Rebuild or Retreat- Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Climate Migration and Mobility in the Glo[...]
Company: Deutsches Historisches Institut Washington DC
Location: Washington
Posted on: May 31, 2025
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Job Description:
Rebuild or Retreat? Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Climate
Migration and Mobility in the Global NorthApr 23, 2026-Apr 24,
2026Conference at GHI Washington - Conveners: Jana Dunz-Keck (GHI
Washington) and Sarah Beringer (GHI Washington), Simon Richter
(University of Pennsylvania), Andreas H--bner (Kiel University),
Max Gruenig (POCACITO Network and Georgetown University, BMW Center
for German and European Studies), and Brendan O'Donnell (POCACITO
Network and Heinrich B--ll Foundation)Call for PapersT.C. Boyle's
eco-thrillerBlue Skiespublished in 2023 paints a hauntingly
familiar picture of a climate-ravaged future - one that feels
eerily close to reality.The novel's characters live in a constant
state of tension, caught between encroaching wildfires in
California and rising waters in Florida. As disaster closes in,
they face an unavoidable truth: there's nowhere left to go but
away. Forced to abandon their homes, they join the growing tide of
climate migrants, turning fiction into a reflection of our own
uncertain future.The World Bank's 2021Groundswellreport highlights
climate change as an increasingly powerful driver of migration
(Clement et al.). It projects that by 2050, it could force 216
million people across six world regions to relocate within their
own countries.While a significant number of people will be
displaced in the Global South, it is also a matter that concerns
the Global North. Nations and communities in the Global North are
increasingly experiencing the impacts of - mostly internal -
climate migration, i.e. the movement of people within a country's
borders primarily due to sea-level rise.Unlike acute climate events
such as hurricanes or wildfires, sea-level rise is a slow-moving,
long-term process that gradually impacts coastal communities over
decades. While it is chronic in nature, its effects-such as coastal
erosion, frequent flooding, and saltwater intrusion-can lead to
acute disasters when combined with extreme weather events like
storm surges and hurricanes. Together,historically, gradual
destruction and the one stemming from disaster scenarios have
endangered the existence of many communities along the coastlines
with no exception to the United States, as seen in the case of
internal migration following Hurricane Katrina. Sweet et al. (2022)
find that sea levels on the coasts of the 48 states spanning the
conterminous U.S. are rising more rapidly than the global average.
In consequence, over 20 million Americans could be forced to
relocate in the coming decades, with more than 13 million facing
permanent displacement due to sea-level rise by 2100, as
highlighted in Matthew E. Hauer'sNaturearticle (2017).Thus,
internal climate migration due to sea-level rise, is no longer a
future scenario as imagined in climate fiction or scientific
reports, but an already lived reality by low-lying coastal
communities across the United States.For instance, Isle de Jean
Charles in Louisiana, home to the Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw Tribe,
has already lost over 98% of its land to rising waters and erosion
forcing the community to abandon the place their ancestors had
lived on for centuries (Jimenez-Damary et al. 2020).While rising
sea levels are impactingall coastal regions from Virginia to
Washington state, minority communities are often - and,
historically speaking, were always -disproportionately affected.The
erosion of roads, sewage systems, and buildings and other impacts
are leading to costly repairs and economic decline andpose serious
risks to human health.In Louisiana, for example, sea-level rise and
higher temperatures are a serious threat to wetland fisheries,
forcing many people to abandon their homes and livelihoods.This
scenario has prompted urgent debates on whether to rebuild or
retreat and relocate. In their policy reportBeyond Rebuilding:
Planning for Better Managed Retreatpublished by the the DC-based
think tank "New America," Robustelli et al. advocate for the
urgency of "an ambitious plan to support millions of Americans to
steadily relocate in a way that is financially feasible,
community-led, and socioeconomically equitable" (2023). In their
analyses, politicians and policy advisers do not necessarily speak
of (internal climate) migration. Instead, they have adopted the
terminology of "managed retreat" to refer to the abandonment of
occupied land and the removal or relocation of population and/or
infrastructure out of areas subject to repeated flooding, rising
sea level, or other natural hazards (Siders et al. 2019). Even
though managed retreat is "a new concept in scientific and policy
discussions, flooding [, which has forced people living near coasts
or rivers to relocate,] has been threatening U.S. communities
throughout the history of the nation," as geologist Nicholas Pinter
reminds us (2021).Other countries in the Global North, particularly
Western European nations led by the Netherlands, have begun to
implement publicly funded programs managing strategic retreat,
which include buy backs of homes in affected coastal areas and
targeted relocation (Lepesant 2024). In the United States, however,
culture wars and climate change denialism of the conservative right
and its MAGA movement have complicated the matter as seen with the
recent freezing of respective Federal funds or as in the case of
Florida-one of the hardest hit states of coastal sea level
rise-through implementing a "Don't say Climate Change" bill and its
governor refusing to publicly address the matter of managed retreat
(Tampa Bay Times, February 17, 2025).Climate change and its effects
- including discussions about migration and adaptation- have, thus,
many layers whichhave been studied from an interdisciplinary
perspective. Understanding its complex causes, impacts, and
solutions requires integrating insights from environmental science,
urban planning, policy studies, sociology, history, and beyond.This
conference brings together scholars from diverse disciplines to
examine contemporary and historical cases of sea level rise and the
need formanaged retreat in the United States - and as a matter of
comparison within the Global North-Western Europe. By bridging
knowledge across disciplinary and geographical boundaries, we aim
to explore how societies navigate climate-induced displacement and
adaptation.Submission GuidelinesFor this two-day conference, we
invite colleagues to submit proposals by June 16, 2025, for
individual presentations (20 minutes) that provide
interdisciplinary perspectives on climate migration and mobility in
the Global North by addressing the following questions:
#J-18808-Ljbffr
Keywords: Deutsches Historisches Institut Washington DC, Reston , Rebuild or Retreat- Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Climate Migration and Mobility in the Glo[...], Other , Washington, Virginia
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