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・ Environmental liability directive
・ Environmental Life Force
・ Environmental Literacy Plan
・ Environmental magnetism
・ Environmental management forces
・ Environmental management scheme
・ Environmental management system
・ Environmental manager
・ Environmental Measurements Laboratory
・ Environmental Media Association
・ Environmental Media Awards
・ Environmental Media Services
・ Environmental medicine
・ Environmental mega conferences
・ Environmental memory
Environmental migrant
・ Environmental mitigation
・ Environmental model city (Japan)
・ Environmental Modeling Center
・ Environmental Modification Convention
・ Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory
・ Environmental monitoring
・ Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
・ Environmental movement
・ Environmental movement in Australia
・ Environmental movement in New Zealand
・ Environmental movement in South Africa
・ Environmental movement in the United States
・ Environmental Mutagen Society
・ Environmental niche modelling


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Environmental migrant : ウィキペディア英語版
Environmental migrant

Environmental migrant refers to people who are forced to migrate from or flee their home region due to sudden or long-term changes to their local environment which compromise their well being or secure livelihood, such changes are held to include increased droughts, desertification, sea level rise, and disruption of seasonal weather patterns such as monsoons.〔Terminski, Bogumil (2011). Towards Recognition and Protection of Forced Environmental Migrants in the Public International Law: Refugee or IDPs Umbrella, (Policy Studies Organization Summit Proceedings: Washington)〕 Environmental migrants may flee to or migrate to another country or they may migrate internally within their own country.〔Myers, Norman. "Environmental Refugees: A Growing Phenomenon ." Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences 357.1420 (2002): 609. Print〕 However, the term 'environmental migrant' is used somewhat interchangeably with a range of similar terms, such as 'environmental refugee', 'climate refugee', 'climate migrant', although the distinction between these terms is contested. Despite problems in formulating a uniform and clear-cut definition of 'environmental migration', such a concept has increased as an issue of concern in the 2000s as policy-makers, environmental and social scientists attempt to conceptualise the potential societal effects of climate change and general environmental degradation.
==Definition and concept==
The term "environmental refugee" was first proposed by Lester Brown in 1976,〔Brown, L., Mcgrath, P., and Stokes, B., (1976). twenty two dimensions of the population problem, Worldwatch Paper 5, Washington DC: Worldwatch Institute〕 since then there has been a proliferation in the use of the term at which "environmental migrant" and a cluster of similar categories, including "forced environmental migrant", "environmentally motivated migrant", "climate refugee", "climate change refugee", "environmentally displaced person (EDP)", "disaster refugee", "environmental displacee", "eco-refugee", "ecologically displaced person" and "environmental-refugee-to-be (ERTB)"〔Boano, C., Zetter, R., and Morris, T., (2008). Environmentally Displaced People: Understanding the linkages between environmental change, livelihoods and forced migration, Refugee Studies Centre Policy Brief No.1 (RSC: Oxford), pg.4〕 have been utilized. The differences between these terms are less important than what they have in common: they all suggest that there is a determinable relationship between environmental drivers and human migration which is analytically useful, policy-relevant and possibly grounds for the expansion of refugee law.
Under the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees of 1951, a refugee is more narrowly defined (in Article 1A) as a person who "owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality, and is unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country".〔United Nations High Commission for Refugees. (2012). (Text of "Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees" ). Retrieved 5 May 2012.〕 While the concept of a refugee was expanded by the Convention's 1967 Protocol and by regional conventions in Africa and Latin America to include persons who had fled war or other violence in their home country, in its present state the convention does not provide long-term legal protection to refugees due to environmental change.〔Hartley, Lindsey. ( 16 February 2012). ''(Treading Water: Climate Change, the Maldives, and De-territorialization )''. Stimson Centre. Retrieved 25 April 2012.〕
The International Organization for Migration proposes the following definition for environmental migrants:〔http://www.iom.int/jahia/webdav/shared/shared/mainsite/about_iom/en/council/94/MC_INF_288.pdf〕
"Environmental migrants are persons or groups of persons who, for compelling reasons of sudden or progressive changes in the environment that adversely affect their lives or living conditions, are obliged to leave their habitual homes, or choose to do so, either temporarily or permanently, and who move either within their country or abroad."

The term ''climate refugees'' refers to the subset of environmental migrants forced to move "due to sudden or gradual alterations in the natural environment related to at least one of three impacts of climate change: sea-level rise, extreme weather events, and drought and water scarcity" (Global Governance Project 2012).〔Global Governance Project. (2012). (Forum on Climate Refugees ). Retrieved on 5 May 2012.〕
However, there is yet to be a universally accepted definition of "environmental migration" or "climate refugee". Thus, The International Organization for Migration formulated a working definition which encompasses the complexity of the topic.
This working definition recognizes that
* Environmental migrants are not only those displaced by the environmental event but also those whose migration is triggered by deteriorating environmental conditions
* Environmentally induced movement can take place within as well as across international borders;
* It can be both long and short term; and
* Population movements triggered by environmental forces can be forced as well as a matter of choice 〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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