Intersections of climate change, migration, and health: experiences of first-generation migrants from Latin America to the Atlanta-metropolitan area

Climate change is an important driver of migration, but little research exists on whether migrant communities in the U.S. identify climate change-related factors as reasons for migrating. In 2021, we conducted a multidisciplinary, collaborative project to better understand the nexus of climate chang...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global public health 2023-01, Vol.18 (1), p.2261773-2261773
Hauptverfasser: Laney, Emaline, Nkusi, Alexis, Herrera, Clary, Lane, Morgan, Sampath, Amitha, Kitron, Uriel, Fairley, Jessica K., Philipsborn, Rebecca, White, Cassandra
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container_start_page 2261773
container_title Global public health
container_volume 18
creator Laney, Emaline
Nkusi, Alexis
Herrera, Clary
Lane, Morgan
Sampath, Amitha
Kitron, Uriel
Fairley, Jessica K.
Philipsborn, Rebecca
White, Cassandra
description Climate change is an important driver of migration, but little research exists on whether migrant communities in the U.S. identify climate change-related factors as reasons for migrating. In 2021, we conducted a multidisciplinary, collaborative project to better understand the nexus of climate change and immigrant health in the Atlanta area. This paper presents one arm of this collaboration that explored both the role of climate change in decisions to immigrate to Georgia and the ways that climate change intersects with other possible drivers of migration. First generation migrants from Latin America were recruited primarily through CPACS Cosmo Health Center and were invited to participate in an intake survey and an in-depth interview. Results were analyzed using descriptive statistics and thematic analysis. Findings suggest that while participants may not have explicitly identified climate change as a primary reason for migration, in both surveys and in-depth interviews, participants reported multiple and intersecting social, economic, political, and environmental factors that are directly or indirectly influenced by climate change and that are involved in their decisions to migrate. The narratives that emerged from in-depth interviews further contextualised survey data and elucidated the complex nexus of climate change, migration, and health.
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source Taylor & Francis Open Access; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; PAIS Index; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects anthropology
Change agents
Climate change
Collaboration
Decision making
Decisions
Environmental aspects
Environmental impact
First generation
Health
Health facilities
Immigrants
Interdisciplinary aspects
Interviews
Latin America
Metropolitan areas
Migrants
Migration
multidisciplinary
Political factors
Polls & surveys
Statistical analysis
Statistics
title Intersections of climate change, migration, and health: experiences of first-generation migrants from Latin America to the Atlanta-metropolitan area
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