Need for Recognizing Climate Refugees Highlighted in Foreign Policy Column

In a recent Foreign Policy magazine column, Diana Roy, the Latin America and immigration writer at the Council on Foreign Relations, outlines the reasons for why more countries need to officially recognize climate refugees.

Despite growing numbers of climate-displaced people, “very few countries offer them specific protections,” notes Roy.

“Some research forecasts that more than 1 billion people—roughly an eighth of the world’s population—could be at risk of displacement by 2050, largely due to natural disasters and climate change,” she writes.

The current scope of the term “refugee” “is insufficient to address the large number of people who will be displaced by the global climate crisis, leaving them without legal protection or access to asylum,” Roy argues.

“A new global humanitarian immigration pathway that recognizes the unique challenges that climate-displaced individuals face—such as a lack of legal status and insufficient resources for resettlement—would facilitate the development of domestic and international policy frameworks that protect and assist this growing population.” 

Syrian Refugees Grapple with Fall of Assad

The recent fall of Syria’s longtime dictator Bashar Al-Assad is causing the Syrian diaspora across the globe to consider a key question — is now the right time to return home to Syria or does the instability that has been caused by Assad’s fall mean it remains too risky to depart from their host countries?

“Until last week, the idea of being able to go back home seemed an impossible dream for many Syrian refugees. Now, the fall of Syria’s dictator Bashar Assad has opened the door for their return,” writes Politico’s Clothilde Goujard. “While some have already headed back, many more harbor worries about the future of their country or feel reluctant to leave the lives they’ve built over as much as a decade abroad.”

For many Syrian refugees, “the decision to repatriate depends on where they now live. Millions of Syrian refugees reside in countries bordering Syria — Lebanon, Turkey, and Jordan — and endure precarious conditions in crowded and destitute refugee camps. Others are internally displaced within Syria,” Vox reported

Meanwhile, some host countries are encouraging and in some cases providing financial incentives for Syrian refugees to return to Syria.

For example, Austria’s conservative-led government said on Friday it is offering Syrian refugees a “return bonus” of 1,000 euros to move return to their home country, Reuters reported.