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Environmental migrant

Environmental migrants are people who are forced to leave their home region due to sudden or long-term changes to their local or regional environment. These changes compromise their well-being or livelihood, and include increased drought, desertification, sea level rise, and disruption of seasonal weather patterns (such as monsoons[1]). Though there is no uniform, clear-cut definition of environmental migration, the idea is gaining attention as policy-makers and environmental and social scientists attempt to conceptualize the potential social effects of climate change and other environmental degradation, such a deforestation or overexploitation.

Shelters in Kenya for those displaced by the 2011 Horn of Africa drought

"Environmental migrant" and "climate migrant" (or "climate refugee") are used somewhat interchangeably with a range of similar terms, such as ecological refugee, environmental refugee, forced environmental migrant, environmentally motivated migrant, environmentally displaced person (EDP), disaster refugee, environmental displacee, eco-refugee, ecologically displaced person, or environmental-refugee-to-be (ERTB).[1] The distinctions between these terms remain contested.

Definition and concept

The vast majority of people fleeing environmental distress migrate over short distances, often temporarily. Moreover, the refugees aren't leaving their homes because of fear they will be persecuted, or because of "generalized violence or events seriously disturbing public order."[2] Even though the definition of who is a refugee was expanded since its first international and legally binding definition in 1951 people who are forced to flee due to environmental change are still not offered the same legal protection as refugees.[3]

The term "environmental refugee" was first proposed by Lester Brown in 1976.[4] The International Organization for Migration (IOM) proposes the following definition for environmental migrants:[5]

"Environmental migrants are persons or groups of persons who, for compelling reasons of sudden or progressive changes in the environment that adversely affect their lives or living conditions, are obliged to leave their habitual homes, or choose to do so, either temporarily or permanently, and who move either within their country or abroad."

Climate migrants are a subset of environmental migrants who were forced to flee "due to sudden or gradual alterations in the natural environment related to at least one of three impacts of climate change: sea-level rise, extreme weather events, and drought and water scarcity."[6]

Types

The International Organisation for Migration proposes three types of environmental migrants:

  • Environmental emergency migrants: people who flee temporarily due to an environmental disaster or sudden environmental event. (Examples: someone forced to leave due to a hurricane, tsunami, earthquake, etc.)
  • Environmental forced migrants: people who have to leave due to deteriorating environmental conditions. (Example: someone forced to leave due to a slow deterioration of their environment such as deforestation, coastal deterioration, etc. The village of Satabhaya in the Kendrapara district of Odisha in India is “one of the foremost victims of coastal erosion and submergence due to rising sea levels”. The villagers were losing their homes to the encroaching sea and their cultivable lands to saline ingress, and were forced to migrate elsewhere.[7] In Nepal, many villages in mass migration has been reported from Sivalik Hills / Chure regions due to water scarcity.[8] Similarly, in eastern highland of Nepal 10 households in Chainpur, Sankhuwasabha, 25 households in Dharmadevi and 10 households in Panchkhapan have been forced to migrate due to water crises in their areas.[9]
  • Environmental motivated migrants also known as environmentally induced economic migrants: people who choose to leave to avoid possible future problems. (Example: someone who leaves due to declining crop productivity caused by desertification. A study conducted between 2014 and 2018 reveals that a large proportion of the deltaic populations of Volta delta in Africa, the Ganges Brahmaputra Meghna delta in Bangladesh and India, and Mahanadi delta in India cited economic reasons as a cause of their migration and only 2.8% cited environment reasons. But one third of migrant households perceived an increased exposure to environmental hazards and deltaic populations associated environmental factors with more insecure livelihoods. This shows how the environment is having a proximate effect on migration.)[10]

Other scholars have proposed various other types of migrant including:

