Research
Database

This constantly growing database accumulates and structures
relevant knowledge in the field of migration.

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Application of Climate-Smart Agriculture Approaches in Uganda’s Refugee Response

Authors U-Learn Uganda
Description
This desk review explores the application of climate-smart agriculture (CSA) in Uganda’s refugee response, highlighting the initiatives, policies, and strategies that promote resilient and sustainable farming practices among refugee and host communities. The review identifies key CSA approaches, including climate-resilient crop production, livestock management, water conservation, and agroforestry. It also maps out actors involved in implementing CSA initiatives, showcases lessons learned, and presents recommendations for scaling CSA within Uganda’s refugee-hosting districts. Key Highlights include; - Understanding CSA and its role in refugee resilience - National frameworks and policies supporting CSA in Uganda - Agricultural production, natural resource management, and agri-food systems - Challenges, gaps, and recommendations for strengthening CSA in refugee-hosting districts
Year 2025
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1 Report

Living with Climate-related hazards in Nyumanzi settlement (Adjumani, Uganda)

Authors U-learn Uganda
Description
This in-depth assessment, drawing primarily on data collected in 2024, examines climate change response strategies in the refugee and host communities of Nyumanzi settlement (Adjumani District). It aims to provide detailed data on perceived local climate impacts, deepen understanding of how vulnerable populations are responding, and equip humanitarian actors with actionable insights for more effective interventions. By focusing on lived experiences on the ground—beyond statistics—the assessment sheds light on the realities faced by these communities. The findings also support advocacy for local climate action and increased climate funding, with a particular focus on health, shelter, and livelihoods (including markets, agriculture, and household labour). Given the similar setup of settlements across northern and northwestern districts, and their shared exposure to climate-related hazards, these findings may be indicative of the challenges faced by communities in other settlements as well.
Year 2025
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2 Report

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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4 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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5 Project

Risk Factors for Varicella Susceptibility Among Refugees to Toronto, Canada

Authors Geneviève Cadieux, Vanessa Redditt, Daniela Graziano, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name JOURNAL OF IMMIGRANT AND MINORITY HEALTH
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7 Journal Article

Environmental Change and (Im)Mobility in the South

Authors Eberhard Weber
Book Title A New Perspective on Human Mobility in the South
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8 Book Chapter

Environmental Mobility in a Polarized World: Questioning the Pertinence of the “Climate Refugee” Label for Pacific Islanders

Authors Sarah M. Munoz
Year 2021
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
Citations (WoS) 5
10 Journal Article

The uneven geography of research on “environmental migration”

Authors Etienne Piguet, Raoul Kaenzig, Jérémie Guélat
Year 2018
Journal Name Population and Environment
Citations (WoS) 9
12 Journal Article

The effect of climate change threat on public attitudes towards ethnic and religious minorities and climate refugees

Authors Sadi Shanaah, Sadi Shanaah, Immo Fritsche, ...
Year 2024
Journal Name Group Processes & Intergroup Relations
13 Journal Article

Forced Migration

Authors Holly E. Reed, Bernadette Ludwig, Laura Braslow
Year 2016
Book Title Handbook of Migration and Population Distribution
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14 Book Chapter

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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15 Project

Examining Refugee Integration: Perspective of Community Members

Authors Suzie S Weng, Shinwoo Choi
Year 2019
Journal Name Journal of Refugee Studies
Citations (WoS) 5
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16 Journal Article

Climate Refugees: Global, Local and Critical Approaches

Authors Lauren Nishimura
Year 2022
Journal Name International Journal of Refugee Law
17 Journal Article

Future Prospects for the Palestinian Refugees

Authors M. Dumper
Year 2009
Journal Name REFUGEE SURVEY QUARTERLY
19 Journal Article

An ecological approach to psychological adjustment: A field survey among refugees in Germany

Authors Anna Haase, Anette Rohmann, Katrin Hallmann
Year 2019
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS
21 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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25 Journal Article

Introduction to climate, disasters and international development

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

Refugees as People: The Portrayal of Refugees in American Human Interest Stories

Authors S. J. Steimel
Year 2010
Journal Name JOURNAL OF REFUGEE STUDIES
27 Journal Article

Climate Displacement and the Legal Gymnastics of Justice: Is It All Political?

Authors Andrea C. Simonelli
Year 2021
Journal Name ETHICS & INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
Citations (WoS) 2
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35 Journal Article

Community gardens as psychosocial interventions for refugees and migrants: a narrative review

Authors Triya Tessa Ramburn, Triya Tessa Ramburn, Yufei Mandy Wu, ...
Year 2023
Journal Name International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care
Citations (WoS) 1
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39 Journal Article

Visualizing Climate-Refugees: Race, Vulnerability, and Resilience in Global Liberal Politics

Authors Chris Methmann
Year 2014
Journal Name International Political Sociology
Citations (WoS) 6
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40 Journal Article

Does Brock's theory of migration justice adequately account for climate refugees?

Authors Shelley Wilcox
Year 2021
Journal Name ETHICS & GLOBAL POLITICS
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44 Journal Article

Climate Change Impacts on Migration and Urbanization

Principal investigator Ruud Koopmans (Principal Investigator), Marc Helbling (Principal Investigator)
Description
Millions of international migrants have recently sought refuge in Europe, animating debates about the best ways to manage migration. Even more people are being displaced within their home countries every year due to natural disasters like floods and storms; and underlying these sudden events is a steady flow of people leaving their rural livelihoods behind and flocking to the cities in an ongoing trend towards urbanization. Across spatial scales, humanity is on the move. And, that much is clear, climate change plays a role in this: whether in the form of unprecedented droughts that drive people to abandon their fields (as likely happened in Syria just before the war) or through differential impacts on countries’ economies that widen the income gaps and fuel international migration. But how large are the effects of climate change - and how do they interact across spatial scales? Little to no quantitative research is available, and the numbers that have been proposed (e.g. of “environmental refugees”) are often crude estimates, and are highly contested. IMPETUS aims for a unified, quantitative modeling approach to understand the linkages between migration, urbanization, and climate change. To this end, the project combines interdisciplinary expertise from climate change, migration, and urban development. The project will not only provide a better understanding of the relevant environmental and social processes, but also provide valuable data - including projections of future migration and urbanization under climate change - to science and policymakers. This may contribute to anticipating political and humanitarian crises and improving migration policies, as well as climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts, in a rapidly changing world.
Year 2018
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47 Project

The continuing bonds of US expatriates living in Egypt

Authors Hani M. Henry, Nayla Hamdi, Gina Shedid
Year 2009
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS
50 Journal Article
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