in the “slivers” of time she could find between housekeeping and childrearing. And Maya Angelou got away from the pull of home by leaving it altogether, checking herself into an unadorned hotel room to think, read and write.

Even Anthony Trollope, who famously wrote 2,000 words before 8am every morning, most likely learned the habit from his mother, who began writing at age 53 to support her sick husband and their six children. She rose at 4am and finished work in time to serve the family breakfast.

I think of all the books, paintings, music, scientific discoveries, philosophy I learned about in school – almost all by men. The conductor Zubin Mehta once said, “I just don’t think women should be in an orchestra,” as if they didn’t have the temperament, or the talent. (Blind auditions put an end to that notion.) I think of an interview Patti Scialfa gave on how difficult it was for her to write the music for her solo album because her kids kept interrupting her and demanding her time in a way that they never would of their father, Bruce Springsteen. And it strikes me: it’s not that women haven’t had the talent to make their mark in the world of ideas and art. They’ve never had the time.

Women’s time has been interrupted and fragmented throughout history, the rhythms of their days circumscribed by the sisyphean tasks of housework, childcare and kin work – keeping family and community ties strong. If what it takes to create are long stretches of uninterrupted, concentrated time, time you can choose to do with as you will, time that you can control, that’s something women have never had the luxury to expect, at least not without getting slammed for unseemly selfishness.

Even today, around the globe, with so many women in the paid labor force, women still spend at least twice as much time as men doing housework and childcare, sometimes much more. One study of 32 families in Los Angeles found that the uninterrupted leisure time of most mothers lasted, on average, no more than 10 minutes at a stretch. And in mapping the daily lives of academics, the sociologist Joya Misra and her colleagues found that the work days of the female professors were much longer than their male colleagues, once you factored in all their unpaid labor at home. Even so, she found that the men and women she studied spent about the same amount of time at their paid work. But the women’s time at work, too, was interrupted and fragmented, chopped up with more service work, mentoring and teaching. The men spent more of their work days in long stretches of uninterrupted time to think, research, write, create and publish to make their names, advance their careers and get their ideas out into the world.

In his Theory of the Leisure Class, Thorstein Veblen wrote that throughout history the people who had the ability to choose and control their time were high-status men. He dismissed women on page two, writing that they, along with the servants and the slaves, have always been responsible for the drudge work that enables those high-status men to think their great thoughts. Feminist researchers have argued that women have often had, at most, “invisible leisure” – enjoyable, but productive and socially sanctioned, activities like quilting bees, canning parties or book groups. Yet pure leisure, making time just for oneself, is nothing short of a courageous act of radical and subversive resistance. Easier to do, one researcher joked, if, like the writer, composer, philosopher and mystic Hildegard of Bingen, you became a nun.

Feminist researchers have also found that many women don’t feel that they deserve long stretches of time to themselves, the way men do. They feel they have to earn it. And the only way to do that is to get to the end of a To Do list that never ends: the chores of the day, as Melinda Gates writes in her new book, killing the dreams of a lifetime. Indeed, I’ve been trying to carve out time to think and write this essay for more than four months. Every single time I’ve sat down to start, I’ve gotten a panicked call or email from my husband, son or daughter; my mother, dealing with the strange frontier and endless paperwork of the newly widowed; a credit card company; or a mechanic about some emergency or other that requires my immediate attention to stave off certain disaster.

I remember interviewing psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, famed for identifying the state of flow, the peak human experience when one is so absorbed in a meaningful task that time effectively disappears. It’s the state that artists and thinkers say is a requirement for creating anything of value. I asked him if his research explored whether women had as much opportunity to get into flow as men. He thought for a moment, then told me a story of a woman who lost track of time as she ironed her husband’s shirts.

The poet Eleanor Ross Taylor lived her life in the shadow of her husband, the Pulitzer prize-winning novelist, short story writer and professor Peter Taylor. “Over the years, many times I would say to poems, ‘Go away, I don’t have time now,’” she told an interviewer in 1997. “But that was part laziness. If you really want to write, you can. I did keep the house scrubbed and waxed and that sort of thing.”

