| Literature DB >> 29435732 |
Sonja Ayeb-Karlsson1,2, Christopher D Smith3, Dominic Kniveton4.
Abstract
First mooted in 2011, the concept of Trapped Populations referring to people unable to move from environmentally high-risk areas broadened the study of human responses to environmental change. While a seemingly straightforward concept, the underlying discourses around the reasons for being 'trapped', and the language describing the concept have profound influences on the way in which policy and practice approaches the needs of populations at risk from environmental stresses and shocks. In this article, we apply a Critical Discourse Analysis to the academic literature on the subject to reveal some of the assumptions implicit within discussing 'trapped' populations. The analysis reveals a dominant school of thought that assisted migration, relocation, and resettlement in the face of climate change are potentially effective adaptation strategies along a gradient of migrant agency and governance.Entities:
Keywords: Climate change; Critical Discourse Analysis; Environmental migration; Immobility; Textual analysis; Trapped Populations
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29435732 PMCID: PMC6072639 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-017-1007-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1Word cloud 1 has been generated from the full text of the Foresight MGEC (2011) report and is dominated by the words migration, environmental, and change. To enable more in-depth analysis, Word cloud 2 has been created using the same source text but is displayed with the words migration, environmental, and change removed. Larger font size of a word indicates greater prevalence within the text with non-conceptual words such as ‘the’, ‘by’, and ‘for’ removed
Overview of discourse groups
| Authors | Year | Institutional affiliations during authorship | Type of publication | Cited Foresight report? | Author(s) linked to Foresight? | Number of times ‘trapped’ cited | Article keywords | ‘Word cloud’ keywords |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||
| Black, R. | 2011 | UK university and UK Government | Peer reviewed journal | Yes | Yes, directly (all either members of Foresight or the Lead Expert Group) | Whole = 5 | NA |
|
| Adger, W.N. | 2015 | UK universities | Peer reviewed journal | Yes | Yes, directly (all members of the Lead Expert Group) | Whole = 6 | migration, environmental change, adaptation, governance |
|
| Adger, N. | 2013 | UK university | Book chapter | Yes—not in relation to being trapped | Yes (one member of the Lead Expert Group) | Whole = 1 | NA |
|
| Black, R. | 2013 | UK universities | Peer reviewed journal | Yes | Yes, directly (all members of the Lead Expert Group) | Whole = 13 | environmental change, migration, extremes, mobility, displacement |
|
| Penning-Rowsell, E.C. | 2013 | UK university | Peer reviewed journal | Yes | Yes, indirectly (case study authors) | Whole = 6 | hazards, Bangladesh, impacts, evacuation, migration, focus groups |
|
| Afifi, T. | 2015 | Consortium of German research organisations, primarily UNU-EHS | Peer reviewed journal | Yes—not in relation to being trapped | No | Whole = 4 | human mobility, rainfall variability, food security, climatic stressors |
|
| Gray, C. | 2016 | US university | Peer reviewed journal | No | No | Whole = 2 | NA |
|
| Milan, A. | 2014 | UNU-EHS and Guatemalan Ministry | Peer reviewed journal | Yes | No | Whole = 5 | climate variability, migration, Guatemala, food security, mountain |
|
| Warner, K. | 2014 | UNU-EHS | Peer reviewed journal | Yes - not in relation to being trapped | No | Whole = 9 | adaptation, climate change, vulnerability, migration | |
|
| ||||||||
| Geddes, A. | 2012 | UK universities | Peer reviewed journal | Yes - not in relation to being trapped | Yes, directly (all members of the Lead Expert Group) | Whole = 12 | international migration, internal migration, environmental change, governance, security, displacement, protection |
|
| Geddes, A. | 2015 | UK university | Peer reviewed journal | Yes | Yes, directly (member of the Lead Expert Group) | Whole = 11 | migration, climate change, security South Mediterranean |
|
| Humble, A.T. | 2014 | Earth League, Sweden | Journal article | No | No | Whole = 8 | NA |
|
| Sow, P. | 2015 | German universities | Peer reviewed journal | Yes - not in relation to being trapped | No | Whole = 1 | West African migration, climate change, Morocco, racism |
|
| Black, R. | 2014 (book) | UK universities | Book chapter | Yes | Yes (one member of the Lead Expert Group) | Whole = 68 | NA |
|
| Black, R. | 2014 (FMR) | UK universities | Journal article | Yes | Yes (one member of the Lead Expert Group) | Whole = 22 | NA |
|
| Bhatta, G.D. | 2015 | Global research partnership (CGIAR) members (Canada and India) and Canadian city. | Peer reviewed journal | No | No | Whole = 7 | distress migration, climatic risks, extreme events, rainfall variability, gender dimensions, South Asia |
|
| Adams, H. | 2016 | UK university | Peer reviewed journal | Yes | No | Whole = 22 | immobility, trapped, place attachment, behavioural theory, environmental change, migration, Peru |
|
| Hillman, F. | 2016 | German research institutes | Peer reviewed journal | Yes - not in relation to being trapped | No | Whole = 6 | migration, environmental change, climate change, migration trajectories, Ghana, Indonesia | |
|
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| Baldwin, A. | 2016 | UK university | Peer reviewed journal | Yes | No | Whole = 1 | climate change, migration, race, neoliberalism, affect |
|
| Baldwin, A. | 2013 | UK and French universities | Book chapter | Yes - not in relation to being trapped | No | Whole = 2 | NA | |
| Felli, R. | 2012 | UK university | Peer reviewed journal | Yes | No | Whole = 2 | NA |
|
NA no article keywords were specified for a particular publication
* A situation where full digital text was not available for use in the creation of a ‘word cloud’. In such an instance, a ‘word cloud’ was created from the excerpts taken from the article due to their relation to Trapped Populations