🚨 Do you wish to read one comprehensive article on
#Dog crisis 🚨 in India that conveys: The
#Chaos and Scale → The
#Biology → The Evolutionary Trap → The Social Inequity → The
#Behavioural Mechanism → The Legal Deadlock → The Solution. (Link to pre-print:
doi.org/10.32942/X25921).
I have just submitted my updated perspective, "The Indian Street
#Dog Crisis and Multispecies Coexistence in Tropical Urban Futures". This manuscript comes at a critical juncture, as the
#SupremeCourt of India navigates a deadlock between public safety and animal welfare.
Our argument is simple but uncomfortable: Kindness, when divorced from ecology, becomes a trap.
Here are the four pillars of our argument:
1). The Social Justice Imperative We explicitly argue that "kindness" is not economically neutral. In Indian cities, wealthy residents often "outsource" the risk of feeding—provisioning
#dogs in public spaces while commuting in private vehicles. Meanwhile, blue-collar workers, pedestrians, and cyclists face the disproportionate consequences of territorial aggression. This is not just an animal issue; it is an issue of urban equity.
2). The Evolutionary Trap We move beyond the "nuisance" debate to define this as a biological failure. By creating resource hotspots near high-traffic zones, we have created an "ecological trap". We are literally luring 60 million animals into conflict zones, turning the act of feeding into a trigger for vehicular trauma and aggression.
3). The Irony of Bureaucracy We highlight the paradox of well-intentioned policy. As seen in Figure 3 of the manuscript (a legal feeding board in a green zone), we are attempting to legislate ecology. Bureaucracy creates "feeding spots," but Biology dictates that these spots become territorial flashpoints that crowd-out native wildlife and endanger the
#dogs themselves.
4). Filling the
#Scientific Void The current judicial deadlock exists because we are operating in an "empirical vacuum". We cannot solve a 21st-century ecological crisis with sentiment alone. This paper offers the missing framework: linking Robert Trivers’ evolutionary theory to modern urban planning to show why our current "feed and forget" model is failing both
#humans and
#dogs.
It is time to move from reactive management to anticipatory urban ecology.
DBT/Wellcome Trust
@India_Alliance funded project hosted at
@NCBS_Bangalore and
@OxfordBiology.
#UrbanEcology #NatureCities #PublicHealth #StreetDogs #SciencePolicy #India #NCBS #Oxford