I feel such a sense of loss when I think of the great, unwritten poems that took a backseat to polished floors. And for a long time, I thought the expectation that others be tended to first and the floors be polished and that she was the one who was supposed to keep them that way was what kept those untold stories coiled inside her, compressed, as Maya Angelou writes, to the point of pain. But I wonder if it isn’t also that women feel they don’t deserve time to themselves, or enough of it that comes in unbroken stretches. I wonder if we also feel we don’t deserve to tell our untold stories, that they may not be as worth listening to.

The writer VS Naipaul claimed that no woman writer was his match, that women’s writing is too “sentimental”, their worldview too “narrow” – because, you know, men’s lives are the default for the human experience. And I’ve often wondered: would a woman who’d written a carefully observed six-volume novel based on her own life have received the same attention and international acclaim as the Norwegian writer Karl Ove Knausgaard, author of My Struggle?

Virginia Woolf once imagined what would have become of Shakespeare were he born a woman, or if he’d had an equally gifted sister. (Think of the musical prodigy Nannerl Mozart, whose early compositions her brother Wolfgang praised as “beautiful” but have been lost, or remained coiled inside, unwritten, as she disappeared into an expected but loveless marriage.)

The female Shakespeare, Woolf wrote, would never have had the time or the ability to develop her genius – barred from school, told to mind the stew, expected to marry young, and beaten if she didn’t. In Woolf’s telling, Shakespeare’s sister, despite her great gifts, wound up crazy, dead, or shut up in a cottage in the woods and mocked as a witch.

But that wasn’t the end of the story. Woolf imagined that, in the future, a woman with genius would be born. Her ability to blossom – and the expectation that her voice, her vision, was worthy – would depend entirely on the world we decided to create. “She would come if we worked for her,” Woolf wrote.

I do not claim to have any particular genius. But sometimes, I dream that I’m sitting in a dusky room at a kitchen table across from another version of me, who sits, unbound by time, quietly drinking a cup of tea. “I wish you’d visit more often,” she tells me. And I wonder if that searing middle-of-the-night pain that, at times, settles like dread around my solar plexus may not only be because there’s so little unbroken time to tell my own untold stories, but because I’m afraid that what may be coiled inside may not be worth paying attention to anyway. Perhaps that’s what I don’t want to face in that dusky room I dream of.

I also wonder: what if we really did do the work to create a world where the sisters of Shakespeare and Mozart, or any woman, really, could thrive? What would happen if we decided women deserved the time to go to their dusky rooms and stay awhile at the kitchen table? What if we all decided to visit more often, drinking a quiet cup of tea with ourselves, listening to the coil of stories as they unspool, knowing they have value simply because they’re true? I’d love to see what happens next.

  • Brigid Schulte is a Pulitzer prize-winning journalist for The Washington Post and The Washington Post Magazine. She is also fellow at the New America Foundation. Overwhelmed by Brigid Schulte is published by Bloomsbury in March 2014

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NOAA workers report 'intentional chaos' during personnel cuts

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Some workers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration who were fired in February, rehired in March and then fired for a second time in April, say the agency has missed some salary payments during that period, and failed to have their health insurance plans restored or provide basic paperwork. 

“I have described it as intentional chaos and weaponized incompetence,” said Kayla Besong, who did not receive one of her last paychecks after she was initially fired from her job as a physical scientist at the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center. Besong, who issued tsunami alerts as part of her job, was later rehired and then fired again.

Another NOAA worker said she underwent a $70,000 surgery only to find out after the fact that she didn't have active insurance coverage.

The Department of Commerce and NOAA fired more than 600 probationary employees at the agency alone on Feb. 27, including hurricane hunters, meteorologists and storm modelers. In mid-March, judges ordered many of those workers to be reinstated and NOAA placed the workers on paid administrative leave instead. Last week, the Supreme Court paused some of the reinstatements and NOAA chose to fire the workers for a second time. 

