The McGill Tribune TUESDAY, JANUARY 21 2020 | VOL. 39 | ISSUE 15
McGILLTRIBUNE.COM | @McGILLTRIBUNE
Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University
EDITORIAL
FEATURE
GAME REPORT
International issues have on-campus consequences
The witching hour arrives in Montreal
One point victory lifts Marlet basketball over Citadins
PG. 8-9
PG. 15
PG. 5
(Marie Saadeh / The McGill Tribune)
Hundreds protest against Bill 21 at the Ministry of Education
PG. 4
McGill is not an “Antisemitic University” Jonah Fried Contributor Over the winter break, I was excited to talk with my family and friends about McGill, but defending the university’s name against accusations of “antisemitism”
was not what I had in mind. Instead of sitting down to the ordinary Shabbat dinner with loved ones, I stumbled into defending a McGill on trial, and I did my best as its attorney: But it seemed like the case was already closed. The Times of Israel had already published a piece lamenting an “antisemitic” Students’ Society of McGill University
(SSMU) resolution, while Bari Weiss, New York Times Opinion Staff Editor, mentioned the incident in a column about the rise of world wide antisemitism. As a Jewish student representative to SSMU, seeing the issue so misrepresented in the press was jarring to say the least. PG. 6
Rapid urbanization is driving biodiversity decline
Research findings expose gaps in knowledge of urban growth’s effects on biodiversity
Gwenyth Wren Contributor Humanity is currently experiencing an unprecedented era of urban growth. By 2030, more than 1.2 billion additional people are expected to live in cities, equivalent to building a city the size of New York every
six weeks. A group of international scientists, including Andrew Gonzalez, a professor in the McGill Department of Biology, surveyed over 922 studies on urban growth’s impacts on biodiversity. Their study, recently published in Nature, found that scientists are not studying the impacts of urban growth
in the right places: 72 per cent of studies of direct urban impacts on biodiversity are in high-income countries, while the natural habitat loss in lower-income countries, largely ignored by the scientific community, is much more severe. In essence, researchers are neglecting to study low-income urban growth. PG. 13