Umweltwissenschaften

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The Biopolitical Animal in Canadian and Environmental Studies

Authors Stephanie Rutherford
Year 2013
Journal Name JOURNAL OF CANADIAN STUDIES-REVUE D ETUDES CANADIENNES
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1 Journal Article

Health and environment in the Brazilian Amazon

Authors Rosa Carmina de Sena Couto
Year 2020
Journal Name NOVOS CADERNOS NAEA
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2 Journal Article

Strategy for adapting to climate change and conserving biodiversity in the Bangladesh Sundarbans

Authors Leonard Ortolano, Ernesto Sanchez-Triana, Shakil Ahmed Ferdausi, ...
Year 2017
Journal Name Climate and Development
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3 Journal Article

Les Deltas Asiatiques comme champ d'observation et de la recherche sur les migrations et les stratégies d'adaptation au changement climatique

Principal investigator Sylvie Fanchette (Principal Investigator)
Description
Deltas are coastal Social Political Environmental Systems (SPES) characterised by the interplay between rivers, lands and oceans, influenced by a combination of riverine and oceanic processes, shaped by human interventions under strong state water control management policies. Deltas provide numerous resources such as fertile land and water for irrigated and intensive agriculture, fisheries, abundant biodiversity as well as non-farm activities. Thanks to their location at the interface of lower valleys and the sea, and their fluvial connections, trade and exchange have flourished and led to the development and expansion of some of the world’s largest metropolises. Asia is home to the largest and most populated deltas in the world. However, deltas are recognised as one of the most vulnerable coastal environments. They face a range of threats operating at multiple scales, from global climate change (CC) and sea-level rise (SLR) to various hazards (floods, erosion, salinization, subsidence), local anthropogenic activities and land use changes. Deltas are relevant sites for adaptation to CC studies, given they are dynamic systems where communities have a long record of adapting to natural hazards and are accustomed to being highly exposed to environmental risks. Local populations whose livelihoods depend on natural resources have adapted in different ways to live with floods. Objectives The MOVINDELTAS project intends to understand the challenges for deltaic populations when their livelihoods are at risk due to environmental/climatic and global economic changes, and their adaptive capacity sustainability through the current scenarios in the Ganges-Brahmapoutra-Meghna and Mekong deltas. The project approach isinterdisciplinary, multi-scale and long term(past history experiences and forecasting) from four perspectives: i) a physical and environmental assessment of risks posed by multi-hazards linked to adaptive strategies, ii) a socio-economic vulnerability assessment of the population exposed to these hazards, iii) an assessment of the population and local stakeholders’ perception of risk in the risk hotspots, and iv) a projection of how the risk is expected to evolve in the coming decades, with climate changes in the GBM and Mekong deltas. Through its various components, MOVINDELTAS aims to meet several specific objectives: Enhance the understanding of the dynamics of deltaic Social Political Environmental Systems (SPES), and the level of sustainability of deltaic population livelihoods under multi-hazard environmental change. Define the complexity of new patterns of mobility and immobility/migration and non-migration, (involuntary) displacement and translocal livelihoods (across multiple locations, gender, cultures and social classes) in delta regions defined as risk hotspots. Assess the various adaptive strategies and community responses to multi-hazards under expected environmental change in risk hotspots, through model-scenarios/CC in a new context of global CC. Conduct an in-depth and evidence-based analysis of the differentiated perceptions, sensitivity and experiences of men and women in their strategies for coping with environmental, global and climate changes. Include stakeholders in an iterative consultative process throughout the project in order to better understand their perspectives, develop informed models and maximise the potential impact of policy response. Under this specific objective, experience sharing between deltas and the use of local knowledge on adaptation strategies in vulnerable flood deltas will allow future learning, and contribute to the sustainability of the proposed methodology. In fact, the Nile delta is the perfect environmental configuration for a test case as it has several converging and divergent parameters characteristic of South-East-Asia. Partnerships : 27 partners from 4 European countries (France, UK, Germany and Netherland), 4 Asian countries (Vietnam, Cambodia, India, Bangladesh) and Egypt.
Year 2018
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4 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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5 Project

