Climate migration: what the research shows is very different from the alarmist headlines

David Durand-Delacre, University of Cambridge; Carol Farbotko, University of the Sunshine Coast; Christiane Fröhlich, German Institute of Global and Area Studies, and Ingrid Boas, Wageningen University

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.

We do not deny that climate change influences migration. We cannot ignore the damage done to communities around the world by rising sea levels, worsening droughts and catastrophic forest fires. These raise new and serious challenges we must contend with. Yet the above narratives are misleading and damaging, when the concept of human mobility requires a deeper and more nuanced approach. It’s important we take these harsh realities seriously but avoid being too alarmist or seeing everything as being determined by the climate.

In general, we are concerned by the inaccurate portrayal of migration. People have always moved under the combined influences of changing environments, economies and sociopolitical dynamics. Climate migration is neither new nor extraordinary. It is not even that different from other forms of migration – climate migrants still tend to move to places they know or have connections to through their social networks.

These are key aspects of the idea of “climate mobilities”, which we developed in a Nature Climate Change commentary with 31 co-authors including anthropologists, geographers and political scientists. We point to how mobility in the context of climate change is highly diverse – what the vast body of empirical research on the subject has shown is far different from the image of mass movements of people moving abroad.

Instead, we see highly varied and fragmented climate-related journeys. For instance, climate mobility can take the form of short-term, short-distance movements, rural-to-urban migration, or voluntary immobility. Contrary to the alarmist rhetoric of mass international migration, most movements do not involve crossing a border. For instance a million Somalians were internally displaced by a drought in 2016-17 – this dwarfs the numbers involved in any international climate migration.

Two women and their babies walk across a dry desert.
The 2016 drought also displaced hundreds of thousands of people in Ethiopia – but again, almost all stayed within the country. UNICEF Ethiopia, CC BY-NC-SA

Fully understanding climate mobilities requires a broader evidence base than is typically used. Many problematic narratives rely mainly on quantitative modelling, reading peoples’ experiences only through that lens. More research collaboration with the social sciences and humanities would improve our understanding, as these disciplines can provide a sensitivity to context that models alone will never achieve.

Affected people are telling their own stories

As we turn to a more diverse set of perspectives, affected people must themselves be included. They are already telling their own stories, in their own words. It’s crucial that we listen, especially when they contradict our research findings and personal intuitions. Listening to Pacific Islanders, for example, tells us that easy tales of “sinking islands” aren’t the whole story. Activists throughout the region have distilled their message of themselves as powerful actors in the fight for climate justice (and against climate migration) in the catchcry: “We are not drowning, we are fighting”.

Protesters hold up signs
‘We are not drowning, we are fighting’ Carol Farbotko, Author provided

Halfway across the world, interviews with young farmers in Senegal living in precarious situations found that, while climate change does threaten their livelihoods, it is not their key concern, and they do not see migration as a problem. They want stronger local government, more local economic opportunities and the choice to migrate regardless of cause, if it can mean a better life for them and their families.

Finally, research and reporting on climate migration needs to better consider destination areas. Policymakers throughout the global north are notoriously incapable and reluctant to take the complex realities of migration into account, to the point of sometimes disregarding the research they fund. Instead they justify anti-immigration policies such as the UK’s “hostile environment” by presenting the interests and desires of “native” populations as competing with those of new arrivals.

These narratives of inevitable economic and cultural conflict need to be challenged. For this, we can draw on a large body of work that shows migrants aren’t all rich and successful, or poor and excluded, and that successful projects take these differences into account, listen to migrants themselves and promote open dialogue with established populations.

Building an open, diverse, and accepting society in times of crisis and change is a difficult task. We should take care not to make it harder by promoting fear-based stories of climate migration.

David Durand-Delacre, PhD Candidate in Geography, University of Cambridge; Carol Farbotko, Human Geographer, University of the Sunshine Coast; Christiane Fröhlich, Research Fellow, German Institute of Global and Area Studies, and Ingrid Boas, Associate Professor, Wageningen University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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MarkW
October 9, 2020 11:48 am

Really, anyone who is concerned about illegal immigration is secretly worried about ethnic purity.

Has anyone ever met a progressive who was capable of arguing honesty?
I haven’t.

Dave Fair
Reply to  MarkW
October 9, 2020 1:24 pm

Yep, the U.S. is protecting its ethnic purity.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  Dave Fair
October 9, 2020 2:40 pm

America has a lot of ethnic purity to protect since America is made up of every race and ethnicity on the planet.

America isn’t a race, it is an idea; a dream. Any race or ethnicity can and do have this dream, and in America that dream can come true no matter who or what you are. At least, that’s the idea, and has proven true on many an occasion.

God Bless America.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
October 9, 2020 4:21 pm

I haven’t heard the phrase “Melting Pot” used in quite a while.
Come for “the dream”, goal of a Government that lives up to the ideals in The Declaration of Independence and The Bill of Rights. (Don’t come for the “free” stuff!)
Come legally. Become a citizen.
Becoming part of “The Melting Pot” doesn’t mean that you lose your roots. You’ve planted new ones.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  Gunga Din
October 10, 2020 5:26 am

“Becoming part of “The Melting Pot” doesn’t mean that you lose your roots. You’ve planted new ones.”

That’s right. Well put.

fred250
October 9, 2020 1:43 pm

Looking at those Pacific Islanders in the picture above , fossil fuel free” banners etc

They appear to be in Sydney or Melbourne (anyone recognise the building?)

