Climate migrants and public policies

This project examines how scientific research on climate-related migration is translated, debated, and reformulated in the development of **public policies—particularly in Europe—by analyzing how the concept of “climate migrants” is defined and how climate change actually influences migration decisions.

Morocco, Senegal

Axis: Epistemic communities & African agentivity

Coordinating investigators:

– Yousra Abourabi, UIR
– Doudou Gueye, IEFSG
– Jean-Noël Ferrié, LAM

Teams:

– Center for Global Studies, UIR, Rabat, Morocco
– LAM, Sciences Po Bordeaux, France
– Institut Education, Famille, Santé et Genre (IEFSG), Assane Seck University, Ziguinchor, Sénégal
– Geography Department, University of Vienna, Autriche
– Department of Political Science and Demography, University of Bari, Italie

Funder: IPORA internal

Status: Accepted

Impact:

1 doctoral fellowship is associated to the project.
– Name of doctoral student : Aya Boubel
– Title: In the shadow of debates in regional parliamentary assemblies (Europe, African Union): the collective construction of categories of environmentally displaced persons (1990-2023).

Context and rationale

A great many publications deal with migration and its causes; many now deal with migration in relation to climate change. As in all fields of research, there is room for even more publications, because the complexity of the phenomena is revealed as investigations increase. Our project, however, is different: it involves analysing how the results of research relate to the making of public policy, particularly at European level. In other words, the aim is to understand climate migration in its various states, from what it is for researchers to what it is becoming for public players, and therefore to find out how what the former produce supports or does not support the action of the latter.
Public policies are intended to be close to scientific findings. This positivisation of social engineering has continued to develop since the nineteenth century. By subjecting public action to considerations informed by ‘objective’ knowledge, by which is meant knowledge guaranteed by objectification procedures, contemporary societies can claim to escape arbitrariness by using an alternative means to democracy. However, at the same time as recourse to science has intensified, the deference it once enjoyed has weakened. The heart of this phenomenon lies in the fact that public policy aims to produce practical effects based on the unambiguous identification of a problem and its solution, whereas science only produces stabilised conjectures that are not, in themselves, solutions.

The public has come to learn that scientists do not necessarily agree, that their proposals involve extrapolations from experiments or modelling, and that both experiments and modelling condition the results. The figures that make it possible to govern by numbers and the standards that are attached to them thus appear more and more as ‘obtained’ by contingent operations and less and less as those facts that triumphant scientism would have liked to consider as ‘raw thing(s) with which one does not compose.

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Methods

The aim is to co-ordinate our work, which is primarily conceptual in nature. Specialists from different disciplines will be invited to take part in a series of seminars as part of a retrospective approach designed to: (1) clarify, for each of the disciplines, the relevant categorisations applying to migration linked to climate change; (2) make explicit, in particular, the criteria specific to each of these disciplines and what these criteria require in terms of information from the other disciplines involved. The idea is that each of the disciplines concerned should avoid developing its own categorisation on the basis of elements determined by other disciplines whose ins and outs are not analytically known to it.

But that’s not all. Conceptual clarification would also mean moving from retrospective verification, as just described, to prospective verification: in what way can the elements put forward and the categories specified with their help influence public policy, and in what ways. In general, researchers produce analyses on a negative state of affairs, so that the corrections to this state of affairs can be read in the light of its causes, or are directly prescribed by the researchers on the same basis. Roughly speaking, in both cases, this results in instructions of this type: ‘deforestation leads to a reduction in carbon sequestration, so we need to stop deforestation’. However, solutions are not the same as causes for the simple reason that they can only be deployed in the practical world and not in the analytical world of causality in abstracto. In the practical world, stopping deforestation means changing a set of complex and interrelated human practices. It follows that ‘halting deforestation’ means in fact (or by extension) ‘modifying a set of complex and interrelated human practices’, taking into account the consequences of these modifications. It is therefore not a matter of circumscribed action but of holistic action. From this point of view, suggesting a solution or promoting it positively cannot be done independently of anticipating what this solution actually entails.

In the case of migration linked to global warming, it is not possible, for example, to consider global warming as a factor in migration independently of the local resilience of populations, i.e. their adaptation to it. Nor is it possible to develop a legal category independently of anticipating the disputes it may generate. We need to envisage scenarios involving complete sequences. These are the scenarios we intend to work on. Among the latter, it is important to add the identification of insufficient or missing information, of blind spots, which the sequential perspective should make it easier to locate.

Deliverable

Boubel A, Calabrese I, categorisation of climate migrants in parliamentary debates (with I. Calabrese, (avec I., Keiros, n°7, en ligne).

Boubel A. Theorizing and quantifying in parliamentary discourses. The case of climate migrants », ISA forum of sociology, 6-11 juillet 2025, Rabat, Maroc

Boubel A, Qerouach R. The place given to climate in determining climate migrations: risks, challenges, opportunities », 28th World Congress of Political Science, Panel Climate
migrations, migrations of minors, borders, and geopolitics, International Political Science Association, 12-16 juillet 2025, Séoul, Corée du Sud

Boubel A, Qerouach R. Testing categories of climate migrants through the game of hearings », 28th World Congress of Political Science, Citizenship and Migration Panel, International Political Science Association, 12-16 juillet 2025, Séoul, Corée du Sud