Cambio climático y condiciones del medioambiente

Climate change and environmental conditions refers both to levels and structural and long-term changes in temperature and precipitation that lead to rising sea levels, extended periods of draughts, and environmental degradation.

Studies listed under this migration driver refer to climate change, environmental degradation, and general climatic conditions (weather).

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Environmental Change and Migration Between Europe and Its Neighbours

Authors Sophia Burke, Mark Mulligan, Caitlin Douglas
Book Title People on the Move in a Changing Climate
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1 Book Chapter

Environmental factors and internal migrations in Peru: exploring adaptation strategies, human agency, and policy implications.

Authors Agnieszka Olter-Castillo, Katarzyna Górska
Year 2025
Book Title Sustainability versus Reality The Regional and Urban Dilemma of Development.
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3 Book Chapter

Migration and Climate Change in Latin America and the Caribbean

Authors Etienne Piguet, Raoul Kaenzig
Book Title People on the Move in a Changing Climate
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4 Book Chapter

The Science of Climate Change

Authors Michael Oppenheimer, Jesse K. Anttila-Hughes
Year 2016
Journal Name FUTURE OF CHILDREN
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5 Journal Article

Regional Perspectives on Migration, the Environment and Climate Change

Authors Etienne Piguet, Frank Laczko
Book Title People on the Move in a Changing Climate
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8 Book Chapter

Imaginary Numbers of Climate Change Migrants?

Authors Ilan Kelman
Year 2019
Journal Name SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL
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9 Journal Article

Climate change and Zhou relocations in early Chinese history

Authors Chun Chang Huang, Hongxia Su
Year 2009
Journal Name Journal of Historical Geography
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11 Journal Article

Moving Beyond the Focus on Environmental Migration Towards Recognizing the Normality of Translocal Lives: Insights from Bangladesh

Authors Bishawjit Mallick, Benjamin Etzold
Book Title Migration, Risk Management and Climate Change: Evidence and Policy Responses
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13 Book Chapter

Conceptualizing and contextualizing research and policy for links between climate change and migration

Authors Himani Upadhyay, Ilan Kelman, Lingaraj G J, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name International Journal of Climate Change Strategies and Management
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14 Journal Article

The Politics of Climate Change Loss and Damage

Description
The way in which normative principles (“norms”) matter in world politics is now a key area of international relations research. Yet we have limited understanding of why some norms emerge and gain traction globally whereas others do not. The politics of loss and damage related to climate change offers a paradigm case for studying the emergence of - and contestation over - norms, specifically justice norms. The parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) have recently acknowledged that there is an urgent need to address the inevitable, irreversible consequences of climate change. Yet within this highly contested policy area - which includes work on disaster risk reduction; non-economic losses (e.g. loss of sovereignty); finance and climate-related migration - there is little consensus about what loss and damage policy means or what it requires of the global community, of states and of the (current and future) victims of climate change. Relying on an interdisciplinary theoretical approach and an ethnographic methodology that traverses scales of governance, my project - The Politics of Climate Change Loss and Damage (CCLAD) - will elucidate the conditions under which a norm is likely to become hegemonic, influential, contested or reversed by introducing a new understanding of the fluid nature of norm-content. I argue that norms are partly constituted through the practices of policy-making and implementation at the international and national level. The research will examine the micro-politics of the international negotiations and implementation of loss and damage policy and also involves cross-national comparative research on domestic loss and damage policy practices. Bringing these two streams of work together will allow me to show how and why policy practices shape the evolution of climate justice norms. CCLAD will also make an important methodological contribution through the development of political ethnography and “practice-tracing” methods.
Year 2018
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15 Project

Past and future drought in Mongolia

Authors Amy Hessl, Benjamin I. Cook, Hanqin Tian, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name SCIENCE ADVANCES
Citations (WoS) 12
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19 Journal Article

Implications of Climate Change for Children in Developing Countries

Authors Rema Hanna, Paulina Oliva
Year 2016
Journal Name FUTURE OF CHILDREN
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23 Journal Article

Introduction to climate, disasters and international development

Authors Ilan Kelman
Year 2010
Journal Name Journal of International Development
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25 Journal Article

Migration as a Risk Management Strategy in the Context of Climate Change: Evidence from the Bolivian Andes

Authors Raoul Kaenzig, Regine Brandt, Susanne Lachmuth
Book Title Migration, Risk Management and Climate Change: Evidence and Policy Responses
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26 Book Chapter

CONSEQUENCES OF MIGRATION ON STRATEGIES OF ADAPTATION TO COASTAL EROSION IN SENEGAL: A TYPOLOGY

Authors Loic Bruening
Year 2021
Journal Name Population
Citations (WoS) 2
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30 Journal Article

AfricanBioServices: Linking biodiversity, ecosystem functions and services in the Great Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem (GSME) - drivers of change, causalities and sustainable management strategies

