The elusive climate migrant: symbolic geographies in migration studies
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2025-08-19Estado
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. Climate migration has emerged as one of the fastest-growing lines of inquiry within
migration studies. However, it suffers from a fundamental empirical–conceptual
limitation: the absence of a definition that clearly distinguishes a climate migrant
from a labour migrant. This research aims to determine how the specialised literature
positions the phenomenon, which forms of mobility it recognises and the extent
to which the geographical context of scientific production influences its territorial
delineation. To this end, the territorial location of migrant populations was analysed
in a sample of 1,059 articles drawn from the WoS, Scopus and LENS databases. The
results indicate that 39% of the studies treat the phenomenon in a decontextualised
manner — without linking it to specific populations or migration processes. When
territories are mentioned, 27% of the references pertain to Bangladesh and the Pacific
islands. It is also observed that territorial identification is conditioned by the country
of production, which tends to situate the phenomenon in spaces with which it has
pre-existing migratory, geographical or historical ties. These findings are discussed
from the perspectives of Science and Technology Studies (STS), the Geography of
Science and decolonial thought. It is concluded that research on climate migration
reproduces the epistemological positions of the Global North — the main generator
of knowledge in this field. This produces a symbolic territorialisation of the
phenomenon guided by securitising frameworks and a tendency to prioritise climate
as the decisive factor.
The elusive climate migrant: symbolic geographies in migration studies
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
2214-594XPalabras Clave
.Migration studies, Climate migration, Geography of science, Epistemology of migration, Bibliometric analysis


