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Who are climate refugees?

The climate crisis is no secret–but you might not know how it’s affecting vulnerable populations around the globe. This month, Novel Hand explores the lived experiences of climate refugees and effective solutions to protect them.

Impactfull is our monthly series.

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Articles written by Grace Adcox

Finding Solutions for Climate Refugees

Anywhere from 50 to 300 million people may face climate-induced displacement over the coming century. This is an almost unimaginable number of people who will need resources, including food and security, and who will need to seek out a new home as climate refugees.  Throughout this Impactfull series, we have learned about the challenges

You Can Help Climate Refugees. Here’s How.

Today on the podcast, Nonprofit Director Katherine and Refugees and Migration Editor Grace sit down to discuss our July Impactfull partner, Climate Refugees, and to wrap up an excellent month of learning and impact. Using a people-driven approach, founder and Executive Director Amali Tower and the team at Climate Refugees work to uplift the

Climate Refugees: An Interdisciplinary Approach with Jonathan Gilligan

What does it mean to take an interdisciplinary approach to research and policy for an issue as complex as climate refugees and climate-driven migration? For Prof. Jonathan Gilligan, it looks like drawing on expertise across fields – ranging from environmental science and law to psychology and political science – and developing a multifaceted view

Challenges for Climate Refugees in the 21st Century

Climate refugees are a group of people without name, description, recognition, or protection in international law. As the climate crisis continues to worsen with each passing year, immediate change is essential. Yet, before we can develop solutions for the problems that climate refugees face, we must better understand these multidimensional challenges.  Displacement is one

This Land is Your Land, This Land is My Land: Climate Refugees in Our Cultural Landscape

This land is your land, and this land is my land From the California to the New York Island, From the Redwood Forest, to the Gulf stream waters, God blessed America for me. [This land was made for you and me.] I roamed and rambled and followed my footsteps To the sparkling sands of

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ONE MINUTE

Subscribe to the Joint Data Center on Forced Displacement Newsletter to receive technology- and data-driven insights on the state of international refugee crises and responses. This is a great way to stay up-to-date on climate refugee news!

FIVE MINUTES

In February 2021, President Biden signed an Executive Order on rebuilding and improving programs for climate refugees and further planning for the impact of climate change on migration. This Order establishes a formal way of resettling climate migrants and directs the Biden Administration to more thoroughly and officially investigate climate change and migration.

Read Biden’s Executive Order and learn more about the steps the US government is taking to address the increasingly relevant issue of climate migration.

TEN MINUTES

Write to your legislator asking them to support climate justice and climate refugee legislation brought forward by Senator Markey and Representative Velázquez using the template written by our Policy Director.

SHORT-TERM

RefuSHE helps refugee girls attain economic independence through its program for creating artisanal clothing. Browse and purchase everything from face masks to tote bags from RefuSHE to support hundreds of young women.

Not shopping right now? Bookmark RefuSHE for birthday and holiday shopping!

LONG-TERM

The Mobile International Mobility Convention (MIMC) aims to help establish the rights of climate displaced individuals to freely move and seek security. Over the span of 213 articles, the Convention establishes minimum and special rights to all people who cross borders for various reasons, including everyone from tourists to forced migrants.
Legal action is essential for climate justice and you can contribute by staying informed. Read the Convention (or a summary), sign the Convention, and stay up to date with the MIMC newsletter.


Want even more? Here are more Novel Hand articles about climate refugees:

Finding Solutions for Climate Refugees

Anywhere from 50 to 300 million people may face climate-induced displacement over the coming century. This is an almost unimaginable number of people who will need resources, including food and security, and who will need to seek out a new home as climate refugees.  Throughout this Impactfull series, we have learned about the challenges

You Can Help Climate Refugees. Here’s How.

Today on the podcast, Nonprofit Director Katherine and Refugees and Migration Editor Grace sit down to discuss our July Impactfull partner, Climate Refugees, and to wrap up an excellent month of learning and impact. Using a people-driven approach, founder and Executive Director Amali Tower and the team at Climate Refugees work to uplift the

Displacement Trends, Policymaking, & Research in Climate Migration with Kayly Ober

For the third episode of our Impactfull series on climate refugees, Natasha sits down with Kayly Ober, the senior advocate and program manager of the Climate Displacement Program for Refugees International. Kayly has over a decade of experience researching and analyzing issues related to climate and migration, including her work with the TransRe project,

Combating Climate Change: The Great Green Wall

What comes to mind when you hear the phrase “Great Wall”? Perhaps you are reminded of the Great Wall of China, or the wall former President Donald Trump vowed to construct along the United States-Mexico border. However, there is another “Great Wall”, one that may join the Great Wall of China as a World

The Climate-Migration Nexus and International Law

The climate-migration nexus occupies a unique space in our understanding of climate change, migration, and international law.

Climate Refugees: An Interdisciplinary Approach with Jonathan Gilligan

What does it mean to take an interdisciplinary approach to research and policy for an issue as complex as climate refugees and climate-driven migration? For Prof. Jonathan Gilligan, it looks like drawing on expertise across fields – ranging from environmental science and law to psychology and political science – and developing a multifaceted view

Challenges for Climate Refugees in the 21st Century

Climate refugees are a group of people without name, description, recognition, or protection in international law. As the climate crisis continues to worsen with each passing year, immediate change is essential. Yet, before we can develop solutions for the problems that climate refugees face, we must better understand these multidimensional challenges.  Displacement is one

Climate Migration in Bangladesh with Kelsea Best

Today on Handful, Grace introduces our newest Impactfull series on climate refugees by sitting down with Kelsea Best, a PhD candidate in the Earth and Environmental Science department at Vanderbilt University. Kelsea studies environmental and climate migration in coastal Bangladesh, thinking about the relationship between humans and their natural environments as well as the

This Land is Your Land, This Land is My Land: Climate Refugees in Our Cultural Landscape

This land is your land, and this land is my land From the California to the New York Island, From the Redwood Forest, to the Gulf stream waters, God blessed America for me. [This land was made for you and me.] I roamed and rambled and followed my footsteps To the sparkling sands of

Climate Migration: A Crisis of Coffee in Guatemala

Before the world closed its borders indefinitely due to the COVID-19 pandemic, thousands of Guatemalans were fleeing north, towards the United States. They were not fleeing from war or conflict—but from a land that had turned against them. What’s causing coffee plantations to fail, how are coffee farmers responding, and what can you do

All About Asylum in the United States: A Flawed System

What is Asylum, Anyway? The asylum-seeking process in the United States has been under scrutiny for years from all sides of the political spectrum. Most recently, the Trump Administration has taken a very rigid approach to immigration as a whole, as well as the process and admittance of asylum seekers.  Often terms like “refugee”

Climate “Refugees” Explained

Between harmful rhetoric about immigration and campaigns of misinformation about climate change, the world is unprepared for a dramatic increase in climate “refugees” over the coming decades. So, why “refugees” in quotes? Under the leadership of the United Nations, the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees defines the “refugee” concept and discusses