Bibtex export

 

@book{ Durand-Delacre2020,
 title = {Climate migration: what the research shows is very different from the alarmist headlines},
 author = {Durand-Delacre, David and Farbotko, Carol and Fröhlich, Christiane and Boas, Ingrid},
 year = {2020},
 pages = {5},
 address = {London},
 publisher = {The Conversation Trust},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-70801-3},
 abstract = {Predictions of mass climate migration make for attention-grabbing headlines. For more than two decades, commentators have predicted "waves" and "rising tides" of people forced to move by climate change. Recently, a think-tank report warned the climate crisis could displace 1.2 billion people by 2050. Some commentators now even argue that, as the New York Times noted in a recent headline "The Great Climate Migration Has Begun", and that the climate refugees we've been warned about are, in fact, already here.
These alarming statements are often well-intentioned. Their aim is to raise awareness of the plight of people vulnerable to climate change and motivate humanitarian action on their behalf. But such headlines aren't always accurate - and rarely achieve their intended effect.
Our main concern is that alarming headlines about mass climate migrations risk leading to more walls, not fewer. Indeed, many on the right and far right are now setting aside their climate denialism and linking climate action to ideas of territory and ethnic purity. In this context of growing climate nationalism, even the most well-intentioned narratives risk feeding fear-based stories of invasion when they present climate migration as unprecedented and massive, urgent and destabilising.
The risk is only made worse when headlines point to racialised populations from the global south as on their way to the European Union, the US or Australia: places already in the grips of moral panics about migration.},
 keywords = {Klimawandel; climate change; Migration; migration; Flucht; flight}}