  • Pressured environmental migrants[11] – slow onset This type of migrant is displaced from their environment when an event is predicted prior to when it would be imperative for the inhabitants to leave.[12] Such events could be desertification or prolonged drought, where the people of the region are no longer able to maintain farming or hunting to provide a hospitable living environment.[13]
  • Imperative environmental migrants[14] – gradual onset These are migrants that have been or will be "permanently displaced" from their homes due to environmental factors beyond their control.
  • Temporary environmental migrants[14] – short term, sudden onset- This includes migrants suffering from a single event (i.e. Hurricane Katrina). This does not go to say that their status of being temporary is any less severe than that of the other, it simply means that they are able to go back to the place they fled from (though it may be undesirable to do so) granted that they are able to rebuild what was broken, and go on to maintain a similar quality of life to the one prior to the natural disaster. This type of migrant is displaced from their home state when their environment rapidly changes. They are displaced when disastrous events occur, such as tsunamis, hurricanes, tornadoes, and other natural disasters occur.[15]

Global statistics

 
A map showing where natural disasters caused/aggravated by global warming may occur. Previously, environmental refugees were expected from these regions but they are often internal refugees.[16]

There have been a number of attempts over the decades to enumerate environmental migrants and refugees. Jodi Jacobson (1988) is cited as the first researcher to enumerate the issue, stating that there were already up to 10 million 'Environmental Refugees'. Drawing on 'worst-case scenarios' about sea-level rise, she argued that all forms of 'Environmental Refugees' would be six times as numerous as political refugees.[17] By 1989, Mustafa Tolba, Executive Director of United Nations Environment Programme, was claiming that 'as many as 50 million people could become environmental refugees' if the world did not act to support sustainable development.[18]

In the mid-1990s, British environmentalist, Norman Myers, became the most prominent proponent of this 'maximalist' school (Suhrke 1993), noting that "environmental refugees will soon become the largest group of involuntary refugees".[19] Additionally, he stated that there were 25 million environmental refugees in the mid-1990s, further claiming that this figure could double by 2010, with an upper limit of 200 million by 2050 (Myers 1997).[20] Myers argued that the causes of environmental displacement would include desertification, lack of water, salination of irrigated lands and the depletion of biodiversity. He also hypothesised that displacement would amount to 30m in China, 30m in India, 15m in Bangladesh, 14m in Egypt, 10m in other delta areas and coastal zones, 1m in island states, and with otherwise agriculturally displaced people totalling 50m by 2050.[21] More recently, Myers has suggested that the figure by 2050 might be as high as 250 million.[22]

Norman Myers is the most cited researcher in this field, who found that 25 million environmental migrants existed in 1995 in his work (Myers & Kent 1995),[21] which drew upon over 1000 sources.[23] However, Vikram Kolmannskog has stated that Myers' work can be 'criticized for being inconsistent, impossible to check and failing to take proper account of opportunities to adapt' (2008: 9).[24] Furthermore, Myers himself has acknowledged that his figures are based upon 'heroic extrapolation' (Brown 2008: 12).[25] More generally, Black has argued that there is 'surprisingly little scientific evidence' that indicates that the world is 'filling-up with environmental refugees' (1998: 23).[26]

Society and culture

Popular culture

The notion of 'environmental migrant' has been a part of popular culture at least since The Grapes of Wrath, a 1939 novel by John Steinbeck.[27]

Documentary films

  • Eco Migrants: The Case of Bhola Island (2013), documentary movie directed by Susan Stein. Starring Katherine Jacobsen, Nancy Schneider, Bogumil Terminski
  • Refugees of the Blue Planet (2006), documentary movie directed by Hélène Choquette & Jean-Philippe Duval.
  • The Land Between (2014) documentary movie directed by David Fedele.[28]

