Evicted by Climate Change: Confronting the Gendered Impacts of Climate-induced Displacement

Publication language
English
Pages
32pp
Date published
07 Jul 2020
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Environment & climate, Forced displacement and migration, Internal Displacement, Gender, Health, Shelter and housing, Climate Action (SDG)
Organisations
CARE International

In a world in which poverty is increasingly concentrated in vulnerable or fragile states, and fragility is increasingly driven by climate change, climate-induced displacement has become one of the most visible manifestations of the relationship between ecological and societal breakdown. Newest figures from the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre reveal that over 70% of the 33 million newly displaced people (2019) had climate-related triggers. Poor and marginalised people are being driven from their homes with greater frequency and in greater numbers as they are struck by storms, heat waves, floods, rising sea levels and other threats caused and exacerbated by climate change.

This report outlines the causes and consequences of climate-induced displacement, and how the triple injustice of climate change, poverty and gender inequality must be met by transformative action: to support more gender-equal and resilient communities in sustainable environments. In this report, CARE draws on key scientific findings as well as its own experience and, most importantly, the experiences of the people CARE seeks to support in managing compound risks: women and girls in vulnerable situations.