THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF ENVIRONMENTAL MIGRATION IN THE CENTRAL ASIAN COUNTRIES

Authors

  • Artem LUKYANETS Ph.D. (Econ.), Leading Researcher, Center for Social Demography, Institute of Socio-Political Research— Branch of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (ISPR FCTAS RAS) (Moscow, Russian Federation) Author
  • Sergey RYAZANTSEV D.Sc. (Econ.), Professor, Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Director of the Institute of Socio-Political Research— Branch of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (ISPR FCTAS RAS) (Moscow, Russian Federation) Author
  • Evgenia MOISEEVA Junior Researcher, Center for Social Demography, Institute of Socio-Political Research—Branch of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology of he Russian Academy of Sciences (ISPR FCTAS RAS) (Moscow, Russian Federation) Author
  • Roman MANSHIN Ph.D. (Econ.), Assistant Professor, Leading Researcher, Center for Social Demography, Institute of Socio-Political Research— Branch of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (ISPR FCTAS RAS); Assistant Professor, People’s Friendship University of Russia (RUDN) (Moscow, Russian Federation) Author

Keywords:

climate change, ecology, environment, migration, Central Asia, Russian Federation, climate risks, security, adaptation

Abstract

Nowadays, increasing attention is paid to the impact of environmental change on  society  and  the  economies  of countries because of the growing frequency and intensity of various adverse natural and man-made phenomena. In addition to their destructive effect on economic and social processes, they lead to the formation of specific migration flows, characterized by suddenness and complexity of forecasting. The article discusses the role of climatic and technological factors in economic, social, and migration processes in the countries of Central Asia. The study proved that, as a result of a steady increase in the population of Central Asian countries, anthropogenic pressure on the environment has significantly increased. The rise in average annual temperatures, which has accelerated with global warming, has an additional negative impact on the environmental situation. The study revealed that adverse environmental changes affect the living standards and working conditions of the rural population to a greater extent than those of urban dwellers. This fact is of particular importance because of the historically established patterns of settlement in the countries of Central Asia, where about half of the population lives in rural areas. For the region, the main negative consequences of global climate change are droughts, floods, desertification, and  soil  degradation.  These  processes
 make it impossible to cultivate crops in certain areas, and this, given the large share of the agricultural sector, leads to additional risks in the form of a slowdown in economic growth and, consequently, a decline in the population’s quality of life. At the same time, the adaptive capacity to counter these risks is quite low on account of social instability, conflicts, difficulties in socio-economic development, and institutional problems in emergency response systems. In recent years, the Central Asian countries have undertaken more and more initiatives in the field of ecology and climate change: projects to preserve mountain ecosystems in Kyrgyzstan, development of solar energy in Uzbekistan and wind energy in Kazakhstan, the establishment of an Ashghabad-based Regional Center for Climate Change Technologies for Central Asia, etc.1
However, currently there are no specific national or international programs for managing environmental migration, whereas they could significantly reduce the social, economic, and environmental risks caused by population movements under the influence of negative environmental changes.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

“Turkmenistan initsiiruet sozdanie Regionalnogo Tsentra po tekhnologiiam, sviazannym s izmeneniem klimata,” Official website UN News, 16 March, 2015, available at [https://news.un.org/ru/story/2015/03/1259881], 20 February, 2020.

V. Novikov, C. Kelly et al., Climate Change and Security in Central Asia, Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, 2017, available at [https://www.osce.org/secretariat/355471?download=true], 13 December, 2019.

Reaching Tipping Point? Climate Change and Poverty in Tajikistan, ed. by A. Swarup, J. Magrath, R. English, Oxfam International, December 2009, p. 7.

Central Asia and Caucasus Disaster Risk Management Initiative (CAC DRMI). Risk Assessment for Central Asia and Caucasus: Desk Study Review, available at [https://www.preventionweb.net/files/11641_CentralAsiaCaucasusDRManage- mentInit.pdf], 28 November, 2019.

J. Myers, J. Kent, Environmental Exodus: An Emergent Crisis in the Global Arena, Climate Institute, Washington D.C., 1995, 214 pp.

R. Black, Refugees, Environment and Development, Longman, London, 1998, 229 pp.

G.F. Renaud et al., “A Decision Framework for Environmentally Induced Migration,” International Migration, Vol. 49, 2011, pp. 5-29.

I.S. Zonn, V.N. Nikolayev, N.S. Orlovsky, I.P. Svintsov, Opyt borby s opustynivaniem v SSSR, ed. by A.G. Babayev, Corresponding Member of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences, Nauka Publishers, Moscow, 1981, 115 pp.

Calculated using data from [https://climateknowledgeportal.worldbank.org/].

Calculated using World Bank Open Data, available at [https://data.worldbank.org/], 4 December, 2019.

Demogra

Demogra

Statistika yestestvennogo dvizheniia naseleniia, State Committee of the Republic of Uzbekistan on Statistics, available at [https://stat.uz/ru/164-ofytsyalnaia-statystyka-ru/6569-demografiya2], 10 December, 2019.

Demogra

Official website of the Academy of Sciences of Turkmenistan, available at [https://science.gov.tm/turkmenistan], 10 December, 2019.

World Bank Open Data, available at [https://data.worldbank.org/], 4 December, 2019.

IPCC Fifth Assessment Report, Climate Change: The Physical Science Basis, available at [https://www.ipcc.ch/ report/ar5/wg1/], 12 February, 2020.

Reaching Tipping Point? Climate Change and Poverty in Tajikistan, p. 7.

A.G. Bolshakov, “The Foreign Policy of Kirghizstan in the Context of Conflicts’ Change in the Post-Soviet States,” Russia and the Muslim World. Science-Information Bulletin, INION RAN, Center of Scientific Information Studies in Humanities, Moscow, No. 6, 2011, pp. 58-71.

