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New project to assess how governments can help environmental refugees

Publication Date: 
Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Researchers from the CSIR are investigating the impact of climate-induced migration or environmental refugees in the Southern African region, focusing on internal displacement and cross-border displacement as part of a multi-funded project. Dubbed ‘Kukimbia’, which means ‘to flee’ in kiSwahili, the research will look at how environmental factors lead people to move from their homes for a life elsewhere.

Contact Person

Dr Inga Jacobs-Mata

ijacobsmata@csir.co.za

Researchers from the CSIR are investigating the impact of climate-induced migration or environmental refugees in the Southern African region, focusing on internal displacement and cross-border displacement as part of a multi-funded project. Dubbed ‘Kukimbia’, which means ‘to flee’ in kiSwahili, the research will look at how environmental factors lead people to move from their homes for a life elsewhere.

The United Nations defines a refugee as a person who flees their home country due to a 'well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion’.

CSIR principal researcher, Dr Inga Jacobs-Mata, says more people are displaced because of environmental reasons than politics, war or discrimination, yet there are no legislative frameworks that provide support for this group.

The project will assess whether or not governments in Southern Africa are prepared to create support structures that will accommodate people who migrate from their homes due to floods, drought and extreme weather patterns. It will also track the effectiveness of their disaster response strategies by checking facilities and resources that municipalities have in the event of an influx of people.

They will do this through a participatory approach consisting of interviews, focus group discussions and workshops with key policy-makers. These are set to begin in the second quarter of 2017.  Researchers, which include, political scientists, anthropologists and development studies scholars, expect to develop an understanding of what environmental refugees need to assimilate in the new area.

Jacobs-Mata says their aim is to inform governments about their role in supporting people displaced because of environmental reasons and help them develop context-specific policy guidelines to adequately deal with environmental refugees at a local and regional level. Through the support of the Water Research Commission, the project hopes to contribute to the growing body of empirical evidence on the links between climate change and human mobility and thereby help to improve the adaptive capacity of states and municipalities.