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Migration and Disasters From the Great Fire of London to the Fukushima Disaster. Environment and Migration. The disaster – migration nexus. “Disasters are very political events.” James Lee Witt, former director of FEMA, April 1996
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Migration and DisastersFrom the Great Fire of London to the Fukushima Disaster Environment and Migration
The disaster – migration nexus “Disasters are very political events.” James Lee Witt, former director of FEMA, April 1996 • Disasters are the most obvious and most brutal form of environmental displacement • Also its most visible form • Often thought to induce only temporary displacement • Disaster management was also the first attempt to develop environmental policies • Number of displaced: Source: IDMC
The foundations of disasterresponses • Disasterswereinitiallythought to beacts of God • The roleof the state wasNoachian: rescue as manyvictims as possible • Initalpolicieswerereactive and national • Shift towardsDisasterRiskReduction • Shift towards increased international cooperation • Issues atstake • Resettlement – Permanent migration • HumanRights • Humanitarian assistance • Reconstruction
Resettlement and permanent migration:From the Great Fire of London to Katrina • The Great Fire of London 1666 • First case of people beingresettledafter a disaster • Started in a bakery shop • People trapped in Saint-Paul’sCathedral • People escapedthrough the 8 gates of city • Perceived as a divine revengeagainst the English
Evacuation procedureswerechaotic • Police closed the gates of the city sothat people wouldfight the fire • Mayor of London fled the dayafter the firestarted • Refugee camps were set up in the North of London • No emergency relief – provisions were for sale • Unrest in the camps – fear of a civil war if refugeeswere to return to London • Hencetheywereencouraged to resettle in the North
Hurricane Katrina 2005 • One of the worstdisasters in US history: • About 2,000 fatalities • 75 % of homes in New Orleansdestroyed • 1,200,000 people evacuated on the Gulf Coast • US$ 85 billion damage • Disastermainly due to the leveebreaches • One quarter of New Orleans population without car • Help didn’t arrive beforeSetember 3rd, four daysafter the disaster
Evacuation • Mandatoryevacuationordered by MayorNagin on August 28. • Overallquitesuccessful: 85 % evacuated • About 60,000 werestranded in the city • Becausetheyhad no car • Becausetheywereill, old, or disabled • Becausetheyhad pets • Becausetheydidn’t know where to go • Becausetheywereunwilling to leave • … Or simplybecausetheydidn’t have the money
A social disaster • Despitethe collective dimension of the tragedy, the evacuationprocesswas an individualprocess. • The mostvulnerablewere far lessoff • Manywerestranded in the city. • Thoseevacuatedhad no choice of their destination • This affectedtheirability to copewhileaway • A difficult return • Onlytwothirds of the population have returned to the city • Katrina Diaspora • Impact on race relations
Factorsdriving/hindering the return • Extent of the damage • Job prospects • Family, friends, neighbors • Crime • Fear of another hurricane • Love and optimism for the city • Uncertainty about city redevelopment • Race relations • City used to be 70% black, and isnow 60% white. • Issue of votingrights • Conspiration theories: • Leveesblown up • Return slowed down > City has dramaticallychanged.
Naming the victimsThe Refugeecontroversy • Victimswere all portrayed as black and poor. • Nunberg (2005): ‘Refugee’ twice more likely to beusedthan ‘evacuee’ when used in conjunctionwith ‘black’ and/or ‘poor’ • Wordingunanimouslyrebutted by the victims • « I can’t stand people calling me a refugee, I am an American and I love America » • No reallyappropriateterm: the controversy questions ourcapacity and legitimacy to categorise people
HumanRights and Humanitarian assistance • The IndianOcean Tsunami, 2004 • Killed230,000 people across 14 countries, includingmanytourists • An estimated 2 million weredisplaced – mostly in India, Indonesia and Sri Lanka (about 500,000 displacedeach) • Prompted a humanitarianresponsefrom UNHCR and IOM • Humanrights tend to belittleenforcedduringdisasters • Humanitarian assistance tend to beuneven, and focused on emergency relief • Trafficking issues, withwomenmostaffected.