Nativism and nature: Rethinking biological invasion

Authors JH Peretti
Year 1998
Journal Name ENVIRONMENTAL VALUES
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6 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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7 Project

The Dominance of Climate Change in Environmental Law: Taking stock for Rio+20

Authors Jerneja PENCA, Fabiano DE ANDRADE CORRÊA
Year 2012
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8 Working Paper

Assisted Migration in Normative and Scientific Context

Authors D. S. Maier, Daniel Simberloff
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics
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9 Journal Article

Integrating Sustainability Practices Using the Viable System Model

Authors Allenna Leonard
Year 2008
Journal Name SYSTEMS RESEARCH AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE
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10 Journal Article

2050: New Zealand's sustainable future

Authors Ian Yeoman, Natalie K. Wolf, Amalina Andrade, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name JOURNAL OF TOURISM FUTURES
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11 Journal Article

Indigenous-Settler Climate Change Boundary Organizations Contending With US Colonialism

Authors Carla M. Dhillon
Year 2021
Journal Name AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST
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12 Journal Article

Neutral ecological theory reveals isolation and rapid speciation in a biodiversity hot spot

Authors AM Latimer, Richard M. Cowling, JA Silander
Year 2005
Journal Name Science
Citations (WoS) 93
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13 Journal Article

Plant species dispersed by Galapagos tortoises surf the wave of habitat suitability under anthropogenic climate change

Authors Diego Ellis-Soto, S Lotters, Stephen Blake, ...
Year 2017
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 3
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14 Journal Article

Slow food tourism: an ethical microtrend for the Anthropocene

Authors Francesc Fuste-Forne, Tazim Jamal
Year 2020
Journal Name JOURNAL OF TOURISM FUTURES
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15 Journal Article

RUNNING A GREENER RACE: WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY EVIDENCE FROM THE OLD MUTUAL TWO OCEANS MARATHON IN SOUTH AFRICA

Authors WF Krugell, Melville Saayman
Year 2013
Journal Name SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL FOR RESEARCH IN SPORT PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND RECREATION
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17 Journal Article

Well-being, Ecology, Gender, and cOmmunity

Description
WEGO (Well-being, Ecology, Gender and cOmmunity) is a trans-national network aims to develop a shared research and training agenda to educate the next generation of interdisciplinary social-environmental scientists on feminist political ecology in Europe. WeGO’s research examines gender relations in community organizing from a feminist-informed political ecology (FPE) framework. From an international and interdisciplinary perspective, WEGO looks at gender and power relations in community responses to the current climate, economic and environmental crises in different socio-ecological contexts. WEGO aims to provide insightful and compelling analysis about the importance of gendered community response to climate, economic and environmental change as well as more detailed knowledge about what changes are required for greater resilience and sustainability. Gender is understood as a critical variable in shaping resource access and control, interacting with class, caste, race, culture, and ethnicity to shape processes of ecological change and the prospects of any community for sustainable development. WEGO research will look at resilience and sustainability by examining the gendered role of women in care work for the community and for the environment. The cases chosen – from in and outside of Europe are sites that can feed into innovative European Policy on sustainable development.
Year 2018
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18 Project

Designing a sustainable future through fashion education

Authors Natascha Radclyffe-Thomas
Year 2018
Journal Name CLOTHING CULTURES
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19 Journal Article

The relationship between place ties and moves to small regional retirement communities on the Canadian prairies

Authors John Spina, G DeVerteuil, Geoffrey C. Smith, ...
Year 2013
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 2
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20 Journal Article

Model uncertainties do not affect observed patterns of species richness in the Amazon

Authors Lilian Patricia Sales, P de Marco, Rafael D. Loyola, ...
Year 2017
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 6
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21 Journal Article

Environmental change and human mobility in the digital age

Authors Ingrid Boas
Year 2017
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 2
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23 Journal Article

Challenges of Resilience to Reducing Environmentally Induced Migration from Central America

