Climate,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
12(9), P. 140 - 140
Published: Sept. 7, 2024
Climate
change
intensifies
the
frequency
and
severity
of
extreme
weather
events,
profoundly
altering
demographic
landscapes
globally
within
United
States.
This
study
investigates
their
impact
on
migration
patterns,
using
propensity
score
matching
LASSO
techniques
a
larger
regression
modeling
framework.
Here,
we
analyze
historical
population
trends
in
relation
to
climate
risk
exposure
metrics
for
various
hazards.
Our
findings
reveal
nuanced
patterns
climate-induced
change,
including
“risky
growth”
areas
where
economic
opportunities
mitigate
risks,
sustaining
growth
face
observed
exposure;
“tipping
point”
amenities
are
slowly
giving
way
disamenity
escalating
hazards;
“Climate
abandonment”
experiencing
exacerbated
out-migration
from
compounded
by
other
market
factors.
Even
single
county,
these
vary
significantly,
underscoring
importance
localized
analyses.
Projecting
impacts
due
2055,
flood
risks
projected
largest
percentage
(82.6%),
followed
heatwaves
(47.4%),
drought
(46.6%),
wildfires
(32.7%),
wildfire
smoke
(21.7%),
tropical
cyclone
winds
(11.1%).
The
results
underscore
understanding
hyperlocal
order
better
forecast
future
patterns.
Nature Communications,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
15(1)
Published: May 14, 2024
The
global
population
is
aging
at
the
same
time
as
heat
exposures
are
increasing
due
to
climate
change.
Age
structure,
and
its
biological
socio-economic
drivers,
determine
populations'
vulnerability
high
temperatures.
Here
we
combine
age-stratified
demographic
projections
with
downscaled
temperature
mid-century
find
that
chronic
exposure
doubles
across
all
warming
scenarios.
Moreover,
>23%
of
aged
69+
will
inhabit
climates
whose
95th
percentile
daily
maximum
exceeds
critical
threshold
37.5
°C,
compared
14%
today,
exposing
an
additional
177-246
million
older
adults
dangerous
acute
heat.
Effects
most
severe
in
Asia
Africa,
which
also
have
lowest
adaptive
capacity.
Our
results
facilitate
regional
risk
assessments
inform
public
health
decision-making.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
121(3), P. e2206193121 - e2206193121
Published: Jan. 16, 2024
To
understand
the
implications
of
migration
for
sustainable
development
requires
a
comprehensive
consideration
range
population
movements
and
their
feedback
across
space
time.
This
Perspective
reviews
emerging
science
at
interface
studies,
demography,
sustainability,
focusing
on
consequences
flows
nature-society
interactions
including
societal
outcomes
such
as
inequality;
environmental
causes
involuntary
displacement;
processes
cultural
convergence
in
sustainability
practices
dynamic
new
populations.
We
advance
framework
that
demonstrates
how
result
identifiable
resources,
burdens
well-being,
innovation,
adaptation,
challenges
governance.
elaborate
research
frontiers
science,
explicitly
integrating
full
spectrum
regular
decisions
dominated
by
economic
motives
through
to
displacement
due
social
or
stresses.
Migration
can
potentially
contribute
transitions
when
it
enhances
well-being
while
not
exacerbating
structural
inequalities
compound
uneven
resources.
medRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory),
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
unknown
Published: Feb. 20, 2025
Summary
Climate
change
is
likely
to
exacerbate
a
range
of
determinants
which
drive
tuberculosis,
the
world’s
leading
infectious
disease
killer.
However,
tuberculosis
often
neglected
in
wider
climate
health
discussions.
Commissioned
by
World
Health
Organization,
we
developed
an
analytical
framework
outlining
potential
causal
relationships
between
and
tuberculosis.
We
drew
on
existing
knowledge
determinants,
identified
are
be
sensitive
effects
change,
conceptualised
mechanistic
pathways
through
this
might
occur.
collated
evidence
for
these
literature
reviews.
Our
reviews
found
no
studies
directly
linking
warranting
research
build
action.
The
available
supports
existence
plausible
links
highlights
need
include
risk
adaptation
mitigation
programmes,
climate-resilient
funding
response
mechanisms.
Further
urgently
needed
quantify
Public Health Ethics,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
18(1)
Published: Jan. 21, 2025
Abstract
Climate
change
is
a
public
health
threat
that
disproportionately
impacts
certain
groups
more
than
others.
Getting
old
something
most
of
us
will
experience
during
our
lifetime,
and
older
adults
are
among
those
at
elevated
risk
for
adverse
due
to
climate
change.
As
result,
it
behooves
as
society
consider
how
we
approach
mitigating
on
adults.
We
must
carefully
what
ethical
principles
underpin
the
policies
laws
affect
adults,
particularly
world
facing
increasing
challenges
with
distribution
resources.
This
paper
argues
an
based
care-ethic
framework
developed
by
Gilligan,
Tronto
Fisher
using
case
studies
from
New
Zealand
Italy
illustrate
this
could
be
applied.
VESTNIK INSTITUTA SOTZIOLOGII,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
16(1), P. 50 - 73
Published: March 31, 2025
Mountain
ecosystems
and
glacial
zones
around
the
world
are
most
sensitive
to
climate
change,
transforming
natural
environment,
social
economic
life
of
territories
changing
culture
indigenous
peoples
other
ethnic
groups
living
in
mountains.
Changes
temperature
regimes,
precipitation
water
supply,
growth
hazardous
hydro-meteorological
phenomena
have
a
negative
impact
on
activity
health
residents
mountainous
areas
require
increased
attention
issues
their
adaptation
sustainability
context
uncertainty.
Migration
one
hand,
is
considered
as
an
active
strategy
that
increases
level
security
population.
And
focuses
non-migration
forced
result
free
choice.
Mountainous
South-West
Siberia
center
scientific
due
changes
ice
cover
degradation
permafrost,
complex
migration
situation,
usually
analysed
light
factors
socio-economic
development.
The
article
presents
results
sociological
expeditions
three
regions
located
within
Altai
mountain
country
(Altai
Krai,
Republic,
Tyva
Republic),
aimed
at
population's
assessment
change
it.
Based
data
surveys,
in-depth
interviews
expert
assessments,
conclusions
made
about
main
trends
features
situation
attitudes
population
difficult
climatic
conditions.
It
shown
acts
factor
aggravating
problems,
stimulating
outflow
On
for
large
part
population,
they
not
significant
reason
place
residence,
but
special
"mountain"
largely
traditional
way
life.
Voluntary
refusal
migrate
formed
by
positive
perception
area
having
development
potential,
while
seen
manifestation
maladaptive
strategies.