Environmental migration, like other types of migration, is a gendered process. Migrants of all genders have different needs and priorities and are exposed to various risks along their ways. Climate change disproportionately burdens women in particular who have different access to information, resources and employment opportunities in destination communities and countries. As climate change destroys existing livelihoods, women are more exposed to the risk of being left behind and trapped in dangerous environments while also expected to taking care of family and household responsibilities, when men migrate to seek better livelihood opporttunities. In addition, behavioural restrictions can hinder women’s ability to move without the consent of a male figure, therefore women’s options to adapt to disasters are strongly dependent on socio-cultural gender norms. When women are pressured to migrate in order to sustain a healthy and safe living elsewhere, they often face specific risks during their migration routes. Migrant women already on the move are often forced to return to their countries of origin or are at risk of becoming trapped and unprotected along their migration routes. They are also more exposed vulnerable to risks such as abuse, discrimination, exploitation, and Gender-Based Violence (GBV), including trafficking in persons, and face challenges in accessing sanitation, and sexual, and reproductive and mental health services.
Women play a key role in waste management and in the production, processing and trade of agricultural products, however, are less likely than men to own productive and financial assets, social protection and land, to help them absorb shocks. In rural areas, the adverse effects of climate change include increased workload of women and girls to collect water and firewood as well as food and nutrition insecurity due to water scarcity. While women and girls often take disproportionate amount of unpaid care work in the household and communities, their burden of reproductive work is likely to increase in the aftermath of disasters. The burden of unpaid care work on most women, including migrant women, will become increasingly time-consuming leading to less time to engage in recognised or paid work, participate in community decision-making processes, gain knowledge on adaptation strategies or invest in new resilient livelihoods.
Environmental migration can deepen pre-existing gender divides and expose women to new vulnerabilities. Due to discrimination based on place of origin, race, ethnicity, religion, social status, education, ability, etc., women face a multitude of oppressive factors resulting from the lack of social and legal protection and intensifying the gendered experiences of poverty, discrimination and socioeconomic inequality. This, in turn, generates other factors of exclusion, such as wage gaps, difficulties in accessing housing for single women, access to information, etc. Women from the poorest communities who depend on natural resources for their livelihoods often have the least capacity to respond to climate-related hazards, such as droughts, landslides, floods and hurricanes. It is therefore critical to address existing gender inequalities and ensure the rights of people of all genders, including women and girls, who experience intersecting forms of discrimination. In this regard, the negative impacts of climate change exacerbate the challenges faced by other marginalised groups, including persons with disabilities, migrants with irregular status, persons with diverse gender identities and/or expressions and older people, particularly regarding access to adequate healthcare and protection “due to their particular vulnerabilities, heightened risk of violence and societal exclusion” (IOM 2021,p.24).
Gender analysis is a key tool in developing adequate and durable responses to environmental migration that meet the various needs of people of different gender and age groups, and how existing gender inequalities shape people’s ability to adapt to climate impacts, made decisions to whether and how to migrate and their experiences of migration. It is also essential to include gender considerations into international frameworks and processes related to climate change mitigation and adaptation (Paris Agreement), disaster risk reduction (Sendai Framework of Disaster Risk Reduction), and (environmental) migration (Global Compact for Migration) discussions as well as the attainment of SDG5 on gender equality to ensure that policies and interventions are effective, fair, implementable and gender-sensitive/responsive at the regional, national and local level, and so do not perpetuate existing inequalities and vulnerabilities or create new ones.
It is critical to recognize that women, including migrant women, are also powerful agents and leaders in their families and communities, and at national and international level, providing resources for their families, facilitating migration, and adapting during displacement. Utilizing the contributions and ensuring the gender equality participation with diverse groups of people, including with indigenous communities, older people, those living with disabilities, etc. is key to addressing climate change and disaster impacts and ensuring that any solutions build on the capabilities, knowledge and perspectives of people of all genders, including women and women, and empower them to be active agents in mitigating climate change and pursuing adaptation responses. Therefore, there is a strong need to adopt inclusive and participatory approaches to ensure gender-responsive solutions.
- Examples of IOM Projects
-
Understanding the Nexus of Migration, Gender, Climate Change, and Agriculture in Tajikistan
This project aims to work towards ensuring migration is mainstreamed in climate change adaptation policy or programmes and the adaptation needs of women left-behind are met. In order to do so, evidence-based knowledge and capacities are enhanced to address the nexus of migration, gender, climate change and agriculture in Tajikistan. The project has two key Outputs: one focused on action research related to training women in the communities on financial literacy and climate-resilient agriculture, and the other focused on influencing Government knowledge and policy on the topic.