Year 2021
Journal Name REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS SOCIALES
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24 Journal Article

The Good, the Bad and the Recovery in an Assisted Migration

Authors Bridget S. Green, Caleb Gardner, Adrian Linnane, ...
Year 2010
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 23
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25 Journal Article

The Reason Land Matters: Relocation as Adaptation to Climate Change in Fiji Islands

Authors Julia Blocher, Dalila Gharbaoui
Book Title Migration, Risk Management and Climate Change: Evidence and Policy Responses
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26 Book Chapter

The Value of Public Spaces for Sustainable Cities In the Context of Urbanization and Urban Development

Authors Uyesi Nihal Arda Akyildiz
Year 2020
Journal Name MILLI FOLKLOR
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27 Journal Article

Characteristics and future intentions of second homeowners: a case study from Eastern Victoria, Australia

Authors Nicholas Osbaldiston, Michelle Duffy, Felicity Picken
Year 2015
Journal Name JOURNAL OF POLICY RESEARCH IN TOURISM LEISURE AND EVENTS
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28 Journal Article

Beyond Social Science History: Population and Environment in the US Great Plains

Authors M. P. Gutmann
Year 2018
Journal Name Social Science History
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29 Journal Article

Evaluating farmers' adaptation strategies to climate change: A case study of Kaou local government area, Tahoua State, Niger Republic

Authors A. Moussa Tabbo, Zakou Amadou, Agada B. Danbaky
Year 2016
Journal Name JAMBA-JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK STUDIES
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30 Journal Article

A countrywide multi-ethnic assessment of local communities’ perception of climate change in Benin (West Africa)

Authors Aida Cuni Sanchez, Belarmain Fandohan, Achille Ephrem Assogbadjo, ...
Year 2012
Journal Name Climate and Development
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32 Journal Article

Sustainable whale-watching tourism and climate change: towards a framework of resilience

Authors Emily Lambert, Colin Hunter, Colin MacLeod, ...
Year 2010
Journal Name JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE TOURISM
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33 Journal Article

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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36 Book Chapter

Adaptive capacity of small-scale coffee farmers to climate change impacts in the Soconusco region of Chiapas, Mexico

Authors Laura Elena Ruiz Meza
Year 2015
Journal Name Climate and Development
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37 Journal Article

Environmental change and migration: methodological considerations from ground-breaking global survey

Authors Koko Warner
Year 2011
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 21
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38 Journal Article

Urbanization and Informal Development in China: Urban Villages in Shenzhen

Authors YA PING WANG, Ya Ping Wang, Yanglin Wang, ...
Year 2009
Journal Name International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
Citations (WoS) 152
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39 Journal Article

Ethics and Biofuel Production in Chile

Authors Celian Roman-Figueroa, Manuel Paneque
Year 2015
Journal Name Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics
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40 Journal Article

Editor’s introduction

Authors Lori M. Hunter
Year 2009
Journal Name Population and Environment
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41 Journal Article

COOPERATIVE RESEARCH ON EAST AFRICAN TERRITORIAL INTEGRATION WITHIN GLOBALISATION

Description
This project seeks to improve research capacity and develop collaboration amongst researchers in Europe and East Africa, and by doing so to contribute to the larger objective of regional integration. The project will enhance integration in the research community in both Europe and East Africa through bringing researchers together in a series of training activities. These activities will focus on two kinds of transborder environment: mountains and Lake Tanganyika. Through this focus on resources which span the borders of the multiple political units of East Africa, the project will contribute directly to public understanding of some of the challenges to regional integration in East African context. The project is organized around four themes, all of which relate to human use and management of these cross border resources: resource management and livelihood sustainability, environmental and climate change, migration and identity and the role of small and medium cities. At the core of the project, five institutions – four European, and one East African – will be brought together; the project will also draw on the skills and knowledge of four university research institutions in Europe, whose staff will take the role of leaders for each of the four themes. All the individuals and institutions involved have substantial experience of work in Africa, and have commitment both to the enhancement of an integrated European research capacity and to the building of research capacity and regional integration in East Africa.
Year 2008
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42 Project

Impact of Climate Change on Voltinism and Prospective Diapause Induction of a Global Pest Insect - Cydia pomonella ( L.)

