Climate change: governments should support migration, not fear it

Governments risk adopting policies that increase people’s vulnerability to climate change because of a general prejudice against migration, according to research published by the International Institute for Environment and Development.

News, 02 February 2011

Governments risk adopting policies that increase people’s vulnerability to climate change because of a general prejudice against migration, according to research published today by the International Institute for Environment and Development.

The research, which includes case studies from Bolivia, Senegal and Tanzania, found no evidence that environmental degradation linked to climate change would result in large flows of international migrants.

Instead, social and economic factors play a bigger role in who moves, where they move and for how long — and most movements are of short durations and short distances.

"People affected by environmental degradation rarely moved across borders," says the study's author Dr Cecilia Tacoli. "Instead they moved to other rural areas or to local towns, often temporarily."

"Such migrants can reduce their vulnerability by diversifying their sources of income and reducing their dependence on natural resources, but governments often view migrants as a problem and either provide little support or actively discourage them from moving."

The study urges governments to understand the social and economic factors that shape migration so they can develop policies that support the strategies poor people use to adapt to environmental degradation.

"Policymakers need to redefine migration and see it as a valuable adaptive response to environmental risks and not as problem that needs to be tackled," says Tacoli. "We need rational, realistic responses to climate-change, not knee-jerk reactions that create new problems and increase vulnerability," says Tacoli.

For governments in climate-vulnerable countries, this means policies that:
• protect livelihoods in migrants’ home areas, with specific attention to ensuring access to land;
• support migrants at destination, making sure that they have adequate representation and that their rights are respected; and
• avoid vicious cycles, whereby migration is the consequence not of climate change itself, but of policies created to address climate change.

The study refutes alarmist predictions about hundreds of millions of people being forced to migrate across international borders because of climate change.

It notes that when people do move internationally they often invest in their home countries in ways that can further have an impact on internal movement.

This is because such investments tend to be made in areas with potential for economic growth and, in many cases, in non-agricultural activities, such as construction and businesses in urban centres, especially in small and intermediate ones where land is cheaper.

Also, when international migrants send money home this can be used to pay temporary labourers to work on family farms.

Both these sectors are major employers of temporary migrants from environmentally fragile areas and can reduce people’s vulnerability to climate change.

"Both the relatively common internal migration and the relatively rare international migration can support poor people who are at risk from climate change," says Tacoli. "Migration is part of the solution, not part of the problem as many people think."

Download the report