Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
132
1
3

Year Published

2011
2011
2017
2017

Publication Types

Select...
4
4

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 182 publications
(136 citation statements)
references
References 17 publications
0
132
1
3
Order By: Relevance
“…All the mobility and non-mobility factors discussed in Section 3 have long been associated with island communities, low-lying and otherwise, and they continue to affect island life irrespective of climate change, yet the climate change focus often precludes consideration of the wider factors (see analysis by Farbotko, 2005;Gaillard, 2012;King and Connell, 1999;McNamara, 2009;McNamara and Gibson, 2009). As a truism from the non-climate change literature (see also Felli and Castree, 2012), mobility and non-mobility are multi-dimensional, with numerous factors and drivers -often most notably access or lack of access to resources -influencing decisions, choices available, and voluntariness.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…All the mobility and non-mobility factors discussed in Section 3 have long been associated with island communities, low-lying and otherwise, and they continue to affect island life irrespective of climate change, yet the climate change focus often precludes consideration of the wider factors (see analysis by Farbotko, 2005;Gaillard, 2012;King and Connell, 1999;McNamara, 2009;McNamara and Gibson, 2009). As a truism from the non-climate change literature (see also Felli and Castree, 2012), mobility and non-mobility are multi-dimensional, with numerous factors and drivers -often most notably access or lack of access to resources -influencing decisions, choices available, and voluntariness.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are lessons for the attempts to impose the label 'climate (change) refugees' on islanders in low-lying communities, as shown by McNamara and Gibson (2009) who analysed policy documents on, and interviewed Pacific island UN ambassadors regarding, the climate refugee topic. Their analysis showed that, irrespective of topophilia, the ambassadors do not reject the likely need to move due to climate change but do reject the 'refugee' label because they feel that it removes power and choice from themselves while denigrating their attachment to place.…”
Section: Attachment To Placementioning
confidence: 99%
“…They have therefore become prominent in debates on climate change and migration (McNamara and Gibson 2009;Gerrard 6 and Wannier 2013;Yamamoto and Esteban 2014;Kelman et al 2015), although empirical evidence for island disappearance under climate change impacts, most notably sea-level rise, is limited thus far (Webb and Kench 2010;Rankey 2011;Ballu et al 2012;Kench et al 2016). Climate change impacts other than sea-level rise, such as coral mortality (from elevated sea-surface temperatures and ocean acidification) and reduced freshwater, might precede sea-level rise in forcing major island livelihoods changes (Gerrard and Wannier 2013;Yamamoto and Esteban 2014).…”
Section: Climate Change and Migrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…McNamara (2009) and McNamara and Gibson (2009) show how, with respect to climate change, Pacific island UN ambassadors demand that they be given the power and control to determine how and when they will move, keeping it a choice within their control.…”
Section: Topophilia and Tempophiliamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…83 The importing into conflict-prone countries of techniques for climate risk reduction responds to a distinctive Western anxiety over the growing prospect of "climate conflict" and "climate refugees". 84 Climate vulnerability assessments and institution building for climate adaptation thus accompany other donor-led interventions addressing perceived governance failings in (post)conflict spaces. International organisations justify these interventions as protecting the core freedoms of indigenous populations, whilst at the same time legitimating liberal order-building under the rubric of good climate governance.…”
Section: Climate Change As An External Driver Of Vulnerabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%