Authors Sibylle Stoeckli, Martin Hirschi, Christoph Spirig, ...
Year 2012
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 26
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43 Journal Article

Low-carbon Lifestyles and Behavioural Spillover

Description
Responding to climate change has profound implications for behaviour; yet policies to achieve this change have met with limited success. A key challenge for environmental social scientists is the need to move forward in understanding how to bring about change in consumption, community and political behaviours, which is commensurate to the scale of the climate change challenge. One promising area is ‘behavioural spillover’, the notion that taking up a new behaviour (e.g., recycling) may lead to adoption of other, more environmentally beneficial, behaviours. Such a notion appears to hold the promise of changing a suite of behaviours in a cost-effective way. Yet despite robust theoretical principles (e.g., self-perception theory) underpinning behavioural spillover, there is little empirical research. The proposed research intends to produce a step-change in behavioural and sustainability science by undertaking a mixed-method, cross-cultural study of pro-environmental behavioural spillover in order to open up new ways of promoting sustainable lifestyle change and significantly broadening our understanding of behaviour within individuals and cultures. There are three objectives for the research: 1. To examine ways in which pro-environmental behaviour, lifestyles and spillover are understood and develop within different cultures; 2. To understand drivers of behavioural consistency and spillover effects across contexts, including home and work, and cultures; and 3. To develop a theoretical framework for behavioural spillover and test interventions to promote spillover across different contexts and cultures. Three Work Packages will address these objectives: 1. Defining and understanding spillover: Focus groups with biographical questions and card sorts [Years 1-2] 2. Examining drivers of spillover: Cross-national survey with factor, correlation and regression analyses [Years 2-3] 3. Developing theory and testing interventions: Laboratory and field experiments [Years 3-5]
Year 2014
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45 Project

ECOLOGICAL CLUSTERING OF THE PACIFIC OYSTER OF ECUADOR

Authors Jose Zamora Laborde, Jose Zamora Guevara, Fabrizzio Andrade Zamora
Year 2018
Journal Name REVISTA UNIVERSIDAD Y SOCIEDAD
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46 Journal Article

Introduction: special issue dedicated to the memory of Professor Daniel Hogan

Authors Roberto Luiz do Carmo, Eduardo Marandola, Alex de Sherbinin
Year 2012
Journal Name Population and Environment
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47 Journal Article

Reconstructing the Migratory Behavior and Long-Term Survivorship of Juvenile Chinook Salmon under Contrasting Hydrologic Regimes

Authors A. Sturrock, Alan E. Hubbard, Peter K. Weber, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 18
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48 Journal Article

MAKING SENSE OF THE 2016 WATER CRISIS IN SAN ANDRES, A COLOMBIAN CARIBBEAN ISLAND

Authors Carolina Velasquez
Year 2018
Journal Name ANAIS BRASILEIROS DE ESTUDOS TURISTICOS-ABET
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49 Journal Article

Naples As Seen by Musicians: Intus Et Extra Cultura

Authors Svetlana Anfilova, Olga Mykhailova
Year 2020
Journal Name TARIH KULTUR VE SANAT ARASTIRMALARI DERGISI-JOURNAL OF HISTORY CULTURE AND ART RESEARCH
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50 Journal Article