Daryeel: Stabilisation Support to Fragile Areas of Somalia II
IOM is supporting the Adale peace dialogue to forge a sustainable agreement between all parties. Together with the Core Facilitation Team in Adale, a small coastal town in Middle Shabelle, Somalia, IOM supports the confidence building measures that emerge from the dialogue, in the form of tangible peace dividend projects. For instance, a group of women is taking over the streets to combat climate change. Clean-up campaigns, planting trees and advocacy messages are also bringing together a community that has suffered for too long the effects of conflict.The project is led by the Federal Government of Somalia with the support of IOM and funding from the European Union’s Instrument contributing to Stability and Peace (IcSP).
Yemen’s ongoing conflict has stretched existing mechanisms and overwhelmed traditional non-formal actors, such as community leaders. The FAO and IOM partnered, with support from the United Nations Peacebuilding Fund (PBF), to implement a series of interventions to strengthen community-level peace building capacities through natural resources management in Sana’a and Lahj governorates in Yemen. The project was implemented from January 2018 to May 2019 and aimed to reduce conflict over land and water, while also enhancing social cohesion through improving livelihoods and increasing the role of women in natural resource management and conflict resolution mechanisms. The project rehabilitated community irrigation water infrastructure, increasing protection against recurrent floods, which often damaged neighbouring houses and contributed to conflict between the farmers and local residents that use the floodwater or irrigation.
- Key Publications
-
- IOM (2022): Gender lens, essential in global response to climate-induced migration
- IOM (2022): Gender-disaggregated data, crucial to ensuring gender-sensitive response and recovery for displaced women and girls in disaster contexts
- IOM (2021): Advancing gender equality in environmental migration and disaster displacement in the Caribbean
- IOM (2021): Gender and Migration Data
- IOM (2021): Leave No Migrant Behind: The 2030 Agenda and Data Disaggregation
- IOM (2021): 3 ways in which gender equality interlinks with climate migration as an adaptation strategy - Exploring the links between migration, the environment and SDG 5
- IOM (2020): COVID-19 Analytical Snapshot 25: Gender dimensionsIOM (2019) Submission to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) on Climate, Migration and Gender
- IOM (2014) Brief 13: A Gender Approach to Environmental Migration in: IOM Outlook on Migration, Environment and Climate Change
- IOM (2012): Infosheet: Rural Women and Migration
- IOM: Gender Focus in Emergency and Post-crisis
- Other relevant publications
-
- UN Women and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN): Policy brief "Tackling violence against women and girls in the context of climate change" / Infographic
- DCAF (2022): WOMEN SPEAK: The lived nexus between climate, gender and security
- ESCAP, UN Women, UNICEF, UNDRR, UNDP, UNEP, UNFPA (2022): Report on the Asia-Pacific Regional Consultation on the Priority Theme of the Sixty-sixth Session of the Commission on the Status of Women
- UN Women, UNFPA, UNDRR (2021): Beyond vulnerability to gender equality and women’s empowerment and leadership in disaster risk reduction
- Erika Pires Ramos and Keila McFarland Dias (2021): Gender, migration, climate change and disasters in Latin America and the Caribbean
- UNDRR (2021): Women’s Leadership in Disaster Risk Reduction: examples from the Arab States
- FAO (2021): Gender equality action for climate-resilient food systems and agriculture
- OHCHR (2021): Achieving human rights and gender equality in the context of environmental crises: key messages
- UNCCD (2021): Enhancing women’s vital contributions in the fight against land degradation, desertification and drought
- UNDRR (202): Implementing the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction
- UNESCO (2021): Accelerating gender equality in the water domain: A call for action
- UN Women (2021): Measuring the nexus between gender equality and women’s empowerment and the environment, including climate change and disaster risk reduction
- Sonja Ayeb-Karlsson (2020): When the disaster strikes: Gendered (im)mobility in Bangladesh
- Sierra Club and UN Women (2018): Women on the Move in a Changing Climate A discussion paper on gender, climate & mobility
- DCAF: Women Speak - The Lived Nexus between Climate , Gender and Security
Contacts
• Migration, Environment, Climate Change and Disaster Risk Reduction (MECR) Division: mecchq@iom.int
• Gender Based Violence specialists: GBVsupport@iom.int
• Prevention of Sexual Exploitation and Abuse Harassment team: PSEA-SH@iom.int
• Gender and Diversity Coordination Unit and Gender Focal Points Network: gdc@iom.int