In discussions on migration, a basic distinction is often made between ‘voluntary’ and ‘forced’



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Asylum and Refugee Studies Today
Assignment #11 (Group) Draft research proposal (PART 1)
The importance of land
The importance of land to people in PICs is difficult both to express and, for non-Pacific people, to understand. In many PIC languages, the word for land is the same as that for placenta or afterbirth, illustrating the visceral connections that exist between the two (Campbell
2010). This link does not preclude migration, as Jolly (2001) points out that roots (ties to one’s place) and routes (pathways for mobility) are critical elements of society in Vanuatu and that it is the existence of the roots that enable people to migrate knowing there is always a place to which one may return.
This issue has implications for both migrants and those who live in Pacific Island host communities, whose land maybe used for resettlement schemes. For those who have to relocate because of climate change, the possibility that they maybe forcefully removed from their land maybe a cause of an enduring loss that has an emotional toll that cannot be ameliorated. This maybe worsened if their country also ceases to exist. For the communities providing land for resettlement schemes, a similar sense of loss is likely to emerge as their links to their land will be challenged and their sense of identity compromised.
Looking ahead
The 2014 IPCC assessment indicates that climate change is likely to continue through the twenty-first century and sea levels may rise between 0.26 m and 0.55 m by 2100 with a

John R. Campbell and Richard D. Bedford
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worst-case scenario of 0.98 m. For those who live in PICs, the issue of climate change migration is real and bound to persist if not worsen. It is likely that continued habitation of many PIC sites will become increasingly marginal. The costs of adaptation are likely to rise and, thus far, there have been paltry indications of international willingness to cover the costs of loss and damage in comparison to the size of the problem. Most people in PICs want the option to be migrants with dignity, moving as a result of their own decisions and free will.
While our knowledge of the links between climate change and migration is limited, this is not a reason to deny its possibility and its seriousness to the people who inhabit PICs. The few cases of international community relocation that do exist for the PIC region indicate that there is always considerable disruption for both the migrants and the landowners at the destinations (Campbell 2010). A vexed question for the Pacific concerns when climate change migration will become a prominent policy issue to be discussed between countries of likely origin and possible destination, as well as between PICs and greenhouse gas emitting countries. As far as most of the PICs are concerned, the big emitters are responsible for covering the costs of migration as an adaptive response and perhaps providing opportunities for migration to people and communities induced or forced to move because of climate change.

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