I wonder how they got there… by canoe?

yarpos
October 9, 2020 2:31 pm

I hope they included the Californian climate “migrants” Everyone forgets the poor Californians.

October 9, 2020 2:49 pm

Having a war or religious persecution will beat ;Climate Change; any time in promoting a mass movement of people. Financial reward will also get them moving faster than ‘Climate Change”.

October 9, 2020 5:36 pm

I thought they had become a province. I stand corrected. I knew it wasnt a province when I worked there over 50yrs ago, of course. It does have its own government.

Robert MacLellan
October 9, 2020 6:52 pm

A question… if there are climate refugees from these areas why are their populations increasing instead of decreasing? Looking at you Somalia among others.

StephenP
October 10, 2020 12:35 am

IIRC the population of Ethiopia has doubled since 1984.

October 10, 2020 6:28 am

Indeed, thanks.

Common sense reading history and current events shows major problems with violence.

Inter-tribe warfare in Africa, and Islamic Totalitarian violence such as in Somalia as well as inherently against females, drive people away. (Read Hirsi Ali’s story for example, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayaan_Hirsi_Ali.)

And of course the war in Syria, with Russian meddling, has driven large numbers of desperate people north.

I read that there has never been a famine in a country with a relatively free press. But we know the suppression of speech in societies people escape from, and the activists here like the EDPA and David Sleazuki.

Anti-immigration trash omit the question arising from Julian Simon’s question “What kind of society would be better off without more of the ultimate resource?”, and ignore the value of our societies based on respect for individuals and rule of law.

Rhb2
October 10, 2020 6:46 am

A quick scan revealed no mention of the recent mass migrations from Venezuela and the earlier mogrations from Cuba.

Reply to  Rhb2
October 10, 2020 8:51 am

Those are “political climate” migrations

RB
October 10, 2020 7:52 am

If I’m going to migrate, it’s not going to be because of “climate change”. It’s going to be because of oppressive policies of the state or local govt that reduces my level of freedom and opportunities to better myself.

October 10, 2020 7:59 am

I’ve seen climate migration with my own eyes. Florida is packed full of migrants from (oddly) cooler northern climes who were draw to the heat. So many people moved there the land is now sinking and many who didn’t expect it can look forward to beach-front property in a few millenia.

October 10, 2020 9:08 am

Climate alarmists are so myopic with vision of decades to maybe a century. They are able to quickly pivot from global cooling to global warming and clamor about potential disasters with no grasp of benefits in change.

Will there be some migration due to climate change in the future? Sure!!, all we have to do is look back a short 20k years and see that climate warming enabled migration, with many benefits. Just ask the migrants to NYC whether they would like living under a mile of ice.

20k years ago is just a blink in geologic or even Homo biologic time. What was global climate like back then? Cold, thick ice covering much of Canada, US, Europe, and Asia – much like living in Antarctica or Greenland today. What was sea level like then? Lower by more than 100 meters with many land bridges: Alaska to Asia, Australia to Indonesia, UK to Europe. Heck, the Maldives was HUGE with land almost to India.

Climate changed and mankind survived with much migration into regions that were previously covered with glaciers. Thank goodness our ancestors were smart enough to walk up shore during sea level rise instead of drowning!

I have great confidence climate will change (with or without CO2 fluctuations) and that humans will adapt. Catastrophic Alarmists, take a chill pill, and enjoy life a little.

October 10, 2020 4:10 pm

The hard-left The Conversation is totally in the tank for climate alarmism. A year ago they announced that the only opinions they would permit to be expressed in article comments are those in support of climate hysteria. They wrote, “the editorial team in Australia is implementing a zero-tolerance approach to moderating climate change deniers, and sceptics. Not only will we be removing their comments, we’ll be locking their accounts.”

Even before that, The Conversation long had two moderation policies: the official written one (“their Community Standards,” which are basically Quora’s BNBR + “Be Constructive”), and the actual one (“Be Leftist”). No matter how nice, respectful & constructive you were, and no matter how thoroughly you documented your claims, suspicion of casting doubt on the climate emergency was grounds for deleting your comments at The Conversation. But no matter how vicious ad hominem attacks are, they’re acceptable if they are directed toward someone skeptical of the climate crisis.

Although they’ve made their anti-scientific bias official, I’m still waiting for them to change their name to “The One-Sided Conversation.” Or, in keeping with the modern trend toward shortening names…

“Kentucky Fried Chicken” ⇒ “KFC”
“The Huffington Post” ⇒ “HuffPost” or “HuffPo”
“Federal Express” ⇒ “FedEx”
“America Online” ⇒ “AOL”

…I have a suggestion for them:

“The One-Sided Conversation”“The Con”

As for “climate migration,” obviously it cannot be due to sea-level, because manmade climate change has not caused significant changes in sea-level trends. But climate-driven migration is real, in Africa. Here’s an article about it:

NewScientist – Africans go back to the land as plants reclaim the desert

You can find more references here:
https://sealevel.info/greening_earth_spatial_patterns_Myneni.html

MiloCrabtree
October 10, 2020 6:42 pm

Who writes this drivel?

October 10, 2020 9:13 pm

I grew up in Southern California and was living in the Southern California desert near Palm Springs when I learned how to ski in my early forties. I fell in love with the sport and over the years I made quite a few trips to Lake Tahoe in winter to escape the desert heat and ski at the Tahoe resorts. Upon retiring I relocated to Colorado and now live in a home with no air conditioner and easy access to some of the best skiing in North America. I am a climate refugee.