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Research Handbook on Climate Change, Migration and the Law

Edited by:  Benoit Mayer, Francois Crepeau

ISBN13: 9781785366581
Published: October 2017
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £187.00



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Concerns have arisen in recent decades about the impact of climate change on human mobility. Many people affected by climate change are forced or otherwise decide to migrate within or across international borders. Despite its clear importance, many questions remain open regarding the nature of the climate-migration nexus and its implications for laws and institutions. In the face of such uncertainty, this Research Handbook offers a comprehensive picture of laws and institutions relevant to climate migration and the multiple, often contradictory perspectives on the topic.

Carefully edited chapters by leading scholars in the field provide a cross section of the various debates on what laws do, can do and should do in relation to the impacts of climate change on migration. A first part analyses the relations between climate change and migration. A second part explores how existing laws and institutions address the climate-migration nexus. In the final part, the chapters discuss possible ways forward.

This timely Research Handbook provides much-needed insight into this complex issue for graduate and post-graduate students in climate change or migration law. It will also appeal to students and scholars in political science, international relations, environmental studies and migration studies, as well as policymakers and advocates.

Subjects:
Environmental Law
Contents:
1. Introduction
Benoît Mayer and François Crépeau,
Part I Perspectives on the climate-migration nexus
2. Climate-related migration and its linkages to vulnerability, adaptation, and socio-economic inequality: evidence from recent examples
Robert McLeman
3. Climate-induced Migration: the problem with creating new categories, and the need to think differently
Calum Nicholson
4. Representation and misrepresentation of climate migrants
Carol Farbotko
Part II Existing laws and institutions
5. The inadequacy of international refugee law in response to environmental migration
Christel Cournil
6. The relevance of the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement for the climate change-migration nexus
Elizabeth Ferris
7. Climate Change, Human Rights and Migration: A Legal Analysis of Challenges and Opportunities
Siobhán McInerney-Lankford
8. Indigenous peoples, climate migration and international human rights law in Africa, with reflections on the relevance of the Kampala Convention
Ademola Oluborode Jegede
9. International Climate Change Law Perspectives
Maxine Burkett
10. Displacement Due to Responses to Climate Change: The Role of a Rights-Based Approach
Sébastien Jodoin, Kathryn Hansen and Caylee Hong
11. Climate change, migration and the law of State responsibility
Benoit Mayer
12. Regional responses to climate change and migration in Latin America
Erika Pires Ramos and Fernanda de Salles Cavedon Capdeville
13. Organizational Perspectives: IOM’s role and perspectives on Climate Change, Migration and the Law
Gervais Appave, Dina Ionesco, Mariam Traore Chazalnoel, Daria Mokhnacheva and Alice Sironi
14. Organizational Perspective from the International Labour Organization
Sophia Kagan, Meredith Byrne and Michelle Leighton
15. Engaging the media on climate-linked migration
Alex Randall
Part III Ways forward?
16. Ethical Duties to Climate Migrants
Katrina Wyman
17. Up and down with climate-induced migration: A weakening agenda-setting process?
Chloé Vlassopoulos
18. The refugees of the Anthropocene
François Gemenne
19. Towards a Global Governance System to Protect Climate Migrants: Taking Stock
Frank Biermann and Ingrid Boas
20. Towards a Climate Change Displacement Facility.
Ilona Millar and Kylie Wilson
21. Towards an extension of complementary protection?
Susan Martin
22. Afterword
James Hathaway
Index