Category: Mobility and Migration

New BICC research project “On the road to liquid warfare”

In October, BICC has started with the new project “On the road to liquid warfare?“ The project asks how the proliferation of modern military technology for remote warfare – e.g. ballistic missiles, precision-guided munition, or drones – transforms war and warfare practices of autocratic states and non-state armed actors. […]

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Contemporary Asymmetrical Dependencies Beyond the Pandemic: COVID-19, Migration and Global Labor

+CALL FOR PAPERS+
This e-symposium is being organized by the Research Group Contemporary Asymmetrical Dependencies (CAD) at the Bonn Center for Dependency and Slavery Studies, University of Bonn, Germany. Focusing on this nexus between pandemic, migrant labor and vulnerabilities, we hope that this symposium will highlight some of the major challenges that arose from the COVID-19 pandemic, and provide a direction for future research and policy engagement.

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Marshallese Migration: Comparative Well-Being In U.S. Destination States

New policy brief by UNU-EHS Researchers on first-hand information from 79 Marshallese respondents living in Hawai‘i, Oregon, and Washington, who have compared their well-being in these destination states to that of their previous lives in the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI). In addition, they reflect on how their sense of well-being relates to their concerns about a changing environment at home. […]

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When the disaster strikes: Gendered (im)mobility in Bangladesh

“Gender influences people’s behaviour in various ways. This study investigates gendered (im)mobility during cyclone strikes in Bangladesh. During such strikes people have described being unable to move away from environmentally high-risk locations and situations. The Q-based Discourse Analysis used by this study shows how and why gender-roles (im)mobilised people in three coastal locations during the cyclones. […]”

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Urban stories connecting loss of wellbeing, displacement and (im)mobility

The journal article “‘When we were children we had dreams, then we came to Dhaka to survive’: urban stories connecting loss of wellbeing, displacement and (im)mobility” uses storytelling methodology to investigate the connections between urban climate-induced loss of wellbeing and (im)mobility in Bhola Slum, an informal settlement in Dhaka, Bangladesh. […]

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Climate change and migration: How do they connect?

From the category “Worth Reading”: Migration and climate change are both highly complex phenomena. In the public debate we often hear about „climate related migration“ or even „climate refugees“, and very often this is done with a note of alert. …

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Trapped in the prison of the mind: Notions of climate-induced (im)mobility decision-making and wellbeing from an urban informal settlement in Bangladesh

From the category “Worth Reading”: The concept of Trapped Populations has until date mainly referred to people ‘trapped’ in environmentally high-risk rural areas due to economic constraints. This article attempts to widen our understanding of the concept by investigating climate-induced socio-psychological immobility and its link to Internally Displaced People’s (IDPs) wellbeing in a slum of Dhaka. …

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