Tag: Inequality

  • Evidence of Climate and Economic Drivers Affecting Migration in an Unequal and Warming World

    Evidence of Climate and Economic Drivers Affecting Migration in an Unequal and Warming World

    Climate conditions, in complex interrelations with other socioenvironmental, economic, political and cultural factors, significantly play a key role in shaping population density and movement. But these dynamics remain poorly understood.

    This study examines how climate conditions, together with socioenvironmental, economic, political, and cultural factors, shape international migration patterns.

    Using temperature-related climate indices, the authors assess the sensitivity of migration to climate change across 160 countries and regions.

    Results show that mid- to high-latitude countries with cooler baseline climates are projected to experience increased migration inflows, while low-latitude countries are likely to see growing outflows. Climate sensitivity is strongest in higher-GDP countries, whereas lower-GDP countries show less dependence on baseline climate.

    A predictive model combining climate and GDP projections suggests that low-GDP, low-latitude countries will face worsening conditions and increasing migration pressure by the end of the century.

    The study’s results underscore the growing role of economic factors and calls for the integration of climate justice into migration policy to support vulnerable populations in a warming world.

    Learn more about this study here: https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02811-2


    Reference

    Yang, X., Chen, D., Wahab, I. et al. Evidence of climate and economic drivers affecting migration in an unequal and warming world. Commun Earth Environ 6, 782 (2025)

  • How does the Climate Change and Migration Nexus Result in Maladaptation?

    How does the Climate Change and Migration Nexus Result in Maladaptation?

    The characteristics and causes of ineffective migration and how such movements can lead to maladaptation were researched in this article.

    Based on a systematic review of 89 studies, the analysis considers impacts on migrant households, destination communities, and origin communities, including those left behind and trapped populations.

    It is explained how climate-influenced migration can lead to persistent poverty, food insecurity, inequality, exclusion, and social isolation, driven by low income, limited skills and education, weak remittance flows, unequal access to rights, and language barriers.

    The paper demonstrates how the phenomena can undermine local livelihoods and harm both sending and receiving communities, asserting that a clearer understanding of maladaptive migration is essential for policymakers seeking to manage climate-induced mobility more effectively.

    Learn more about this paper here: https://doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2025.2518298


    Reference

    Khavarian-Garmsir, A. R., Sharifi, A., Sadeghi, A., & Allam, Z. (2025). How does the climate change and migration nexus result in maladaptation? Climate Policy, 1–16

  • Climate Change, Inequality, and Human Migration

    Climate Change, Inequality, and Human Migration

    This paper investigates the long-term effects of climate change on global migration and inequality, having the authors modeled the impact of climate change on productivity and utility in a dynamic general equilibrium framework.

    By endogenizing migration decisions across millions of spatial cells, the study captures the scale and structure of climate-induced migration across regions and education groups.

    Study findings show that climate change intensifies global inequality and poverty, reinforces urbanization, and increases migration from low- to high-latitude areas. Median projections suggest that global warming could lead to the voluntary and forced permanent relocation of around 62 million working-age individuals during the 21st century.

    Overall, it is concluded that under current international migration policies, only a small share of those affected are able to move beyond their home countries, and that while massive international migration is unlikely under most scenarios, climate-driven poverty poses a major global threat.

    Learn more about this study here: https://doi.org/10.1093/jeea/jvab054


    Reference

    Michał Burzyński, Christoph Deuster, Frédéric Docquier, Jaime de Melo, Climate Change, Inequality, and Human Migration, Journal of the European Economic Association, Volume 20, Issue 3, June 2022, Pages 1145–1197