The Impacts of Climate Change on Migration Part I

Wednesday, 9 July 2025: 13:00-14:45
Location: SJES002 (Faculty of Legal, Economic, and Social Sciences (JES))
RC46 Clinical Sociology (host committee)
RC31 Sociology of Migration

Language: English

The role of climate change and its resulting environmental hazards, undoubtedly, is important in current studies of migration and mobility. Environmental disasters have displaced countless people and have rendered them among the most vulnerable population, in countries prone to environmental hazards. Massive displacement of people has created “environmental refugees,” with most of them unable to return to their homelands. Along with this is the loss of shelter, livelihood, food sources that have impacted many of these people. Needless to say, climate change-induced migration is intertwined with political and economic factors, which only increased social inequalities and exacerbated the conditions of an already vulnerable population, especially in countries in the Global South.

How do we mitigate the impact of natural disasters resulting from climate change as they affect large numbers of people and communities? What kind of interventions are needed? This regular session welcomes papers that interrogate the impacts of climate change on human lives and human mobility as well as suggest possible solutions addressing this. This session also aims to encourage a rethinking of current migration theories and concepts that examine this critical social issue.

Session Organizers:
Emma PORIO, Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines and Johanna ZULUETA, Toyo University, Japan
Chair:
Johanna ZULUETA, Toyo University, Japan
Oral Presentations
Migration As a Response to Climate Change: Adaptation or Failure to Adapt?
Chryssanthi ZACHOU, American College of Greece-Deree, Greece
Coping Mechanisms of Left-behind Migrant Family Members in Flood-Prone Areas
Ruttiya BHULA-OR, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand