Publication | Closed Access
Migration in the context of vulnerability and adaptation to climate change: insights from analogues
316
Citations
73
References
2010
Year
Human MigrationUrban VulnerabilityEngineeringGlobal MigrationClimate PolicyDrought MigrationSocial SciencesForced MigrationClimate ResilienceAdaptation (Evolutionary Biology)Adaptation StrategyClimate ChangePopulation DisplacementGeographyClimate Change VulnerabilityPopulation MigrationClimate MigrationDroughtClimate Change AdaptationAdaptation (Climate Adaptation)Climate Adaptation ScienceClimate Disaster
Migration is one of the variety of ways by which human populations adapt to environmental changes. The study of migration in the context of anthropogenic climate change is often approached using the concept of vulnerability and its key functional elements: exposure, system sensitivity, and adaptive capacity. This article explores the interaction of climate change and vulnerability through review of case studies of dry-season migration in the West African Sahel, hurricane-related population displacements in the Caribbean basin, winter migration of 'snowbirds' to the US Sun-belt, and 1930s drought migration on the North American Great Plains. These examples are then used as analogues for identifying general causal, temporal, and spatial dimensions of climate migration, along with potential considerations for policy-making and future research needs.
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