Environmental change and migration in historical perspective

From 04 to 06 August 2011 at Munich (Allemagne)

organisée par "Climates of Migration", projet commun du Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut Essen, et du Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society de la Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

Appel à contribution avant le 10 mars 2011

 

We seek proposals on a range of interconnected historical topics, including, but not limited to:
- migration as a result of the constant degradation of the environment (droughts, erosion, etc.)
- migration as a result of different kinds of extreme natural events in the past (storms, floods, earthquakes, and others)
- population changes over time in distinct hazardous locations such as floodplains, coastal zones, etc.
- the history of vulnerability and resilience; what exactly is the relationship between the hazardscape and the landscape, or, put differently, why did people move into a dangerous area in the first place?
- historical examples of relocation, resettlement, zoning, and city planning issues with impacts on the population as a result of environmental change
- historical discourses on environmentally induced migration
- colonial discourses on climate as an incentive for or an obstacle to migration
- islands, especially small and low-lying ones, as particularly vulnerable (or particularly resilient) places
- the relevance of local, regional, and transnational networks for environmental migrants