Conceptualizing Climate Displacement in an Agrarian World Already on the Move, Part I
Type: Virtual Paper
Day: 2/28/2022
Start Time: 8:00 AM
End Time: 9:20 AM
Theme: Climate Justice
Sponsor Group(s):
Cultural and Political Ecology Specialty Group
, Human Dimensions of Global Change Specialty Group
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Organizer(s):
Lisa Kelley
, Kimberley Thomas
, Annie Shattuck
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Chairs(s):
Lisa Kelley, Department of Geography and Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado, Denver
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Description:
Climate changes are unequivocally shifting the way people live and get by, particularly in agrarian regions characterized by high dependence on rain-fed agriculture, accelerating agribusiness investments in land, and pre-existing socio-environmental vulnerabilities. Simultaneously, dominant representations of climate change and linked displacements can leave much to be desired, particularly in agrarian landscapes where existing mobilities are often read as evidence of either climate adaptations or failures thereof. Whether depicted as success or failure, both framings can invisibilize the preexisting socioenvironmental processes that render climate-induced migrations necessary—or conversely, that can inhibit them entirely. This paper session engages with the diversity of eco-social scholarship complicating these more reductive reads of the relationships between ongoing agrarian, climate, and mobility transformations, including work from the fields of environmental migration and critical disaster studies, feminist political ecology, critical physical geography, and socio-environmental systems analysis, among others.
Presentation(s), if applicable
Camelia Dewan, ; Climate Refugees or Labour Migrants? Affective relations, gendered kinship and women’s migration from coastal Bangladesh |
Himani Upadhyay, ; “We are still here” Understanding climate change and immobility in highly mobile agrarian Himalayan communities |
Marygold Walsh-Dilley, University of New Mexico; Quinoa on the Move: On the Opportunities and Exploitations of Climate Smart Agriculture |
Alder Keleman Saxena, Northern Arizona University; Forests and Reverse Migration in India During the Covid-19 Pandemic |
Kiril Sharapov, ; Dead Animals, Frozen Grass and People on the Move: Neoliberal Encompassment and Abandonment in Mongolia. |
Non-Presenting Participants Agenda
Role | Participant |
Discussant | Annie Shattuck |
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Conceptualizing Climate Displacement in an Agrarian World Already on the Move, Part I
Description
Virtual Paper
Contact the Primary Organizer
Lisa Kelley - lisa.kelley@ucdenver.edu