Reconstruction • The HaitianEarthquake • Affected3 million people, left one million homeless. Deathtollunknown, couldbe up to 350,000. • Whichrole for migration policies in the reconstruction process? • Temporary visas and labour schemes • Temporary Protection Status • How to deal within-migration
Whichpolicyresponses?Fromcharity to solidarity • Growing importance of prevention • Paradigm changes • Technologicalscientismrejected in favour of risk management • Determinismrejected in favour of vulnerability • A top-downapproach to disasterriskreduction: resettlement • Mutualisation of risk • National emergency agencies • Damage compensation
Internationalisation of disaster management • In the aftermath of Lisbon, shipswereloadedwith supplies and sent fromEngland, Hamburg and Sicily • World War I: Relief Comission for Belgiumlaunched by Herbert Hoover • 1932: The International Relief Union • Founded by Italian Senator G. Ciraolo • Treatysigned by 42 countries • Civil equivalent of a military alliance • International assistance is no longer a matter of goodwill and charity, but rather of commonresponsibility
1943: United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) • Later split between UNICEF, UNHCR and WHO • 1994: Yokohama Strategy: disasterprevention and development more important thandisasterresponse • Hyogo Framework for Action 2005-2015 • Global Facility for DisasterReduction and Recovery • Twoplatforms for coordination: • UNISDR • IASC
The role of international organisations • Interventions by UNHCR increasinglyfrequent • Justified by moral and practicalimperatives, but alsostrategicconsiderations • Remainunplanned (on a case-by-case basis) and outside of the agency’s mandate. • Interventions by IOM more formalised and systematic • Broader mandate • Complementarity or competitionwith UNHCR? • Operational guidelines on humanrights and disasters by IASC • Soft law, four types of protection: • Life and security • Rightsrelated to basic necessities • Othereconomic and social rights • Otherpolitical and civil rights.
Migration and industrial accidents The triple Fukushima disaster
The DEVAST Project DisasterEVAcuation and riSkpercepTion in democracies
Fieldwork sites Tohoku region Iwate Miyagi Fukushima Tokyo
A triple disaster • Earthquake of magnitude 9.0 • Followed by a tsunami withwaves up to 40 metres • Timelag of 40 minutes after the disaster • Most important tsunami in Japansince 16th century • Previousexperience of tsunamis proved a key factor of vulnerability • 15,000 direct casualties and 3,000 missing • The tsunami flooded the generators of the Fukushima-Daiichinuclear plant • In operationsince 1971, owned and managed by TEPCO • No ventilation system
Radiations related to the Fukushima accident Source: Prof. Hayakawa, University of Gunma, 18 June 2011
A step-by-stepevacuationprocess Iitate Minami-soma Katsurao Namie Futaba Tamura Ookuma Tomioka Kawauchi Naraha Hirono
Evacuation zones (22 Apr – 30 Sep 2011) (30 Sep 2011 - present) Deliberate Evacuation Area Deliberate Evacuation Area Specific Spots Recommended for Evacuation Restricted Area Restricted Area Specific Spots Recommended for Evacuation Evacuation-Prepared Area
Nuclear accident About 350,000 evacueesA tale of twoevacuations Tsunami Evacuation with warning Evacuation with a plan Evacuation with knowledge Evacuation to pre-fabricated houses Number decreasing with time • Privilegedevacuees • Improvised by local authorities • No information provided • ScatteredacrossJapan • Numberincreasingwith time
Tensions and discriminations • Evacuees from the tsunami and from the nuclear accident are not entitled to similar compensations. • Evacuees from the nuclear accident face discrimination across Japan • Doomed population • Self-evacuees • No compensation nor assistance • Tensions with the community • Divorces
A highlypoliticised question • Tsunami evacuees have a clear perspective of return • Democraticprocessthat respects individualchoices • Re-invention of communities, innovativeprojects • For regionsthatwereirradiated, return has become a politicalproject • Uncertain perspectives of return • Attempts to decontaminate the territory • Controversies about the acceptable radiation levels, lack of trustworthy information • Collective choice, encouraged and politicised • Gloomeconomic prospects
Data and researchmaterialsavailable to allhttp://www.devast-project.org
An issue overshadowed by climate change • The impacts of industrial accidents on migration are typically not considered. • They can be very important however • Ex: Chernobyl and the closing of an area situated withing a 50 sq km radius of the power plant • As a result, compensations are usually not paid, and populations at risk not protected • Exception: the Seveso directive in the EU