The agency’s limited communication with its personnel has prevented workers from receiving unemployment benefits and left some forced to pay out-of-pocket charges for health care that should have been covered while under the agency's employ, according to the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), a nonprofit organization that supports environmental workers. Tim Whitehouse, the executive director of PEER, said he'd talked to about a dozen NOAA workers seeking help and reporting a variety of human resources issues.

Neither NOAA nor the Department of Commerce responded to an interview request and a request for comment from NBC News.  

Critics say these events illustrate how unprepared the federal agencies were to execute the mass firings the Trump administration has argued are necessary to make the federal government more efficient. 

“To me, it just points to a deliberate lack of planning,” Whitehouse said. “That’s the strategy. They don’t care. It’s creating all these problems for employees.”

PEER outlined its concerns in a Tuesday letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, claiming that "sloppy record-keeping" and "illegal actions" by the Department of Commerce were harming NOAA workers.

"These problems are not the result of the human resource staff at NOAA, but the failure of the Department of Commerce to follow the law and provide the necessary support," the letter said.

Three NOAA workers interviewed by NBC News said the only communication they have received directly from the agency during the legal back-and-forth are four short memos of legalese containing few details about the practical aspects of a job loss or reinstatement. The documents included two firing notices, a reinstatement notice and the agency's request for current contact information.

Several workers told NBC News they had to seek help from former colleagues still working at NOAA for basic human resources tasks and information, drawing current employees away from their typical responsibilities.

Andy Hazelton, a former hurricane modeling specialist, said he’s never received any formal separation paperwork or instructions from the agency. 

“There hasn’t been any communication about what’s happening. It’s a mess,” Hazelton said. “My paycheck had health premiums taken out, but they haven’t said our benefits have been restored. It’s not at all clear what’s happening.” 

After she was initially fired, Ya’el Seid-Green, a former special assistant in NOAA’s Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research, said she fretted over whether to postpone a hip surgery she had scheduled in January. 

The surgery was slated for April 9. Seid-Green reached out to a former supervisor and received an indication that health insurance would be restored while she was on administrative leave. Insurance premiums continued to be deducted from her paychecks. 

But, when Seid-Green got the surgery, which has an estimated cost of about $70,000, she learned that her insurance had not been active. The next day, on April 10, NOAA fired Seid-Green for a second time. 

“I know I’ll figure something out, but it has been very stressful,” Seid-Green said, adding that she's struggled to get answers on how to proceed from NOAA or the Department of Commerce.

Besong, meanwhile, said she was missing pay owed from when she was initially fired. She's not been able to rectify the error.

“I’ve had to reach out to my local office,” Besong said, referring to former colleagues. “They’re really doing the best they can and they’re not receiving any guidance.” 

Besong said she worries her firing will prevent her from getting a federal job in the future. Despite favorable reviews from supervisors, Besong will now have to disclose on federal job applications that she was terminated from a federal position. 

“Checking that box will greatly diminish or eliminate prospects of moving on to the next round,” said Whitehouse, who often deals with federal employment issues. 

Despite the confusion, Besong would like to return to her job as a physical scientist. 

“I was hoping when all this settles down in two to four years, I could reapply and get back to my job that way,” Besong said, adding that she now feared her application would be screened out through the federal job application website. “I don’t even know if I’ll make it through the USA JOBS hiring process now.” 

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Half the World’s People Depend on Rice. New Research Says Climate Change Will Make it Toxic - Inside Climate News

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Rice, the world’s most consumed grain, will become increasingly toxic as the atmosphere heats and as carbon dioxide emissions rise, potentially putting billions of people at risk of cancers and other diseases, according to new research published Wednesday in The Lancet. 

Eaten every day by billions of people and grown across the globe, rice is arguably the planet’s most important staple crop, with half the world’s population relying on it for the majority of its food needs, especially in developing countries.

