A Multi-Hazard Approach to Climate Migration: Testing the Intersection of Climate Hazards, Population Change, and Location Desirability from 2000 to 2020 DOI Open Access
Zachary M. Hirsch,

Jeremy R. Porter,

Jasmina M. Buresch

et al.

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.

Language: Английский

Global projections of heat exposure of older adults DOI Creative Commons
Giacomo Falchetta, Enrica De Cian, Ian Sue Wing

et al.

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.

Language: Английский

Citations

26

Analysis of the coordinated development and influencing factors between urban population and environment: A case study of 35 metropolises in China DOI

Yuyuan Tan,

Yi Zhou, Hao Zhou

et al.

Sustainable Cities and Society, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown, P. 106160 - 106160

Published: Jan. 1, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

1

Migration and sustainable development. DOI Creative Commons
W. Neil Adger, Sonja Fransen, Ricardo Safra de Campos

et al.

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.

Language: Английский

Citations

4

Public preferences for coastal adaptation: Economic evidence from a discrete choice experiment for hard structures and nature-based solutions in Miami, Florida DOI

Carlie Dario,

Renato Molina, David L. Kelly

et al.

Marine Policy, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 165, P. 106217 - 106217

Published: May 29, 2024

Language: Английский

Citations

4

The demographic future of migration is African DOI
Kathryn A. Foster, Matthew S. Hall

International Migration, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 63(1)

Published: Jan. 1, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

0

Climate change and tuberculosis: an analytical framework DOI Creative Commons
Matthew Saunders, Delia Boccia, Palwasha Khan

et al.

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

Language: Английский

Citations

0

Twelve Research Agendas for Advancing the Peace-Sustainability Nexus DOI Creative Commons
Dahlia Simangan, Joshua Fisher, Tobias Ide

et al.

Published: March 1, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

0

Towards an Ethical Approach to Climate Change and its Health Risks for older adults DOI

Susan Deering,

Ross Upshur

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.

Language: Английский

Citations

0

Migration behaviour of the population of the inland mountainous regions of Eurasia in the context of climate change DOI Open Access
Svetlana G. Maximova, Daria A. Omelchenko

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.

Language: Английский

Citations

0

Knowing More About Losing More: Investigating Spatial-Temporal Patterns of Damage from Storm-Related Hazards in the Contiguous United States DOI
Yao Zhou, Christopher T. Emrich, Melanie Gall

et al.

Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown, P. 1 - 20

Published: April 28, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

0