See also

References

  1. ^ Boano, C., Zetter, R., and Morris, T., (2008). Environmentally Displaced People: Understanding the linkages between environmental change, livelihoods and forced migration, Refugee Studies Centre Policy Brief No.1 (RSC: Oxford), pg.4
  2. ^ unhcr.org page 19
  3. ^ Hartley, Lindsey. ( 16 February 2012). Treading Water: Climate Change, the Maldives, and De-territorialization 27 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Stimson Centre. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
  4. ^ Brown, L., Mcgrath, P., and Stokes, B., (1976). twenty two dimensions of the population problem, Worldwatch Paper 5, Washington DC: Worldwatch Institute
  5. ^ "DISCUSSION NOTE: MIGRATION AND THE ENVIRONMENT" (PDF).
  6. ^ Global Governance Project. (2012). Forum on Climate Refugees. Retrieved on 5 May 2012.
  7. ^ Dulluri, Anvita (14 September 2020). "Shifting Sands: The Story of Adapting to Rising Sea levels in Odisha". THE BASTION. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  8. ^ "Mass migration as water sources dry up in Chure". kathmandupost.com. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
  9. ^ "Water scarcity forces 45 households to migrate". kathmandupost.com. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
  10. ^ Safra de Campos, Ricardo; Codjoe, Samuel Nii Ardey; Adger, W. Neil; Mortreux, Colette; Hazra, Sugata; Siddiqui, Tasneem; Das, Shouvik; Atiglo, D. Yaw; Bhuiyan, Mohammad Rashed Alam (2020), Nicholls, Robert J.; Adger, W. Neil; Hutton, Craig W.; Hanson, Susan E. (eds.), "Where People Live and Move in Deltas", Deltas in the Anthropocene, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 153–177, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-23517-8_7, ISBN 978-3-030-23517-8
  11. ^ Marshall, Nicole (2015). "Politicizing Environmental Displacement: A Four Category Approach". Refugee Review. 2: 96–112.
  12. ^ Koubi, Vally; Stoll, Sebastian; Spilker, Gabriele (8 August 2016). "Perceptions of environmental change and migration decisions". Climatic Change. 138 (3–4): 439–451. Bibcode:2016ClCh..138..439K. doi:10.1007/s10584-016-1767-1. ISSN 0165-0009. S2CID 157835999.
  13. ^ Marshall, Nicole. "Toward Special Mobility Rights for Climate Migrants".
  14. ^ a b Marshall, Nicole (2016). "Forced Environmental Migration: Ethical Considerations for Emerging Migration Policy". Ethics, Policy and Environment. 19 (1): 1–18. doi:10.1080/21550085.2016.1173284. S2CID 156253235.
  15. ^ "Understanding a slow disaster: getting to grips with slow-onset disasters, and what they mean for migration and displacement -". Climate & Migration Coalition. 4 February 2015. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  16. ^ SPIEGEL, DER. "Photo Gallery: Is Environmental Migration Really Rising? - DER SPIEGEL - International". www.spiegel.de. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  17. ^ Jacobson, J.L. (1988). Environmental Refugees: a Yardstick of Habitability, Worldwatch paper 86, Worldwatch Institute, Washington DC, page 38
  18. ^ Tolba, M. K. (1989). Our biological heritage under siege. Bioscience 39, 725–728, page 25
  19. ^ Myers, Norman (2002). "Environmental refugees: A growing phenomenon of the 21st century". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences. 357 (1420): 609–613. doi:10.1098/rstb.2001.0953. PMC 1692964. PMID 12028796.
  20. ^ Myers, N. (1997). 'Environmental Refugees', Population and Environment 19(2): 167–82
  21. ^ a b Myers, N. and Kent, J. (1995). Environmental Exodus: an Emergent Crisis in the Global Arena, (Climate Institute[who?]: Washington DC)
  22. ^ Christian Aid (2007). ‘Human Tide: The Real Migration Crisis’ (CA: London), page 6
  23. ^ Friends of the Earth, A Citizen's Guide to Climate Refugees, Fact Sheet Four: Predictions of Climate Refugees to 2050
  24. ^ Kolmannskog, V (2008). Future Floods of Refugees, (Norwegian Refugee Council: Oslo)
  25. ^ Brown, O (2008). 'Migration and Climate Change', IOM Migration Research Series, paper no.31, www.iom.int
  26. ^ Black, R. (1998). Refugees, Environment and Development, Harlow: Longman
  27. ^ Webb, Allen. Opening the Conversation about Climate Refugees with The Grapes of Wrath (PDF).
  28. ^ "THE LAND BETWEEN". THE LAND BETWEEN. Retrieved 1 March 2017.

Further reading

  • Bogumil Terminski, Environmentally-Induced Displacement. Theoretical Frameworks and Current Challenges, CEDEM, University of Liège, 2012.
  • Westra, Laura (2009). Environmental Justice and the Rights of Ecological Refugees. Routledge. ISBN 9781849770088.
  • Vince, Gaia (2022). Nomad century : how to survive the climate upheaval. ISBN 978-0-241-52231-8. OCLC 1286796695.

