Skip to content

At the moment we can only deliver in the UK. Click here to visit Cambridge.org for international orders.

  • Bestsellers
  • Latest releases
  • Offers
  • Events

    Cart

    Your cart is empty

    Migration and Displacement in a Changing Climate

    Author(s): Kelsea Best, Kayly Ober, Robert A. McLeman

    ISBN: 9781009449601
    Publication Date: 17/4/25
    Pages: 342
    Format: Paperback
    Sale price£39.99 GBP

    Quantity

    Pickup available at Cambridge University Press Bookshop

    Usually ready in 24 hours

    Migration and Displacement in a Changing Climate

    Migration and Displacement in a Changing Climate

    Cambridge University Press Bookshop

    Pickup available, Usually ready in 24 hours

    1-2 Trinity Street
    Cambridge CB2 1SZ
    United Kingdom

    +441223333333

    🚚 Please note we can only ship within the UK.

    FREE delivery on books (excluding sale).

    Delivery for other items is £1.50 - £4.50, calculated at checkout.

    T&Cs apply.

    Free click & collect on all orders.

    This book provides insight into the impact of climate change on human mobility - including both migration and displacement - by synthesizing key concepts, research, methodology, policy, and emerging issues surrounding the topic. It illuminates the connections between climate change and its implications for voluntary migration, involuntary displacement, and immobility by providing examples from around the world. The chapters use the latest findings from the natural and social sciences to identify key interactions shaping current climate-related migration, displacement, and immobility; predict future changes in those patterns and methods used to model them; summarize key policy and governance instruments available to us to manage the movements of people in a changing climate; and offer directions for future research and opportunities. This book will be valuable for students, researchers, and policy makers of geography, environmental science, climate and sustainability studies, demography, sociology, public policy, and political science.

    • Provides insights into how migration responses differ for slow- and rapid-onset climate-related hazards (including sea level rise, drought, flooding, tropical cyclones, wildfires, and others)
    • Contributes to ongoing international discussions on the topic, which in recent years have emerged as key to UNFCCC negotiations and the UN Human Rights tribunal, and the subject of a special white paper commissioned by the White House in 2021
    • Provides the most current synthesis of the state of knowledge in areas of theory, methodology, and policy considerations for climate-related migration and displacement, and will serve as a go-to resource on the subject