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47 Vt. L. Rev. 1 (2022-2023)

handle is hein.journals/vlr47 and id is 1 raw text is: 








    CLIMATE CHANGE, MIGRATION, AND PANDEMICS:
          HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE ANTHROPOCENE

                           Alan W.  Clarke*

                              ABSTRACT

     The 1951 Refugee  Convention defines a refugee as someone  with a
 well-founded fear of being persecuted for  reasons of race, religion,
 nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion.
 Environmental refugees do not fall within its scope, nor does international
 human rights law adequately cover these migrants. If climate change results
 in widespread environmental damage, including massive ill-health for large
parts of the world,  there will likely be immense human  suffering and
potentially the greatest human migrations in all of humanity's history.
Moreover,  these refugees largely come  from  areas of the world  least
responsible for global  warming.  Wealthy societies largely caused the
problem  while the poorest suffer. This increases the moral obligation of the
rich, polluting states to deal responsibly with the human rights issues raised
by climate change. In this respect, our moral obligations and self-interest
align. Human  suffering leading to civil strife is in no one's interest, and our
moral obligation to mitigate suffering that we caused and are responsible for
is plain. This Paper argues that ifwe do not modify international law in order
to deal with the inevitable human migrations spurred by climate change and
its accompanying pandemics  then suffering, strife, and violence will be the
unavoidable outcome.


A B ST R A C T  .................................................................................................  1
IN TR O D U CTIO N  ..........................................................................................  2
I. HUMAN  MIGRATION   AND GAPS  IN INTERNATIONAL  LAW..................... 3
II. THE POTENTIAL FOR A HEALTH   CATASTROPHE   AND A MIGRATION
C R IS IS  ........................................................................................................... 6
III. MILITARIZED BORDERS  ARE  INEFFECTIVE ........................................ 10
IV. LINKAGES:  DISEASE AND WILD  WEATHER........................................... 12
V. CONCEPTUAL   CHALLENGES....................................................................25
VI. TOWARD   A SOLUTION  TO THE HUMAN   RIGHTS DILEMMA   ............... 28



       * Alan W. Clarke is Professor Emeritus at Utah Valley University, Adjunct Professor of
Political Science at Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador, and Visiting Scholar at York
University's Centre for Refugee Studies.
       1. United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, July 28, 1951, 189 U.N.T.S.
137 at art. 1(A)(2).

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