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One step forward, two steps back?: the fading contours of (in)justice in competing discourses on climate migration

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One step forward, two steps back? the fading contours of (in)justice in competing discourses on climate migration. / Bettini, Giovanni; Nash, Sarah Louise; Gioli, Giovanna.
In: Geographical Journal, Vol. 183, No. 4, 12.2017, p. 348-358.

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Bettini G, Nash SL, Gioli G. One step forward, two steps back? the fading contours of (in)justice in competing discourses on climate migration. Geographical Journal. 2017 Dec;183(4):348-358. Epub 2016 Sept 24. doi: 10.1111/geoj.12192

Author

Bettini, Giovanni ; Nash, Sarah Louise ; Gioli, Giovanna. / One step forward, two steps back? the fading contours of (in)justice in competing discourses on climate migration. In: Geographical Journal. 2017 ; Vol. 183, No. 4. pp. 348-358.

Bibtex

@article{84538105294b4d3a80d0022cd831558a,
title = "One step forward, two steps back?: the fading contours of (in)justice in competing discourses on climate migration",
abstract = "In recent debates on climate change and migration, the focus on the figure of {\textquoteleft}climate refugees{\textquoteright} (tainted by environmental determinism and a crude understanding of human mobility) has given ground to a broader conception of the climate–migration nexus. In particular, the idea that migration can represent a legitimate adaptation strategy has emerged strongly. This appears to be a positive development, marked by softer tones that de-securitise climate migration. However, political and normative implications of this evolution are still understudied. This article contributes to filling the gap by turning to both the {\textquoteleft}climate refugees{\textquoteright} and {\textquoteleft}migration as adaptation{\textquoteright} narratives, interrogating how and whether those competing narratives pose the question of (in)justice. Our analysis shows that the highly problematic {\textquoteleft}climate refugees{\textquoteright} narrative did (at least) channel justice claims and yielded the (illusory) possibility of identifying concrete rights claims and responsibilities. Read in relation to the growing mantra of resilience in climate policy and politics, the more recent narrative on {\textquoteleft}migration as adaptation{\textquoteright} appears to displace justice claims and inherent rights in favour of a depoliticised idea of adaptation that relies on the individual migrant's ability to compete in and benefit from labour markets. We warn that the removal of structural inequalities from the way in which the climate–migration nexus is understood can be seen as symptomatic of a shrinking of the conditions to posing the question of climate justice.",
keywords = "adaptation, climate refugees, migration, climate justice, resilience, development",
author = "Giovanni Bettini and Nash, {Sarah Louise} and Giovanna Gioli",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1111/geoj.12192",
language = "English",
volume = "183",
pages = "348--358",
journal = "Geographical Journal",
issn = "1475-4959",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - One step forward, two steps back?

T2 - the fading contours of (in)justice in competing discourses on climate migration

AU - Bettini, Giovanni

AU - Nash, Sarah Louise

AU - Gioli, Giovanna

PY - 2017/12

Y1 - 2017/12

N2 - In recent debates on climate change and migration, the focus on the figure of ‘climate refugees’ (tainted by environmental determinism and a crude understanding of human mobility) has given ground to a broader conception of the climate–migration nexus. In particular, the idea that migration can represent a legitimate adaptation strategy has emerged strongly. This appears to be a positive development, marked by softer tones that de-securitise climate migration. However, political and normative implications of this evolution are still understudied. This article contributes to filling the gap by turning to both the ‘climate refugees’ and ‘migration as adaptation’ narratives, interrogating how and whether those competing narratives pose the question of (in)justice. Our analysis shows that the highly problematic ‘climate refugees’ narrative did (at least) channel justice claims and yielded the (illusory) possibility of identifying concrete rights claims and responsibilities. Read in relation to the growing mantra of resilience in climate policy and politics, the more recent narrative on ‘migration as adaptation’ appears to displace justice claims and inherent rights in favour of a depoliticised idea of adaptation that relies on the individual migrant's ability to compete in and benefit from labour markets. We warn that the removal of structural inequalities from the way in which the climate–migration nexus is understood can be seen as symptomatic of a shrinking of the conditions to posing the question of climate justice.

AB - In recent debates on climate change and migration, the focus on the figure of ‘climate refugees’ (tainted by environmental determinism and a crude understanding of human mobility) has given ground to a broader conception of the climate–migration nexus. In particular, the idea that migration can represent a legitimate adaptation strategy has emerged strongly. This appears to be a positive development, marked by softer tones that de-securitise climate migration. However, political and normative implications of this evolution are still understudied. This article contributes to filling the gap by turning to both the ‘climate refugees’ and ‘migration as adaptation’ narratives, interrogating how and whether those competing narratives pose the question of (in)justice. Our analysis shows that the highly problematic ‘climate refugees’ narrative did (at least) channel justice claims and yielded the (illusory) possibility of identifying concrete rights claims and responsibilities. Read in relation to the growing mantra of resilience in climate policy and politics, the more recent narrative on ‘migration as adaptation’ appears to displace justice claims and inherent rights in favour of a depoliticised idea of adaptation that relies on the individual migrant's ability to compete in and benefit from labour markets. We warn that the removal of structural inequalities from the way in which the climate–migration nexus is understood can be seen as symptomatic of a shrinking of the conditions to posing the question of climate justice.

KW - adaptation

KW - climate refugees

KW - migration

KW - climate justice

KW - resilience

KW - development

U2 - 10.1111/geoj.12192

DO - 10.1111/geoj.12192

M3 - Journal article

VL - 183

SP - 348

EP - 358

JO - Geographical Journal

JF - Geographical Journal

SN - 1475-4959

IS - 4

ER -