Reaching Tipping Point? Climate Change and Poverty in Tajikistan, p. 9.

Appraisal Reports on Priority Ecological Problems in Central Asia. United Nations Environment Programme for Asia and the Paci

“Ubitoye more,” RBC Newspaper website, available at [https://www.rbc.ru/society/25/10/2012/5703fe819a7947fcb d441c88], 20 February, 2020.

N.F. Glazovsky, N.V. Kudinova, L.Yu. Odinokova, V.N. Streletsky, A.S. Shestakov, Migratsii naseleniia v stranakh SNG, sviazannye s opustynivaniem i zasukhoi, Moscow, 2000, pp. 83-84.

“UN Launches New Fund to Advance Sustainable Development in Aral Sea Region,” UN News, 27 November, 2018, available at [https://news.un.org/en/story/2018/11/1026701], 25 February, 2020.

“UN MPTF Human Security Trust Fund for the Aral Sea Region in Uzbekistan,” Trust Fund Factsheet, MPTF UNDP, available at [http://mptf.undp.org/factsheet/fund/ARL00], 25 February, 2020.

“Yaponiia vydelit $3.2 mln na pomoshch zhiteliam Priaralia,” REGNUM News Agency website, available at [https:// regnum.ru/news/2813691.html], 25 February, 2020.

Sustainable Mountain Development. From Rio 1992 to 2012 and Beyond. Central Asia Mountains, ed. by. G. Hughes, University of Central Asia, Zoï Environment Network, Mountain Partnership, GRID-Arendal, 2012, available at [https://www. ucentralasia.org/Content/Downloads/web-CAF-Central-Asia-Mountains.pdf], 18 February, 2020.

Law of the Republic of Tajikistan on Migration, available in Russian at [http://tajmigration.ru/zakon-respubliki- tadzhikistan-o-migracii.html], 18 February, 2020.

“Medvedev zaveril, chto Semipalatinski iadernyi poligon bolee ne opasen,” RIA Novosti news agency website, available at [https://ria.ru/20180829/1527283626.html], 25 February, 2020.

Climate Change and Poverty. Report of the Special Rapporteur on Extreme Poverty and Human Rights. United Na- tions Human Rights Council, 24 June-12 July, 2019, available at [https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Poverty/A_ HRC_41_39.pdf], 25 February, 2020.

M. Fay, R.I. Block, J. Ebinger, op. cit.

World Bank Open Data, available at [https://data.worldbank.org/], 10 December, 2019.

S.V. Ryazantsev, N. Khoriye, Modelirovaniie potokov trudovoi migratsii iz stran Tsentralnoi Azii v Rossiiu” ekonomiko-sotsiologicheskoie issledovaniie, Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Socio-Political Research et al, Nauchnyi mir, Moscow, 2011, 189 pp.

World Bank Open Data, 10 December, 2019.

IPCC Fifth Assessment Report. Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Part A: Global and Sectoral Aspects, available at [https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar5/wg1/], 2 February, 2020.

Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre Database, available at [https://www.internal-displacement.org/database], 2 March, 2020.

A.S. Lukyanets, S.V. Ryazantsev, A.S. Maksimova, E.M. Moiseeva, R.V. Manshin, “Theoretical, Methodological and Statistical Problems of Studying Environmental Migration,” Amazonia Investiga, Vol. 8, No. 19, 2019, pp. 227-236.

Environmental Degradation, Migration, Internal Displacement, and Rural Vulnerabilities in Tajikistan, International Organization for Migration, 2012, available at [http://iom.tj/pubs/eco-eng.pdf], 15 December, 2019.

K.K. Rigaud, Alex de Sherbinin, R.R. Jones et al. Groundswell: Preparing for Internal Climate Migration, World Bank Group, Washington, D.C., 2018, available at [http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/846391522306665751/Main- report], 28 September, 2019.

Ecological Migration and its EJects on Social Policies in Kyzylorda Province of Kazakhstan, ed. by V. Nee, A. Tonkobaeva, A. Ilyasova, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Central Asia Office, 2013.

V. Novikov, C. Kelly et al., op. cit.

Demogra

A.S. Lukyanets, S.V. Ryazantsev, “Economic and Socio-Demographic Effects of Global Climate Change,” International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues, No. 6 (8S), 2016, p. 268-273.

A.S. Lukyanets, Toan Khanh Nguen, S.V. Ryazantsev, V.S. Tikunov, Hai Hoang Pham, “Influence of Climatic Changes on Population Migration in Vietnam,” Geography and Natural Resources, Vol. 36, Issue 3, July 2015, pp. 313-317 [DOI: 10.1134/S1875372815030129].

Law of the Republic of Tajikistan “On Migration,” available in Russian at [http://tajmigration.ru/zakon-respubliki- tadzhikistan-o-migracii.html], 3 March, 2020.

Law of the Kyrgyz Republic “On Internal Migration” (as amended by KR Law No. 144 of 16 October, 2002), available in Russian at [http://www.demoscope.ru/weekly/knigi/zakon/zakon092.html], 3 March, 2020.

Downloads

Published

2020-08-30

Issue

Section

ETHNIC RELATIONS AND MIGRATION

How to Cite

LUKYANETS, A., RYAZANTSEV, S., MOISEEVA, E., & MANSHIN, R. (2020). THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF ENVIRONMENTAL MIGRATION IN THE CENTRAL ASIAN COUNTRIES. CENTRAL ASIA AND THE CAUCASUS, 21(2), 142-156. https://ca-c.org/CAC/index.php/cac/article/view/1307

Plaudit

Similar Articles

1-10 of 1017

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 > >>