But the way rice is grown—mostly submerged in paddies—and its highly porous texture means it can absorb unusually high levels of arsenic, a potent carcinogenic toxin that is especially dangerous for babies.

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Lewis Ziska, a plant physiologist and associate professor at Columbia University, has studied rice for three decades and has more recently focused his research on how climate change reduces nutrient levels across many staple crops, including rice. He teamed up with researchers from China and the U.S. to conduct a first-of-its-kind study, looking at how a range of rice species reacted to increases in temperature and carbon dioxide, both of which are projected to occur as more greenhouse gas emissions are released into the atmosphere as a result of human activities. The new study was published in The Lancet Planetary Health. 

“Previous work has focused on individual responses—some on CO2 and some on temperature, but not both, and not on a wide range of rice genetics,” Ziska said. “We knew that temperature by itself could increase levels, and carbon dioxide by a little bit. But when we put both of them together, then wow, that was really something we were not expecting. You’re looking at a crop staple that’s consumed by a billion people every day, and any effect on toxicity is going to have a pretty damn large effect.”

For six years, Ziska and a large team of research colleagues in China and the U.S. grew rice in controlled fields, subjecting it to varying levels of carbon dioxide and temperature. They found that when both increased, in line with projections by climate scientists, the amount of arsenic and inorganic arsenic in rice grains also went up.  

Arsenic is found naturally in some foods, including fish and shellfish, and in waters and soils.

Inorganic arsenic is found in industrial materials and gets into water—including water used to submerge rice paddies.  

Rice is easily inundated with weeds and other crops, but it has one advantage: It grows well in water. So farmers germinate the seeds, and when the seedlings are ready, plant them in wet soil. They then flood their fields, which suppresses weeds, but allows the rice to flourish. Rice readily absorbs the water and everything in it—including arsenic, either naturally occurring or not. Most of the world’s rice is grown this way.

The new research demonstrates that climate change will ramp up those levels. 

“What happens in rice, because of complex biogeochemical processes in the soil, when temperatures and CO2 go up, inorganic arsenic also does,” Ziska said. “And it’s this inorganic arsenic that poses the greatest health risk.”

Exposure to inorganic arsenic has been linked to cancers of the skin, bladder and lung, heart disease and neurological problems in infants. Research has found that in parts of the world with high consumption of rice, inorganic arsenic increases cancer risk.

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Ziska and his colleagues took the data from their field trials and then, based on per capita consumption data in seven of the top rice-consuming countries in Asia, projected how disease risk could also increase. They found that in those seven countries—Vietnam, Indonesia, China, Bangladesh, the Philippines, Myanmar and India—disease risk rose across the board.  

“There is a toxicological effect of climate change relative to one of the most consumed staples in the world,” Ziska said, “and the consumption is one of the hallmarks of whether you’re going to be vulnerable to that effect.”

Researchers have known that rice can contain high levels of arsenic and regulators have suggested exposure limits, especially for infants who are particularly vulnerable and tend to eat a lot of rice. This new research should put extra pressure on regulators to set more stringent thresholds, the authors say. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has never set limits for arsenic in foods.

The researchers also point to the potential of various interventions that could limit exposure to inorganic arsenic from rice, including developing strains of rice that are less absorbent and educating consumers about alternatives to rice.

“Rice has always been a food where arsenic is an issue, and climate change is making it worse,” said Keeve Nachman, one of the report’s authors, a professor at Johns Hopkins University and a longtime researcher of health risks related to food production and consumption. “This is one more reason to intervene—to control people’s exposure. The number one thing we can do is everything in our power to slow climate change.”

Perhaps you noticed: This story, like all the news we publish, is free to read. That’s because Inside Climate News is a 501c3 nonprofit organization. We do not charge a subscription fee, lock our news behind a paywall, or clutter our website with ads. We make our news on climate and the environment freely available to you and anyone who wants it.

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