Cohesion and Belonging: Review of the Evidence

Description
The last two decades have seen the demographic transformation of Europe, driven primarily by international migration. The current historical moment is defined by economic crisis, by a changing relationship between Europe and its neighbours, and the unprecedented scale of mobility within, into and now once again out of the continent. This transformation has manifested primarily in Europe’s cities. As the world becomes more connected and concentrated in the cities of the 21st century, populations, cultures, economies and values in any one metropolis become more diverse. The European city is marked by the “metropolitan paradox”: the most brutal forms of exclusion and conflict alongside the most profound forms of conviviality and co-existence. It is in cities where diversity is experienced most intensely, to which the majority of migrants move, and where mobilisations against diversity are symbolically rooted. And it is also at local level where the possibility for new forms of identification and belonging emerge. A challenge for the European future is consequently not only the classical moral imperative to generate the good city but also to generate a sense of metropolitan cohesion and to govern diversity justly. The challenge we are taking up here is this: How can Europe’s cities manage diversity dynamics for urban liveability and urban sustainability under the force of massive economic, social, cultural and political change? How can we learn to build inclusive cities and inclusive urban citizenship? More specifically, as cities become more diverse and more unequal, municipalities face the challenge of how to ensure that all citizens feel they have a stake in a common civic culture. Local authorities increasingly recognise their “place-making” role alongside their statutory service delivery functions. A city in which all residents feel they are valued increases residents’ wellbeing and satisfaction, and creates a climate in which municipal measures are more effective. This background paper sets out some of the key issues around building a common civic culture in Europe’s cities. The first section sets out the field which the paper addresses and discusses some of the key terms and concepts. The second section explores some of the evidence around the issues. The third section introduces the areas of intervention where cities can make a difference, illustrated by examples of promising or functioning practices.
Year 2016
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51 Report

Introduction: understanding the links between population dynamics and climate change

Authors Adrian C. Hayes, Susana B. Adamo
Year 2014
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 1
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54 Journal Article

Land grabbing: a preliminary quantification of economic impacts on rural livelihoods

Authors Kyle F. Davis, Paolo D'Odorico, Maria Cristina Rulli, ...
Year 2014
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 33
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55 Journal Article

Experimenting with International Collaborative Governance for Climate Change Mitigation by Private Actors: Scaling up Dutch Co-Regulation

Authors Anastasia TELESETSKY
Year 2011
Journal Name European journal of legal studies, 2016, Vol. 9, No. 1, pp. 211-249
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56 Journal Article

Implications of Climate Science for Policy

Authors Henry D. JACOBY
Year 2012
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57 Working Paper

Local perceptions of climate change impacts in St. Kitts (Caribbean sea) and Malé, Maldives (Indian ocean)

Authors Charlotte Eloise STANCIOFF, Robert STOJANOV, Ilan KELMAN, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name Atmosphere, 2018, Vol. 9, No. 12, OnlineOnly
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58 Journal Article

Regulatory Instruments for Deployment of Clean Energy Technologies

Authors Ignacio J. PÉREZ-ARRIAGA
Year 2010
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59 Working Paper

Does climate change influence people’s migration decisions in Maldives?

Authors Ilan KELMAN, Justyna ORLOWSKA, Himani UPADHYAY, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name Climatic change, 2019, OnlineFirst
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62 Journal Article

The climate change of your desires: Climate migration and imaginaries of urban and rural climate futures

Authors Kasia Paprocki
Year 2020
Journal Name Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
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64 Journal Article

‘Floods’ of migrants, flows of care: Between climate displacement and global care chains

Authors Nigel Clark, Giovanni Bettini
Year 2017
Journal Name The Sociological Review
Citations (WoS) 1
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65 Journal Article

Climate Refugees Study

Principal investigator Albert Kraler (Project Coordinator)
Description
Against the background of climate change, the study of environmentally induced displacement has become increasingly significant. Objectives • to provide a systematic review of the legal aspects of climate related displacement. • to analyse to what extent the current EU framework for immigration and asulum in general and the specific instruments in regard to asylum in particular already offer adequate responses to climate induced displacement. • to assess how the legal framework could evolve in order to provide an improved response to the phenomenon of climate refugees. • to clarify in which way such a modified legal framework can be rooted in the Lisbon Treaty. Outcomes The analysis reviews both the status quo as well as the possible evolution of the policy framework in place in order to arrive at more comprehensive responses to environmentally induced migration, while establishing the possible legal bases of different types of responses within the Treaty of Lisbon. • The first part of the study aims to develop a typology of environmentally induced migration which serves as a basis for identifying adequate policy responses, and in particular for different forms and dimensions of this phenomenon. • The second part focuses on a revision of the global debates on policy responses to environmentally induced displacement, which embeds the analysis of the European policy context in wider global policy debates and provides the framework under which the European policy framework is analysed. • The third and core part of the study looks at the policy framework in place at the level of the European Union to identify possible policy responses under the current EU policy framework that would address environmentally induced displacement as well as gaps and possible directions how this framework can evolve.
Year 2011
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66 Project

