4.3 Article

Environmental migrants and social-movement participation

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH
Volume 58, Issue 1, Pages 18-32

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0022343320972153

Keywords

climate change; Kenya; migration; social movements; survey; urbanization

Funding

  1. Swiss Network for International Studies (SNIS)
  2. British Academy [SRG19\190780]
  3. (Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy)

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The displacement of people due to climatic changes presents challenges for society and governance, and climate-induced rural-to-urban migration may contribute to social movement participation. Environmental migrants are more likely to join social movements promoting migrant rights, which has important policy implications.
The displacement of people due to climatic changes (environmental migration) presents major societal and governance challenges. This article examines whether and how climate-induced rural-to-urban migration contributes to social-movement participation. We argue that the mainly forceful nature of relocation makes environmental migrants more likely to join and participate in social movements that promote migrant rights in urban areas. Using original survey data from Kenya, we find that individuals who had experienced several different types of severe climatic events at their previous location are more likely to join and participate in social movements. This finding has important policy implications. National and local authorities should not only provide immediate assistance and basic social services to environmental migrants in urban settings, but also facilitate permanent solutions by fostering their socio-economic and political integration in order to prevent urban conflict.

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