Local responses to climate change and disaster-related migration in Solomon Islands
This analysis draws primarily on the perspectives of people living in vulnerable locations and aims to improve policy and practice around climate-related migration within Solomon Islands and the Pacific region more broadly. This research paper is informed by mixed-methods primary research, incorporating qualitative and quantitative data collection in five selected communities, plus data from relevant secondary sources. The analysis seeks to address a key information gap: local perspectives on climate-related vulnerability and experiences of migration.
The principal findings from this analysis in relation to climate-related migration are:
- First, climate change and natural hazards represent one of several factors driving human migration in Solomon Islands.
- Second, social capital and informal networks are critical resources for managing the risks and impacts of climate-related migration.
- Third, the study raises important questions about climate-related migration and the intangible losses and damages experienced by communities whose collective identities and social capital are grounded in deep cultural connections to customary land or ancestral “homelands.”
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