Internal Environmental Displacement in Latin America and the Caribbean Legal and Policy Approaches /
| Coauteur: | |
|---|---|
| Andere auteurs: | , , |
| Samenvatting: | XX, 394 p. 20 illus., 12 illus. in color. text |
| Taal: | Engels |
| Gepubliceerd in: |
Cham :
Springer Nature Switzerland : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,
2025.
|
| Editie: | 1st ed. 2025. |
| Reeks: | Environmental Politics and Theory,
|
| Onderwerpen: | |
| Online toegang: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-87027-9 |
| Formaat: | Elektronisch Boek |
Inhoudsopgave:
- Forewords
- Introduction
- About the Editors
- List of Contributors
- Part 1: General Issues
- Chapter 1. Historical Approach of Internal Environmental Displacement of People in Latin America and the Caribbean Basin
- Chapter 2: Legal Approaches for protection of Environmentally Internally Displaced Persons in Latin American
- Chapter 3: Environmental internal displacement and the rights-based approach as a compass for public policies
- Chapter 4: Good Practices to Protect Environmentally Internally Displaced Persons in Latin America
- Part 2: Vulnerable Minorities
- Chapter 5: Environmentally Displaced Girls and Women in Latin America: A Gendered perspective
- Chapter 6: The protection of Environmentally Internally Displaced Children in Latin America and beyond
- Chapter 7: Memories of the longtime expulsions: environmental impacts on Warao indigenous refugee and displaced peoples from Venezuela
- Part 3: Case Studies in Latin America and the Caribbean Basin
- Chapter 8: Between Migration and Displacement: The Case of Environmentally Displaced Persons in Mexico
- Chapter 9: The Need for Protection of Environmentally Displaced Persons in Haiti
- Chapter 10: Environmental displacement in an internal armed conflict context: The Colombian case
- Part 4: Brazilian Cases
- Chapter 11: Human displacements related to disasters in Brazil
- Chapter 12: “Mud Feet”: Displacement and Prejudice After Environmental Disaster in Brazil
- Chapter 13: Environmentally Displaced Persons from companies’ Threats: The Braskem Disaster in Maceio, Brazil
- Conclusion.