Research and Publications

Climate-Induced Displacement and the International Protection of Forced Migrants

In coming years, scores of millions of people will be forced from their homes because of the effects of the climate crisis and other environmental events. While there is general recognition that those displaced by climate events merit assistance and protection, the existing international refugee regime does not provide an adequate framework for action. This article proposes an approach that focuses on the fact of displacement due to the climate crisis and embraces a right not to be displaced. It thus centers questions of accountability and root causes and embeds claims to climate justice in discussions of regime reform. Climate displacement provides an opportunity—indeed, the necessity—for a fundamental rethinking of the prevailing protection paradigm.

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The Project is Dead – Long Live the Project

The Project is Dead – Long Live the Project: Towards Sustainable Multi-Stakeholder Partnerships for Urban Migration Governance in African Intermediary Cities

Migration and displacement are transforming Africa’s urban landscape. Policy-makers and researchers have for a long time focused their attention on the effects of migration in capital cities. However, intermediary cities are increasingly responsible for Africa’s urban growth as they rapidly become hubs of migration and displacement. Local governments struggle with these realities as they often lack the legal mandate, resources, and capacities to address diverse human mobility flows. This paper discusses recent partnerships between African intermediary cities and civil society actors, national governments, research institutions, and international organizations that aim to address the challenges and harness the opportunities associated with human mobility.

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Non-Citizen Voting: The Evolving Case of New York City, The Case of Local Law 11

Vasiliki Malouchou Kanellopoulou PhD Candidate in Politics, The New School for Social Research Patrich Co PhD Candidate in Political Science, University of Washington Cynthia Golembeski PhD Candidate in Public and Urban Policy The New School for Social ResearchResearch Specialist, The New School’s Institute on Race, Power and Politics Tim Komatsu PhD Candidate in Political Science, University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Non-Citizen Voting: The Evolving Case of New York City, Context and Historical Case Studies

Connor SmithPhD Candidate in Politics, The New School for Social ResearchMelamid Scholar, Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility Patrich CoPhD Candidate in Politcal Science, University of Washington Cynthia GolembeskiPhD Candidate in Public and Urban Policy The New School for Social ResearchResearch Specialist, The New School’s Institute on Race, Power and Politics Tim KomatsuPhD Candidate in

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The Responsibility of the International Community in Situations of Human Mobility Due to Environmental Causes

T. Alexander Aleinikoff Director, Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility, The New School Chair, KNOMAD Thematic Working Group on Environmental Change and Migration Susan Martin Donald G. Herzberg Professor Emerita of International Migration, Georgetown University​ KEY WORDS: Environmental Mobility; Climate-Induced Migration; Global Governance; Climate Change and Environmental Degradation; Disaster Risk Reduction; Migration and Displacement; Development;

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Sanctuary Says

Citation: Migration and Society: Advances in Research 4 (2021): 16-18 © The Authors doi:10.3167/arms.2021.040103 Download the pdf Abstract: In 2018, the New School Working Group on Expanded Sanctuary collaboratively organized a series of workshops in New York to reflect on the question of sanctuary as a conceptual and practical starting point for cross-coalitional politics, including

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Sanctuary in Countries of Origin: A Transnational Perspective

Author: Alexandra Délano Alonso  Citation: Migration and Society: Advances in Research 4 (2021): 84–98 © The Authors doi:10.3167/arms.2021.040109 Download the pdf Abstract: While current interpretations of sanctuary are most often associated with practices to protect, support, and accompany migrants with precarious status in countries of destination in the Global North, debates around the concept

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Niina Vuolajarvi Brings Activism-Informed Research to the Zolberg Institute

Niina Vuolajarvi began her postdoctoral fellowship at NSSR in January 2021, bringing her long background of activism and academic research “at the intersection of sex work studies and migration studies” to the Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility. Before starting her PhD in Sociology at Rutgers University, Vuolajarvi organized around migrant rights, anti-racism, feminist movements and

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