Climate Migration in Latin America
Climate Migration in Latin America: A Future ‘Flood of Refugees’ to the North?
This COHA research piece synthesizes the current developments regarding environmentally-driven human migration –and more specifically, migration caused by the environmental manifestations of anthropogenic climate change– seeking to expose its potential harmful effects in Central and South America, as well as the Caribbean. Although this region has received less media attention and academic focus than Western Africa, South East Asia or the Pacific Islands, it certainly houses the climate and non-climate factors that could cause mass human displacement.
The first section
introduces the concept of environmentally-induced migration,
expounding upon the current state of the debate that
surrounds it and the challenges it faces. This is followed
by an examination of different climate processes and natural
disasters as drivers of migration in Latin America. It also
addresses non-climate factors such as poor governance,
poverty, overpopulation, and unequal land distribution that
can compound these migratory pressures.
For full article click here
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Fellow Alexandra Deprez
ENDS