Archive d’étiquettes pour : India

Complex processes shape migration decisions at the individual level, many of which are influenced by the interactions of household-level processes with broader conditions of social-environmental systems (SESs). We examine these interactions in India, a country with large geographic variations in climatic exposure and socio-economic conditions. Our study integrates household and individual-level migration data from the National Sample Survey (NSS 64th Round) with the historical spatial data on flooding from the Global Flood Database based on the Dartmouth Flood Observatory. Adjusting for household-level economic conditions, this paper provides evidence on how individual-level migration decisions vary with environmental shocks and stresses at the SES level. We further document that these environmental conditions affect migration outcomes differently for individuals within households based on characteristics including birth order, sex, and stated reason for migration. Our analysis also points to variations in the time lag between migration as a response to varying environmental shocks and stresses, potentially presenting a window of opportunity to address climatic impacts on SESs. This study advances the research on climate change adaptation by highlighting the role of intersectional vulnerabilities and behaviours affecting the future population structures of climate-exposed SESs.

Garima Jain, Dylan Connor, Pratyush Tripathy
Arizona State University


 
ID Abstract: 397

Urban frontiers are considered spaces of rapid changes where rural activities lose ground in favour of non-agricultural economic activities and multiple forms of residential developments. Rapid environmental transformations driven by climate changes associated with poor management of resources such as water and neglect of farmers’ conditions tend to accelerate land use changes well beyond the urban limits such as urban built-up. It is notably the case in South Asia which experiments with more and more extreme weather conditions. Looking at the case of South India and articulating the distress of agriculture to land assets demands we demonstrate how the desire for urbanism is conceived as an answer to the economic and environmental crisis of farmers. _x000D_
Far from the classical Von Thünen’s configuration of urban expansion where rich orchards surround the city’s peripheries, the socio-environmental crisis of the countryside generates a new landscape where more and more patches of residential layouts replace cultivated lands, often rich irrigated parcels. Many of these layouts remain barren lands for years. Plots are bought as assets to secure or generate capital that can be used later on. Some plots are occasionally built. Purchasers adhere to the idea of the possibility to live a quiet city life in a countryside-like gated community that is sold to them by farmers in disarray and intermediary real estate contractors. The pandemic has accelerated this trend which invites further questions about the notion of urban frontiers. It invites the reconceived South Asian urban world whose viability is profoundly challenged by the increasing number of extreme weather events – including deadly heat._x000D_

Eric Denis, Marine Frantz
Géographie-cités’ Lab, Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne


 
ID Abstract: 799