External links

  • World Refugee & Migration Council (2021) 'Solutions for the Global Governance of Climate Displacement'
  •   Media related to Environmental migrants at Wikimedia Commons

environmental, migrant, people, forced, leave, their, home, region, sudden, long, term, changes, their, local, regional, environment, these, changes, compromise, their, well, being, livelihood, include, increased, drought, desertification, level, rise, disrupt. Environmental migrants are people who are forced to leave their home region due to sudden or long term changes to their local or regional environment These changes compromise their well being or livelihood and include increased drought desertification sea level rise and disruption of seasonal weather patterns such as monsoons 1 Though there is no uniform clear cut definition of environmental migration the idea is gaining attention as policy makers and environmental and social scientists attempt to conceptualize the potential social effects of climate change and other environmental degradation such a deforestation or overexploitation Shelters in Kenya for those displaced by the 2011 Horn of Africa drought Environmental migrant and climate migrant or climate refugee are used somewhat interchangeably with a range of similar terms such as ecological refugee environmental refugee forced environmental migrant environmentally motivated migrant environmentally displaced person EDP disaster refugee environmental displacee eco refugee ecologically displaced person or environmental refugee to be ERTB 1 The distinctions between these terms remain contested Contents 1 Definition and concept 2 Types 3 Global statistics 4 Society and culture 4 1 Popular culture 4 2 Documentary films 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDefinition and concept EditThe vast majority of people fleeing environmental distress migrate over short distances often temporarily Moreover the refugees aren t leaving their homes because of fear they will be persecuted or because of generalized violence or events seriously disturbing public order 2 Even though the definition of who is a refugee was expanded since its first international and legally binding definition in 1951 people who are forced to flee due to environmental change are still not offered the same legal protection as refugees 3 The term environmental refugee was first proposed by Lester Brown in 1976 4 The International Organization for Migration IOM proposes the following definition for environmental migrants 5 Environmental migrants are persons or groups of persons who for compelling reasons of sudden or progressive changes in the environment that adversely affect their lives or living conditions are obliged to leave their habitual homes or choose to do so either temporarily or permanently and who move either within their country or abroad Climate migrants are a subset of environmental migrants who were forced to flee due to sudden or gradual alterations in the natural environment related to at least one of three impacts of climate change sea level rise extreme weather events and drought and water scarcity 6 Types EditThe International Organisation for Migration proposes three types of environmental migrants Environmental emergency migrants people who flee temporarily due to an environmental disaster or sudden environmental event Examples someone forced to leave due to a hurricane tsunami earthquake etc Environmental forced migrants people who have to leave due to deteriorating environmental conditions Example someone forced to leave due to a slow deterioration of their environment such as deforestation coastal deterioration etc The village of Satabhaya in the Kendrapara district of Odisha in India is one of the foremost victims of coastal erosion and submergence due to rising sea levels The villagers were losing their homes to the encroaching sea and their cultivable lands to saline ingress and were forced to migrate elsewhere 7 In Nepal many villages in mass migration has been reported from Sivalik Hills Chure regions due to water scarcity 8 Similarly in eastern highland of Nepal 10 households in Chainpur Sankhuwasabha 25 households in Dharmadevi and 10 households in Panchkhapan have been forced to migrate due to water crises in their areas 9 Environmental motivated migrants also known as environmentally induced economic migrants people who choose to leave to avoid possible future problems Example someone who leaves due to declining crop productivity caused by desertification A study conducted between 2014 and 2018 reveals that a large proportion of the deltaic populations of Volta delta in Africa the Ganges Brahmaputra Meghna delta in Bangladesh and India and Mahanadi delta in India cited economic