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Title: Consequences of environmental refugees: towards a conceptual framework


1

 International Geographical Union  Hong Kong
International Population Conference, Chinese
University of HongKong, 10th-12th July 2007
Consequences of environmental refugees towards a
conceptual framework
Allan M Findlay and Alistair Geddes
Centre for Applied Population Research University
of Dundee Dundee DD1 4HN, UK a.m.findlay_at_dundee.ac
.uk
Image source Black R (1998) Refugees,
Environment and Development (London Longman)
2
Paper Outline
  • Introduction
  • Debate over environmental refugees
  • Consequences of debate evidence of new
    conceptual framework(s)
  • In particular, the borderland with work on
    vulnerable populations



3
  • Introduction
  • Debate over environmental refugees has not been
    resolved
  • However, both proponents and critics have made
    calls for more research to understand root or
    underlying causes, and to link research to
    practice
  • What evidence is there of this from recent
    literature?
  • What are the overlapsthe borderland between
    this literature and recent work on other aspects
    of vulnerable populations?

4
2. The environmental refugees debate
  • 1985 term became used in reports by several
    international organisations
  • Notably El-Hinnawi (1985) Environmental Refugees,
    United Nations Environment Program, Nairobi.
  • 1990s debate shaped around the views of Norman
    Myers and Richard Black
  • Key publications
  • Myers and Kent 1995 Environmental Exodus An
    Emergent Crisis in the Global Arena. Report for
    Climate Institute, Washington DC
  • Black, 1998 Refugees, Environment and
    Development (London Longman).
  • Black 2001 Environmental Refugees Myth or
    Reality? United Nations High Commissioner for
    Refugees, Working Paper No 34, Geneva.



5
Myers view
  • Clear causal connection
  • There are fast growing numbers of people who can
    no longer gain a secure livelihood in their
    homelands because of drought, soil erosion,
    desertification, deforestation and other
    environmental problems. In their desperation,
    these environmental refugees feel they have
    no alternative to seek sanctuary elsewhere,
    however hazardous the attempt
  • Numbers
  • Myers claimed that by 1995 there were at least
    25 million environmental refugees, and that total
    could double by 2010 due to global warming
  • There could be as many as 200 million at risk
    updated this year, to 250 million



6
Myers view
  • Push for recognition
  • We cannot continue to ignore environmental
    refugees simply because there is no
    institutionalized mode of dealing with them. If
    official standing were to be accorded to these
    refugees, this might help to engender a
    recognized constituency for, for example, those
    900 million people who endure some degree of
    desertification
  • p. 612 in Myers (2002) Environmental refugees a
    growing phenomenon of the 21st century, Phil.
    Transactions of the Royal Society, Series B, 347
    (1420), 609-13.



7
Myers view
  • Prominent in popularising the term



New Economics Foundation2003
Christian Aid last month
8
Myers Publications
  • 1993 Environmental refugees in a globally warmed
    world, Bioscience, 43 (11), 752-6.
  • 1995 Environmental Exodus An Emergent Crisis in
    the Global Arena. Report for Climate Institute,
    Washington DC (with J.Kent).
  • 2001 Environmental refugees, Population and
    Environment A Journal of Interdisciplinary
    Studies, 19, 167-82.
  • 2002 Environmental refugees a growing
    phenomenon of the 21st century, Phil.
    Transactions of the Royal Society, Series B, 347
    (1420), 609-13.
  • 2005 Environmental refugees an emergent
    security issue. Paper presented to the 13th
    Economic Forum, Prague, May 22.



9
CriticsBlacks position
  • Has consistently rejected the conceptual and
    political merit of Myers argument
  • Conceptual
  • Forced displacement is multi-causal so the role
    of environmental change in forced displacement is
    by no means easy to determine
  • environmental refugees threatens to skew
    understanding towards proximate causes, rather
    than focussing on underlying forces (political,
    economic, social)
  • Questions actual evidence to demonstrate the
    linkage which Myers claims



10
Blacks position
  • Political
  • refugee is already legally defined concern
    that popularity of environmental refugee in
    fact de-politicises causes of displacement
  • Also ignores internal displacement
  • Potential for withdrawal of asylum assistance
  • Especially in developing world asylum regimes in
    North are already strict
  • Adverse effects on other policy responses
  • guided by proximate causes of displacement,
    rather than an analysis of underlying causes



11
Blacks position
  • The complex interrelationships involved confound
    a scientific blueprint approach
  • what is required in both research and policy is
    a more flexible, place-specific and yet
    theoretically informed approach, that is aware of
    both political and historical context (p.22,
    Black, 1998)
  • Blacks work generally well-received by social
    scientists (sympathetic to social constructivism
    and how labels are manipulated by those in power,
    and suspicious of recommending Myers type of
    preventative policies), but ignored by
    development NGOs and most physical scientists



12
Publications
  • Richard Black
  • 1998 Refugees, Environment and Development
    (London Longman).
  • 2001 Environmental Refugees Myth or Reality?
    United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees,
    Working Paper No 34, Geneva.
  • Also
  • Kibreab, G. (1997) Environmental causes and
    impact of refugee movements a critique of the
    current debate, Disasters, 21(1) 20-38
  • Castles, S. (2002), Environmental change and
    forced migration making sense of the debate,
    UNHCR Working Paper No 70, Geneva.