Description
The direct dependence of humans on ecosystem services is by far strongest in developing regions where poverty restricts access to resources. This dependency also makes people in developing countries more sensitive to climate change than their developed counterparts. Increasing human populations deteriorates natural habitat, biodiversity and ecosystems services which spiral into poverty and low human welfare. This calls for innovative solutions that encompass the entire socio-ecological-economic system, as recognized on a global scale in the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. However, innovative and practical solutions require downscaling to regional levels for identifying concrete sets of drivers of change. For Africa specifically, the interplay of human population growth, land use change, climate change and human well-being is a major challenge. This project focuses on the Serengeti-Maasai Mara Ecosystem and associated agricultural areas, a region in East Africa that encompasses parts of Kenya and Tanzania. The ecosystem is world-famous for key aspects of its biodiversity, such as the migration of 1.3 million wildebeest. This ‘flagship ecosystem’ role will enhance the international interest in the project. In this project, internationally leading researchers from Norway, the Netherlands, Scotland, Denmark and Germany are teaming up with strong local partners in Tanzania and Kenya. The research will be organised in seven interlinked work packages: 1) assemble and integrate the so far separate Kenyan and Tanzanian relevant data on the region; 2) quantify the connections between human population growth, land use change, climate change and biodiversity change; 3) test how biodiversity change leads to changes in key ecosystem services; 4) quantify the dependence of human livelihoods on these ecosystem services. We will implement innovative ways for communication and dissemination of the results of ‘continuous engagement’ by local stakeholders.
Year 2015
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32 Project

Linking biodiversity, ecosystem functions and services in the Great Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem (GSME) - drivers of change, causalities and sustainable management strategies

Description
The direct dependence of humans on ecosystem services is by far strongest in developing regions where poverty restricts access to resources. This dependency also makes people in developing countries more sensitive to climate change than their developed counterparts. Increasing human populations deteriorates natural habitat, biodiversity and ecosystems services which spiral into poverty and low human welfare. This calls for innovative solutions that encompass the entire socio-ecological-economic system, as recognized on a global scale in the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. However, innovative and practical solutions require downscaling to regional levels for identifying concrete sets of drivers of change. For Africa specifically, the interplay of human population growth, land use change, climate change and human well-being is a major challenge. This project focuses on the Serengeti-Maasai Mara Ecosystem and associated agricultural areas, a region in East Africa that encompasses parts of Kenya and Tanzania. The ecosystem is world-famous for key aspects of its biodiversity, such as the migration of 1.3 million wildebeest. This ‘flagship ecosystem’ role will enhance the international interest in the project. In this project, internationally leading researchers from Norway, the Netherlands, Scotland, Denmark and Germany are teaming up with strong local partners in Tanzania and Kenya. The research will be organised in seven interlinked work packages: 1) assemble and integrate the so far separate Kenyan and Tanzanian relevant data on the region; 2) quantify the connections between human population growth, land use change, climate change and biodiversity change; 3) test how biodiversity change leads to changes in key ecosystem services; 4) quantify the dependence of human livelihoods on these ecosystem services. We will implement innovative ways for communication and dissemination of the results of ‘continuous engagement’ by local stakeholders.
Year 2015
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33 Project

Social and Environmental Vulnerability in a River Basin of Mexico

Authors Úrsula Oswald Spring
Book Title Expanding Peace Ecology: Peace, Security, Sustainability, Equity and Gender
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38 Book Chapter

Climate change and the Syrian civil war, Part II: The Jazira’s agrarian crisis

Authors Jan Selby
Year 2019
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 5
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39 Journal Article

The Problem of European Misperceptions in Politics, Health, and Science:Causes, Consequences, and the Search for Solutions

Description
While some people may simply lack relevant factual knowledge, others may actively hold incorrect beliefs. These factual beliefs that are not supported by clear evidence and expert opinion are what scholars call misperceptions (Nyhan and Reifler 2010). This project is principally about misperceptions—the “facts” that people believe that simply are not true. What misperceptions do Europeans hold on issues like immigration, vaccines, and climate change? Who holds these misperceptions? What demographic and attitudinal variables are correlated with holding misperceptions? And ultimately, what can be done to help reduce misperceptions? Misperceptions are an important topic for study because they distort public preferences and outcomes. This research program investigating misperceptions is currently at the state of the art in political science. To date, only a handful of published studies by political scientists have examined how corrective information changes underlying factual beliefs. The results of these studies are uniformly troubling—among those vulnerable to holding a given misperception, corrective efforts often make misperceptions worse or decrease the likelihood to engage in desired behaviors. This ambitious project has three primary objectives. First, the project will assess levels of misperceptions in Europe on three specific issues (immigration, vaccines, and climate change) that represent three different substantive domains of knowledge (politics, health, and science). Second, the project will examine a variety of approaches and techniques for combatting misperceptions and generating effective corrections. Third, the project will take what is learned from the first two stages and transmit the findings back to relevant academic and policy-maker audiences in order to aid policy design and communication efforts on important policy issues.
Year 2016
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43 Project

Reflections on Immigration

Authors D. Steven Nouriani
Year 2023
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46 Journal Article

Skating on thin ice? An interrogation of Canada's melting pastime

Authors Jay Johnson, Adam Ehsan Ali
Year 2017
Journal Name WORLD LEISURE JOURNAL
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47 Journal Article

Climatic conditions are weak predictors of asylum migration

Authors Sebastian Schutte, Jonas Vestby, Jørgen Carling, ...
Year 2021
Journal Name Nature Communications
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48 Journal Article

Challenges of Resilience to Reducing Environmentally Induced Migration from Central America

Authors Bernardo Bolanos-Guerra, Rafael Calderon-Contreras
Year 2021
Journal Name REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS SOCIALES
Citations (WoS) 4
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50 Journal Article
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