Introduction
1: Conceptualizing Climate Change-Related Movement
2: The Relevance of International Refugee Law
3: Climate Change-Related Movement and International Human Rights
Law: The Role of Complementary Protection
4: State Practice on Protection from Disasters and Related
Harms
5: 'Disappearing States', Statelessness, and Relocation
6: Moving with Dignity: Responding to Climate Change-Related
Mobility in Bangladesh
7: 'Protection' or 'Migration'? The 'Climate Refugee' Treaty
Debate
8: Institutional Governance
9: Overarching Normative Principles
Conclusion
change, as opposed to
Jane McAdam is a Professor in the Faculty of Law at the University
of New South Wales, Australia and an Australian Research Council
Future Fellow. She is the Director of the International Refugee and
Migration Law project at the Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public
Law.
She is also a non-resident Senior Fellow at The Brookings
Institution, Washington DC and a Research Associate at the
University of Oxford's Refugee Studies Centre. Professor McAdam is
the Associate Rapporteur of the Convention Refugee Status and
Subsidiary Protection Working Party for the International
Association of Refugee Law Judges; an adviser to the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees on the legal aspects of
climate-related displacement; and has been a consultant to the
Australian and British governments on migration and displacement
issues, about which she has written extensively.
`This is an extraordinarily thorough piece of work, both in terms
of the material it summarizes or refers to ... and in its original
contributions to one of the hottest contemporary debates in the
forced migration field.'
Jean-François Durieux, International Journal of Refugee Law
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