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- Title
Who is the climate‐induced trapped figure?
- Authors
Ayeb‐Karlsson, Sonja; Baldwin, Andrew W.; Kniveton, Dominic
- Abstract
Many will remember the 1990s alarmist narratives of how a human tide of up to a billion climate refugees would flood "our" borders by 2050. By 2011, a new character joined the discourse: the trapped figure. No longer would climatically vulnerable people be forced to move, they could also end up immobile. This review examines the narratives that surround the trapped figure. The article highlights the trapped figure's (i) characterisation, (ii) geography, and (iii) storytellers. The material includes the 2011 Foresight Report, 64 English peer‐reviewed journal articles, and seven UNFCCC policy reports. The textual analysis furthers our understanding of the values that shape the meaning of the trapped figure within the wider discursive economy. Out of the 64 articles, 48 located the trapped figure in Asia, while 34 placed the figure in Africa. Meanwhile, the majority of articles—62 in total—were written by scholars based at European research institutes. The study shows that the trapped figure, much as the mythical climate refugee and migrant, is constructed as both a victim in need of rescuing and as an ambiguous security threat. It is ethically problematic that planned relocation was often put forward as an effective tool to "move" the figure out of harm's way. The review also found a range of binary opposites in the discourse on trapped populations, including those of order–disorder, freedom–unfreedom, and victim–savior. This suggests that however well‐intentioned the liberal discourse on trapped populations appear, it remains embedded in power relations which demands for critical scrutiny. This article is categorized under:Social Status of Climate Change Knowledge > Sociology/Anthropology of Climate KnowledgeClimate and Development > Sustainability and Human Well‐BeingPerceptions, Behavior, and Communication of Climate Change > Perceptions of Climate ChangeClimate, Nature, and Ethics > Ethics and Climate Change
- Subjects
ASIA; AFRICA; ENVIRONMENTAL refugees; POWER (Social sciences); CLIMATE change; PERIODICAL articles; CONTENT analysis; FORCED migration
- Publication
WIREs: Climate Change, 2022, Vol 13, Issue 6, p1
- ISSN
1757-7780
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/wcc.803