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43. Climate displacement threatens cultural survival itself and jeopardizes
traditional livelihoods. “Mobility in relation to climate change is taking place on a
continuum between forced and voluntary migration, and the distinction between the
two is rather blurred.” 77 “Some may be unable to depart, others practising ‘voluntary
immobility,’ ‘an important coping device, helping to strengthen cultural and spiritual
agency among those facing the loss of their homeland’.” 78 However, the cost for this
in human rights terms may become unbearably high, leaving people with terrible
choices between remaining with the cultures which sustain them and departing to
protect their lives and livelihoods. Cultural losses related to migration will be
especially serious for those living in entirely unique landscapes. As one expert asked,
where can the Inuit find another Arctic environment? It is essential to engage in
educational, participatory and consultative processes at the earliest opportunity with
populations facing such situations, to consider options.
44. Creative ways to respect, protect, ensure and fulfil the cultural rights of persons
who become displaced in the context of disasters and clim ate change must be
developed. 79 Cultural rights are a primordial component of “migration with dignity.” 80
This will also require innovative approaches to recognizing, and allowing space for
expression and preservation of, the collective identities and shared cultures of large
groups which may be displaced, including entire national populations.
C.
Traditional knowledge and ways of life
45. Climate change negatively affects the practice of traditional knowledge in many
places, including the very know-how and techniques needed to respond to such
change. This is due to unpredictable weather and changing seasons which impair and
may render increasingly obsolete such things as knowledge around navigation,
calendars, meteorology, wind patterns, movements of sand, planting and harvests,
fishing and food. 81
46. Impacts on food are gendered given the particular nutritional needs of
breastfeeding or pregnant women and cultural norms regarding the partitioning of
food. 82 When traditional agriculture or fishing is no longer feasible, or is impacted by
climate change, women who participate in these practices can feel the loss of cultural
ties, as well as food or income. 83
47. Nomadic pastoralism as a way of life may be entirely at risk in some are as. Ways
of life that are in harmony with the natural environment, from which we need to learn
to deal with climate change, are themselves being eroded, as an environmental human
rights defender told the Special Rapporteur in Maldives. Migration and concen tration
into urban areas resulting from climate change will have further impacts on every
aspect of cultural life.
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78
79
80
81
82
83
20-10595
Minority Rights Group International, Minority and Indigenous Trends 2019: Focus on Climate
Justice, p. 57.
Ibid., p. 64, citing Carol Farbotko, “‘Voluntary immobility: indigenous voices in the Pacific”,
Forced Migration Review No. 57, (February 2018), p. 82.
UNHCR, Climate change and disaster displacement. Available at www.unhcr.org/en -us/climatechange-and-disasters.html.
See www.sierraclub.org/sierra/2016-6-november-december/feature/kiribati-former-catholic-nunhas-become-sort-paul-revere-for.
See contribution by Indonesia.
World Health Organization (WHO), Gender, Climate Change and Health (Geneva, 2014), p. 17.
See contribution by International Action Network for Gender Equity and Law.
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