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[Commlist] Funded PhD scholarship - Climate Migrants, Mobility and Governance Across Emergent Political and Policy Terrains
Tue Jun 15 21:49:46 GMT 2021
Project title: Climate Migrants, Mobility and Governance Across Emergent
Political and Policy Terrains
Project in brief (applicant to identify specific focus):
This interdisciplinary study will investigate impacts of climate-related
migration and mobility, internationally or nationally, including to or
within the UK. It will explore ways these societal challenges are shaped
by community ties and identities, migration and migration politics, and
emergent climate-change policies across local, national, and
international levels. It will examine climate-related impacts on social
exclusion, marginalisation, mobility, and people’s changing relations
with politics, science, and the state; policy concerns to address
climate-related mobility and migration; and ethical issues in the
governance of climate-related displacement. It will inform action around
policy implementation that can be shared regionally, nationally, and
internationally. We are seeking students with a relevant first degree
(e.g. anthropology, development studies, law, geography, similar); and
practical experience e.g. NGOs, community work. The fieldwork location
is the applicant’s choice.
Key themes: climate migration, displacement, mobility, marginalised
communities
Project in detail:
The most widely cited prediction for climate migrants (also “climate
refugees”) is 200+ million by 2050 (UNHCR 2020). Worsening climate
change impacts are producing migrants and displacees within and across
national borders, with for example Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and
Latin America estimated to have 140 million+ internal migrants by 2050
(World Bank 2018). While causal relationships between climate-change,
armed conflict, and asylum-seeking are also established - linking
climate change to Europe’s migrant “crisis” (Guy et al 2019)—slow onset
hazards such as heat are driving the mobility of urban populations
across Asia (Zander et al 2018); and rising sea levels have seen British
villages decommissioned, with their ‘viability’ determined by the cost
of coastal defence versus resettlement (House of Lords 2019). In light
of research showing that ‘climate migrants’ have inadequate legal
protection or recognition (Apap 2019), this interdisciplinary project
seeks to re-imagine policy from the perspective of migrants, with the
aim to explore connections between policy practice, identities, and
exclusions in vulnerable and marginal communities. It will explore how
experiences of climate change mobility vary according to national,
social and economic location; and are shaped by political, community,
media, and policy representations and responses. Particular focus will
be placed on where migrants and communities experience gaps in legal and
community protection, and on how they propose to fill these gaps. The
knowledge and inter-sectorial networks generated will support situated
understandings of mobility in climate-affected communities, and the
ethical governance of climate-related mobility.
Potential questions: (1) How do the dramatic or slow-onset effects of
climate change affect people’s mobility, relationships to their
communities and the state, and other national, social, identity and
class exclusions (including gender)? (Community) (2) How can policy
suggestions emerging from communities displaced as a result of climate
change be leveraged for their integration; and for sustainable policy
development at multiple levels? (Social policy) (3) What ethical
concerns are raised firstly by the logic that confers responsibility for
inter/national migration or resettlement on individuals, the state, and
supra-state actors—and secondly, by their governance as climate-related?
(Ethics)
Methods Interpretive and thematic approaches including in-depth
interviews, focus groups with migrants and affected communities, NGO and
community service providers, and ethnographic insights in affected
settings will produce critical bridgework between the voices and
experiences of migrants, and those of service providers. The study may
involve single or multi-sited methods, co-produced research, and a
national, international, or comparative focus.
Supervisors: Dr Nichola Khan, and Dr Roxana Cavalcanti, School of
Humanities and Social Science; Professor Julie Doyle, School of Art and
Media. Khan and Doyle are Directors of the Centre for Spatial
Environmental and Cultural Politics (SECP) which offers a supportive,
thriving Phd student environment. Dr Khan has significant research
expertise in migration, mobilities, and refugees; Professor Doyle has
expertise in media and communication perspectives on climate change. Dr
Cavalcanti works on violence, justice, and marginalized communities in
the Global South.
Deadline for application 7 July 2021, 1600.
Expected interview dates Monday 19 July 2021
Research centre Centre for Spatial, Environmental and Cultural Politics
https://www.brighton.ac.uk/secp/index.aspx
Funding and application details here:
https://www.brighton.ac.uk/research-and-enterprise/postgraduate-research-degrees/funding-opportunities-and-studentships/2021-uob-climate-migrants-mobility-governance.aspx
Due to the post’s funding it is only open to home applicants as defined
by the Fees Regulations.
Queries about project can be sent to Dr Nichola Khan ((N.Khan /at/ brighton.ac.uk))
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