When nature rebels: international migration, climate change, and inequality

Authors Luca Marchiori, Ingmar Schumacher
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Population Economics
Citations (WoS) 23
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67 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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69 Book Chapter

Against climate apartheid: Confronting the persistent legacies of expendability for climate justice

Authors Jennifer L Rice, Joshua Long, Anthony Levenda
Year 2021
Journal Name Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space
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70 Journal Article

Imaginary Numbers of Climate Change Migrants?

Year 2019
Journal Name SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL
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71 Journal Article

Gender and ethnic differences in perceptions of equal opportunity climate and job outcomes of US Army Reserve component personnel

Authors Armando X. Estrada, Colin R. Harbke
Year 2008
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
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72 Journal Article

Islandness within climate change narratives of small island developing states (SIDS)

Authors Ilan Kelman
Year 2018
Journal Name ISLAND STUDIES JOURNAL
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73 Journal Article

Climate change, internal migration, and the future spatial distribution of population: a case study of New Zealand

Authors Michael P. Cameron
Year 2018
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 2
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74 Journal Article

Leveraging City-level Climate Change Law and Policy for the Protection of Children

Year 2021
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CHILDRENS RIGHTS
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75 Journal Article

Climate variability and human migration in the Netherlands, 1865–1937

Authors Julia Jennings, Clark L. Gray, Julia A. Jennings
Year 2015
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 7
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76 Journal Article

Climate change: understanding anthropogenic contributions and responses

Authors Donald R. Nelson
Year 2010
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 2
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77 Journal Article

‘We do not want to leave our land’: Pacific ambassadors at the United Nations resist the category of ‘climate refugees’

Authors Karen Elizabeth McNamara, Karen E. McNamara, C Gibson, ...
Year 2009
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 103
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78 Journal Article

Remittances for Adaptation: An ‘Alternative Source’ of International Climate Finance?

Authors Pieter Pauw, Barbara Bendandi
Book Title Migration, Risk Management and Climate Change: Evidence and Policy Responses
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80 Book Chapter

Nurses' perception of ethical climate at a large academic medical center

Authors Donna Lemmenes, Chuanhong Liao, Pamela Valentine, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name NURSING ETHICS
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81 Journal Article

The effect of climate on migration: United States, 1995–2000

Authors Dudley L. Poston, DL Poston, Li Zhang, ...
Year 2009
Journal Name Social Science Research
Citations (WoS) 20
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83 Journal Article

A Rhapsody on Climate Change and Flight. Norbert Gstrein's Novel "The Years to Come"

Authors Sabine Wilke
Year 2020
Journal Name STUDIA AUSTRIACA
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84 Journal Article

Thresholds in climate migration

Authors Robert McLeman, Robert A. McLeman
Year 2018
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 9
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85 Journal Article

Climate change and population migration in Brazil’s Northeast: scenarios for 2025–2050

Authors Alisson F. Barbieri, Edson Domingues, Bernardo L. Queiroz, ...
Year 2010
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 54
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86 Journal Article

Climate shocks and the timing of migration from Mexico

Authors Raphael J. Nawrotzkil, Jack DeWaard, Raphael J. Nawrotzki
Year 2016
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 14
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87 Journal Article

Solidarity in Climate/Immigrant Justice Direct Action: Lessons from Movements in the US South

Authors Sara Thomas Black, Nik Heynen, Richard Anthony Milligan
Year 2016
Journal Name International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
Citations (WoS) 5
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89 Journal Article

Climate Barbarians at the Gate? A critique of apocalyptic narratives on ‘climate refugees’

Authors Giovanni Bettini
Year 2013
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 112
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90 Journal Article