reasons as a cause of their migration and only 2 8 cited environment reasons But one third of migrant households perceived an increased exposure to environmental hazards and deltaic populations associated environmental factors with more insecure livelihoods This shows how the environment is having a proximate effect on migration 10 Other scholars have proposed various other types of migrant including Pressured environmental migrants 11 slow onset This type of migrant is displaced from their environment when an event is predicted prior to when it would be imperative for the inhabitants to leave 12 Such events could be desertification or prolonged drought where the people of the region are no longer able to maintain farming or hunting to provide a hospitable living environment 13 Imperative environmental migrants 14 gradual onset These are migrants that have been or will be permanently displaced from their homes due to environmental factors beyond their control Temporary environmental migrants 14 short term sudden onset This includes migrants suffering from a single event i e Hurricane Katrina This does not go to say that their status of being temporary is any less severe than that of the other it simply means that they are able to go back to the place they fled from though it may be undesirable to do so granted that they are able to rebuild what was broken and go on to maintain a similar quality of life to the one prior to the natural disaster This type of migrant is displaced from their home state when their environment rapidly changes They are displaced when disastrous events occur such as tsunamis hurricanes tornadoes and other natural disasters occur 15 Global statistics Edit A map showing where natural disasters caused aggravated by global warming may occur Previously environmental refugees were expected from these regions but they are often internal refugees 16 There have been a number of attempts over the decades to enumerate environmental migrants and refugees Jodi Jacobson 1988 is cited as the first researcher to enumerate the issue stating that there were already up to 10 million Environmental Refugees Drawing on worst case scenarios about sea level rise she argued that all forms of Environmental Refugees would be six times as numerous as political refugees 17 By 1989 Mustafa Tolba Executive Director of United Nations Environment Programme was claiming that as many as 50 million people could become environmental refugees if the world did not act to support sustainable development 18 In the mid 1990s British environmentalist Norman Myers became the most prominent proponent of this maximalist school Suhrke 1993 noting that environmental refugees will soon become the largest group of involuntary refugees 19 Additionally he stated that there were 25 million environmental refugees in the mid 1990s further claiming that this figure could double by 2010 with an upper limit of 200 million by 2050 Myers 1997 20 Myers argued that the causes of environmental displacement would include desertification lack of water salination of irrigated lands and the depletion of biodiversity He also hypothesised that displacement would amount to 30m in China 30m in India 15m in Bangladesh 14m in Egypt 10m in other delta areas and coastal zones 1m in island states and with otherwise agriculturally displaced people totalling 50m by 2050 21 More recently Myers has suggested that the figure by 2050 might be as high as 250 million 22 Norman Myers is the most cited researcher in this field who found that 25 million environmental migrants existed in 1995 in his work Myers amp Kent 1995 21 which drew upon over 1000 sources 23 However Vikram Kolmannskog has stated that Myers work can be criticized for being inconsistent impossible to check and failing to take proper account of opportunities to adapt 2008 9 24 Furthermore Myers himself has acknowledged that his figures are based upon heroic extrapolation Brown 2008 12 25 More generally Black has argued that there is surprisingly little scientific evidence that indicates that the world is filling up with environmental refugees 1998 23 26 Society and culture EditPopular culture Edit The notion of environmental migrant has been a part of popular culture at least since The Grapes of Wrath a 1939 novel by John Steinbeck 27 Documentary films Edit Eco Migrants The Case of Bhola Island 2013 documentary movie directed by Susan Stein Starring Katherine Jacobsen Nancy Schneider Bogumil Terminski Refugees of the Blue Planet 2006 documentary movie directed by Helene Choquette amp Jean Philippe Duval The Land Between 2014 documentary movie directed by David Fedele 28 See also Edit Environment portal Climate change portalEffects of climate change Effects created