Climate Refugees Beyond the Legal Impasse? Routledge Studies in Environmental Migration, Displacement and Resettlement Series
Coordonnateurs : Behrman Simon, Kent Avidan
Current estimates of the numbers of people who will be forced from their homes as a result of climate change by the middle of the century range from 50 to 200 million. Therefore, even the most optimistic projections envisage a crisis of migration that will dwarf any we have seen so far. And yet attempts to develop legal mechanisms to deal with this impending crisis have reached an impasse that shows little sign of being overcome. This is in spite of the rapidly growing academic study and policy development in the area of climate change generally.
'Climate Refugees': Beyond the Legal Impasse? addresses a fundamental gap in academic literature and policy making ? namely the legal ?no-man?s land? in which the issue of climate refugees currently resides. Past proposals for the regulation of climate-induced migration are evaluated, inter aliaby their original authors, and the volume also looksat current attempts to regulate climate-induced migration, including by officials from the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the Platform on Displacement Disaster (PDD).
Bringing together experts from a variety of academic fields, as well as officials from leading international organisations, this book will be of great interest to students and researchers of Environmental Law, Refugee Law, Human Rights Law, Environmental Studies and International Relations.
Acknowledgments
List of Editors
List of Contributors
List of Abbreviations
PART I: FOUNDATIONS
Chapter 1: Overcoming the Legal Impasse? Setting the scene
Chapter 2: ‘Climate Refugees’: A Legal Mapping Exercise
Chapter 3: A New Category of Refugees? 'Climate Refugees' and a Gaping Hole in International Law
Chapter 4: Norm Formalization in International Policy Cooperation - A Framework for Analysis
PART II: DEFINING AND CATEGORISING
Chapter 5: Justice and Climate Migration: The Importance of Nomenclature in the Discourse on Twenty-First Century Mobility
Chapter 6: Who Are "Climate Refugees"? Academic Engagement in the Post-Truth Era
PART III: GOVERNING CLIMATE REFUGEES: THE PERSPECTIVE OF INTER-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
Chapter 7: Advancing the Global Governance of Climate Migration through the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Global Compact on Migration: Perspectives from the International Organization for Migration
Chapter 8: Enhancing Legal Protection for People Displaced in the Context of Disasters and Climate Change: Challenges and Opportunities
Chapter 9: State-Led, Regional, Consultative Processes: Opportunities to Develop Legal Frameworks on Disaster Displacement
PART IV: REGULATING CLIMATE REFUGEES WITHIN EXISTING LEGAL REGIMES
Chapter 10: Drawing Upon International Refugee Law: The Precautionary Approach to Protecting Climate Change-Displaced Persons
Chapter 11: Public International Law’s Applicability to Migration as Adaptation: Fit for Purpose?
Chapter 12: Climate Migrants’ Right to Enjoy their Culture
Chapter 13: Beyond the Shortcomings of International Law: A Proposal for the Legal Protection of Climate Migrants
PART V: ENVISIONING SUI GENERIS PATHWAYS
Chapter 14: Towards an International Legal Status of Environmentally Displaced Persons
Chapter 15: Cross-Border Displacement Due to Environmental Disaster: A Proposal for UN Guiding Principles to Fill the Legal Protection Gap
Chapter 16: Global Governance to Protect Future Climate Refugees
Simon Behrman is a lecturer at the Law School at Royal Holloway, University of London, UK.
Avidan Kent is a lecturer at the University of East Anglia, UK, and a Fellow of the Centre for International Sustainable Development Law (McGill/Cambridge University).
Date de parution : 02-2018
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 02-2018
15.6x23.4 cm
Thèmes de Climate Refugees :
Mots-clés :
Climate Change; Climate Migration; Avidan Kent; Internal Displacement; Simon Behrman; Climate Refugees; Nansen Initiative; Refugee Convention; climate displacement; Cross-border Disaster Displacement; international policy; Environmental Law; UN; refugee law; Disaster Displacement; Jolanda van der Vliet; Kampala Convention; Sumudu Anopama Atapattu; Disaster Risk Reduction; Elin Jakobsson; Peninsula Principles; Benoit Mayer; Habitual Residence; Madeline Garlick; Environmental Migration; Marine Franck; Humanitarian Protection Measures; Erica Bower; International Refugee Law; Thekli Anastasiou; OAU Convention; Margaretha Wewerinke-Singh; Sudden Onset Disasters; Beatriz Felipe Pérez; WIM; Camilla Schloss; Environmentally Displaced; Frank Biermann; Soft Law Mechanisms; Warsaw International Mechanism; Maxine Burkett; Regional Consultative Processes; Mariam Traore Chazalnoel; ILC Draft; Dina Ionesco; Jenny Poon; Michel Prieur