The Mediation of Climate Change Induced Migration. Implications for meaningful media discourse and empowerment of key intermediaries to raise public awareness

Description
The IKETIS project will seek to raise awareness in the UK of the need for action to address climate change induced migration and will focus on the mediation of the climate refugees’ issue. The first aim of the action is to understand the representational practices that shape media and NGOs discourse about climate refugees. The second aim is to build capacity of journalists, NGOs and policy-makers, key intermediaries in the mediation of climate change induced migration, to enhance social support for policy actions. Together, both aims contribute to the transformation of how climate change induced migration is perceived and provide new patterns of critical thinking and civic engagement. The research consists of four phases: i) identify the policy, institutional and definitional factors that may impede meaningful media discourse on the issue ii) perform critical discourse analysis (image and text) and frame analysis of the representations of climate change induced migration of UK online news media iii) using these findings, then move on to examine how UK humanitarian and environmental NGOs utilise and challenge frames identified by online news media coverage of climate displacement and iv) based on the understanding of the representational practices that formulate climate refugees mediated discourse, promote climate justice approach to frame climate change and build capacity of journalists, NGOs and policy-makers to best use climate justice approach through e-learning strategies. This training-through research scheme will provide the applicant with the necessary skills to develop competences in media theory, visual communication, critical discourse and frame analysis and digital media research and plan an academic career track for a better integration into the academic community, while the applicant will be of specific benefit to the research-informed teaching that forms the basis of the host institution’s approach to undergraduate and postgraduate teaching practice.
Year 2017
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91 Project

Unemployment and Immigrant Receptivity Climate in Established and Newly Emerging Destination Areas

Authors Gordon F. De Jong, GF De Jong, Deborah Roempke Graefe, ...
Year 2017
Journal Name Population Research and Policy Review
Citations (WoS) 2
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93 Journal Article

Ökonomie des Klimawandels: Die Bewältigung von Klimaschocks in der Mongolei – Vulnerabilität, Vermögen und Migration

Principal investigator Kati Krähnert (Principal Investigator)
Description
Das Projekt untersucht die Auswirkungen von Klimaschocks auf das Wohlergehen und Verhalten von Haushalten in der Mongolei. Insbesondere werden dabei extreme Wetterereignisse, sogenannte Dzud-Katastrophen, betrachtet (siehe Kasten). Mit fortschreitendem Klimawandel ist damit zu rechnen, dass solche Klimaschocks häufiger und in extremeren Umfang auftreten werden. Im Rahmen des Projekts wird eine Panelhaushaltsbefragung zu Klimaschocks und sozio-ökonomischer Vulnerabilität von Haushalten in der westlichen Mongolei erhoben. Die Anpassungsstrategien von Nomaden zur Bewältigung von Klimaschocks und die Verteilungswirkungen von Klimaschocks werden anhand mikro-ökonometrischer Methoden analysiert.
Year 2012
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94 Project

Local adaptation strategies in semi-arid regions: study of two villages in Karnataka, India

Authors Ruth Kattumuri, Darshini Ravindranath, Tashina Esteves
Year 2017
Journal Name Climate and Development
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95 Journal Article

Climate Change, Extreme Weather Events, and Migration: Review of the Literature for Five Arab Countries

Authors Nicholas Burger, Quentin Wodon, Audra Grant, ...
Book Title People on the Move in a Changing Climate
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96 Book Chapter

Climate-related migration in rural Bangladesh: a behavioural model

Authors Maxmillan Martin, Richard Black, Dominic Kniveton, ...
Year 2014
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 25
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97 Journal Article

Migration and Climate Change

Authors the late Graeme Hugo, Graeme Hugo
Year 2013
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98 Book

Snapshots of the Future: Darfur, Katrina, and Maple Sugar (Climate Change, the Less Well-Off and Business Ethics)

Authors Edward J. Romar
Year 2009
Journal Name JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS
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99 Journal Article

Climate Change, Migration, and Development

Authors Koko Warner, Susan Martin
Book Title Global Perspectives on Migration and Development
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100 Book Chapter
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