by climate change Forced displacement Coerced movement of a person or persons away from their home or home region Managed retreat The purposeful coordinated movement of people and buildings away from risks United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees United Nations agency mandated to protect and support refugees Water scarcity Lack of fresh water resources to meet water demandReferences Edit Boano C Zetter R and Morris T 2008 Environmentally Displaced People Understanding the linkages between environmental change livelihoods and forced migration Refugee Studies Centre Policy Brief No 1 RSC Oxford pg 4 unhcr org page 19 Hartley Lindsey 16 February 2012 Treading Water Climate Change the Maldives and De territorialization Archived 27 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Stimson Centre Retrieved 25 April 2012 Brown L Mcgrath P and Stokes B 1976 twenty two dimensions of the population problem Worldwatch Paper 5 Washington DC Worldwatch Institute DISCUSSION NOTE MIGRATION AND THE ENVIRONMENT PDF Global Governance Project 2012 Forum on Climate Refugees Retrieved on 5 May 2012 Dulluri Anvita 14 September 2020 Shifting Sands The Story of Adapting to Rising Sea levels in Odisha THE BASTION Retrieved 29 November 2020 Mass migration as water sources dry up in Chure kathmandupost com Retrieved 1 December 2020 Water scarcity forces 45 households to migrate kathmandupost com Retrieved 1 December 2020 Safra de Campos Ricardo Codjoe Samuel Nii Ardey Adger W Neil Mortreux Colette Hazra Sugata Siddiqui Tasneem Das Shouvik Atiglo D Yaw Bhuiyan Mohammad Rashed Alam 2020 Nicholls Robert J Adger W Neil Hutton Craig W Hanson Susan E eds Where People Live and Move in Deltas Deltas in the Anthropocene Cham Springer International Publishing pp 153 177 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 23517 8 7 ISBN 978 3 030 23517 8 Marshall Nicole 2015 Politicizing Environmental Displacement A Four Category Approach Refugee Review 2 96 112 Koubi Vally Stoll Sebastian Spilker Gabriele 8 August 2016 Perceptions of environmental change and migration decisions Climatic Change 138 3 4 439 451 Bibcode 2016ClCh 138 439K doi 10 1007 s10584 016 1767 1 ISSN 0165 0009 S2CID 157835999 Marshall Nicole Toward Special Mobility Rights for Climate Migrants a b Marshall Nicole 2016 Forced Environmental Migration Ethical Considerations for Emerging Migration Policy Ethics Policy and Environment 19 1 1 18 doi 10 1080 21550085 2016 1173284 S2CID 156253235 Understanding a slow disaster getting to grips with slow onset disasters and what they mean for migration and displacement Climate amp Migration Coalition 4 February 2015 Retrieved 26 February 2017 SPIEGEL DER Photo Gallery Is Environmental Migration Really Rising DER SPIEGEL International www spiegel de Retrieved 24 October 2020 Jacobson J L 1988 Environmental Refugees a Yardstick of Habitability Worldwatch paper 86 Worldwatch Institute Washington DC page 38 Tolba M K 1989 Our biological heritage under siege Bioscience 39 725 728 page 25 Myers Norman 2002 Environmental refugees A growing phenomenon of the 21st century Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series B Biological Sciences 357 1420 609 613 doi 10 1098 rstb 2001 0953 PMC 1692964 PMID 12028796 Myers N 1997 Environmental Refugees Population and Environment 19 2 167 82 a b Myers N and Kent J 1995 Environmental Exodus an Emergent Crisis in the Global Arena Climate Institute who Washington DC Christian Aid 2007 Human Tide The Real Migration Crisis CA London page 6 Friends of the Earth A Citizen s Guide to Climate Refugees Fact Sheet Four Predictions of Climate Refugees to 2050 Kolmannskog V 2008 Future Floods of Refugees Norwegian Refugee Council Oslo Brown O 2008 Migration and Climate Change IOM Migration Research Series paper no 31 www iom int Black R 1998 Refugees Environment and Development Harlow Longman Webb Allen Opening the Conversation about Climate Refugees with The Grapes of Wrath PDF THE LAND BETWEEN THE LAND BETWEEN Retrieved 1 March 2017 Further reading EditBogumil Terminski Environmentally Induced Displacement Theoretical Frameworks and Current Challenges CEDEM University of Liege 2012 Westra Laura 2009 Environmental Justice and the Rights of Ecological Refugees Routledge ISBN 9781849770088 Vince Gaia 2022 Nomad century how to survive the climate upheaval ISBN 978 0 241 52231 8 OCLC 1286796695 External links EditWorld Refugee amp Migration Council 2021 Solutions for the Global Governance of Climate Displacement Media related to Environmental migrants at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Environmental migrant amp oldid 1145827309, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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