Reminder - Deep Climate Conversations: Climate Migration on 11/16

14 views
Skip to first unread message

Jennifer Hadden

unread,
Nov 9, 2023, 12:38:14 PM11/9/23
to environment...@u.washington.edu, envi...@listserv.neu.edu, gep...@googlegroups.com

DEEP CLIMATE CONVERSATIONS 

 

Topic: "Climate Migration” 

 

Thursday, November 16

12:00-1:15 PM EST  

 

 

The Environmental Politics and Governance network (epgnetwork.org) has launched a new initiative, Deep Climate Conversations. This will be an online structured roundtable (i.e., questions circulated in advance to speakers) on a specific issue. The objective is to explore climate issues at a deeper, theoretical level.   

 

This will be a 75-minute event: 60 minutes for discussion of planned questions, leaving about 15 minutes for comments from the audience. 

 

Please register in advance here. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. 

 

Moderators

Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland, College Park 

Aseem Prakash, University of Washington Seattle 

 

Panelists

Roman Hoffmann, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis

Vally Koubi, ETH Zurich

Valerie Mueller, Arizona State University

Alex de Sherbinin, Columbia University


 

The roundtable will focus on the following questions: 

  • From your perspective, what are the key debates in the area of climate migration? Is the climate migration issue suffering from over-attribution given that wars, conflicts, and economic factors have historically been big drivers of cross-national migration?  How do scholars isolate the effect of climate change on migration outcomes? 
  • How central is the migration issue to the politics of climate change? Are COPs neglecting this subject? Should climate migration be subsumed under adaptation, or do we need a new conceptual category to understand it and address it?
  • In what ways could climate migration reshape international relations and domestic politics? From a cross-national perspective, are there differences in how both home and host countries are addressing the issue of climate migration? 


--

Jennifer Hadden

Associate Professor, Department of Government and Politics
3117H Chincoteague Hall
University of Maryland, College Park
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages