TY - JOUR
T1 - Climate change and migration
T2 - New insights from a dynamic model of out-migration and return migration
AU - Entwisle, Barbara
AU - Williams, Nathalie
AU - Verdery, Ashton
N1 - Funding Information:
Over those years, Nang Rong projects have received support from many sources, including the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the National Science Foundation, NASA, the Mellon Foundation, and the MacArthur Foundation. We gratefully acknowledge this support.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/5/1
Y1 - 2020/5/1
N2 - In popular accounts, stories of environmental refugees convey a bleak picture of the impacts of climate change on migration. Scholarly research is less conclusive, with studies finding varying effects. This article uses an agent-based model (ABM) of land use, social networks, and household dynamics to examine how extreme floods and droughts affect migration in Northeast Thailand. The ABM explicitly models the dynamic and interactive pathways through which climate-migration relationships might operate, including coupled out and return streams. Results suggest minimal effects on out-migration but marked negative effects on return. Social networks play a pivotal role in producing these patterns. In all, the portrait of climate change and migration painted by focusing only on environmental refugees is too simple. Climate change operates on already established migration processes that are part and parcel of the life course, embedded in dynamic social networks, and incorporated in larger interactive systems where out-migration and return migration are integrally connected.
AB - In popular accounts, stories of environmental refugees convey a bleak picture of the impacts of climate change on migration. Scholarly research is less conclusive, with studies finding varying effects. This article uses an agent-based model (ABM) of land use, social networks, and household dynamics to examine how extreme floods and droughts affect migration in Northeast Thailand. The ABM explicitly models the dynamic and interactive pathways through which climate-migration relationships might operate, including coupled out and return streams. Results suggest minimal effects on out-migration but marked negative effects on return. Social networks play a pivotal role in producing these patterns. In all, the portrait of climate change and migration painted by focusing only on environmental refugees is too simple. Climate change operates on already established migration processes that are part and parcel of the life course, embedded in dynamic social networks, and incorporated in larger interactive systems where out-migration and return migration are integrally connected.
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U2 - 10.1086/709463
DO - 10.1086/709463
M3 - Article
C2 - 32773842
AN - SCOPUS:85087018035
SN - 0002-9602
VL - 125
SP - 1469
EP - 1512
JO - American Journal of Sociology
JF - American Journal of Sociology
IS - 6
ER -