13
So, what might be the consequences of the debate?
  • Both Myers and Black (and others) have called for
    further research to understand relationships
    between environmental degradation and forced
    migrationi.e., the role environment actually
    plays, but the nature of the research to be
    undertaken depends on what is knowable and
    ones methodological stance.
  • How should the academy (and population geography
    in particular) engage in this area of concern?



14
3. Consequences of debate contrasting
conceptual framework(s)?
  • Approach A Policies linked to scientific
    forecasting, assessment of population
    vulnerability in exposure to climatic change and
    promotion of strategies to increase ability to
    adapt (rather than move)
  • Eg analysis of IPCC scenarios makes possible
    identification of populations most at risk.
    Geographers at CIESIN (2006) have mapped
    Vulnerability to Climate Change based on
  • a) IPCC scenarios,
  • b) population sensitivity to climate change, and
  • c) assessments of adaptive capacity



15

CIESIN projections of vulnerability to climate
change



16
What would such an approach mean for policy
research on environmental refugees?
  • Focusing international resources in countries
    with the greatest vulnerability (eg in East Arica
    and China)
  • Targeted policy measures to reduce the scale of
    environmental migration
    - increase resilience
    (awareness progs) - reduce
    sensitivity (mitigation measures)
    - increase adaptability (livelihood alternatives)
    _
  • 3) Advocacy of greater spatial sensitivity in
    the international migration policies of receiving
    countries (akin to the way that policies on
    acceptance of political refugees is linked to a
    list of at risk source countries)

17
Problems of Approach A
  • Top down (exports solving the problem to a select
    number of developing countries) and is of course
    only paliative
  • Continues to endorse a mono-causal reductionist
    view of migration
  • Constructs environmentally-linked moves as
    negative
  • Ignores social construction of vulnerability



18
3. Consequences of debate contrasting
conceptual framework(s)?
  • Approach B Some look to political ecology
  • as a broadly-defined, geographical approach
  • with a characteristic dialogic and
    interactive mode of enquiry with other
    sub-fields and cognate disciplines
  • avoids technocratic approach to problem-solving,
    with instead emphasis on understanding political
    role of different actors in influencing social
    and environmental outcomes
  • in consequence, greater support for
    place-specific / bottom-up responses to
    environmental conflict
  • After Zimmerer K. 2007 Cultural ecology (and
    political ecology) in the environmental
    borderlands exploring the environmental
    connectivities within geography, Progress in
    Human Geography, 3(2) 227-44



19
Evidence from recent literature
  • Difference between (a) simply accepting shared
    importance of environmental, political and
    economic considerations, and (b) how environment
    actually becomes integrated in migration
    decisions
  • Led to interest in understanding local social
    relations
  • in recent migration studies, recognises
    importance of understanding migration
    subjectivity
  • and in political ecology, understanding social
    construction of natural resources and their
    management



20
Evidence from recent literature
  • Theorising local social relations draws on
    Foucauldian theory of power/knowledge
  • Power as an active, open, effect, productive of
    new knowledge and ways of knowing which
    continuously structure the effect of power.
  • Example
  • Carr, E. 2005 Placing the environment in
    migration environment, economy and power in
    Ghanas Central Region, Environment and Planning
    A, 27 925-946



21
Problems of Approach B
  • While strong on understanding causes is weak on
    identifying solutions
  • Unlikely to be resourced by most international
    agencies because of difficulties of implementing
    a bottom-up approach
  • Like approach A is at risk of seeing mobility as
    a problem



22
4. Borderlands with understanding of
vulnerable populations
  • Post-debate research on environmental refugees
    shares the same challenges as other research on
    vulnerability
  • To add more dense meaning to concepts borrowed
    from non-scientific discourse and to connect them
    to wider theoretical frameworks
  • (Hogan 2002 176, in Hogan and Marandola Jr
    (2005), Towards an interdiscplinary
    conceptualisation of vulnerability, Population,
    Space and Place 11, 455-71.)
  • Yet borderland signifies overlapping ideas,
    theories, methodologies on which in-depth,
    bilateral and sustained interaction may be
    possible



23
4. Approaches to understanding geography of
vulnerability
Weak
Spatial context
Strong
Power
Weak
Strong
24
4. Context and power/knowledge
  • A relational perspective leads to interesting
    questions about environmental refugees is the
    Myers-Black debate a false dichotomy?
  • Who constructs environmental refugees as
    vulnerable or a problem and why? Might
    mobility not be a sign of resilience?
  • Should there be a search for policies that see
    environmentally-led mobility as a potential
    win-win situation for movers and sending and
    receiving areas?

25
Summary
  • Sympathy for Blacks concerns about
    environmentally-led migration as often local and
    multi-causal
  • Nevertheless mapping spaces of population
    vulnerability to climate change holds potential
    for active policy intervention
  • This must not mean excluding a relational
    perspective that questions why some seek to
    benefit from the construction of an
    environmental refugee category while others
    resist it
  • Population geographers who recognise that
    mobility is a long-established livelihood
    strategy (often related to the environment) are
    well-placed to argue for a more positive policy
    framework, based on an appreciation of the wider
    context of such moves (interacting physical
    spaces, social relations and relational
    geographies)


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