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Climate Change, Environmental Refugees, and Human Rights in the Middle East
- Textbook
Climate Change, Environmental Refugees, and Human Rights in the Middle East
- Textbook
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Description
This in-depth and readable text introduces students to the current and historical impacts of climate change on the region.
The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region has experienced more frequent droughts, heat waves, and other extreme weather events than the rest of the world. Flooding has forced human migration and displacement in Egypt, Iran, and Tunisia in 2020, while wildfires have spread in Lebanon, Syria, and Turkey. The author, a specialist in the MENA region, unpacks the implications of several developments that have triggered large-scale migration from rural to urban areas in the Middle East, and North Africa, and threaten to destabilize the region. These include, among other things, widespread famine, population displacement, and the growing decline of agricultural productivity.
Digging deep into key terminology and frameworks such as the 1951 Refugee Convention, climate–human rights nexus, climate-related protest, environmental politics, green investment, and climate governance, the author demonstrates how human rights and climate change are inextricably intertwined and provides additional context to support student learning. This book examines the environmental threats and history of individual countries, including a survey of how the issues of climate change, forced migration, and human rights interface with socioeconomic, political, and legal perspectives.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Part I: Concepts, Frameworks, and the Research Agenda
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: A Political Framework: Environmental Security and Activism
Chapter 3: A Socioeconomic Framework: Refugees' Right to Work
Chapter 4: A Legal Framework: Making a Case for Climate Refugees
Part II: Political Tensions, Refugee Crisis, and Climate Change
Chapter 5: Turkey: Refugees, Forced Migration, and Climate Change
Chapter 6: Egypt: The Growing Relevance of Climate Change Politics
Chapter 7: Syria: Climate Change and Syrian Civil War Reexamined
Chapter 8: Yemen: The War, Human Security, and the Environment
Part III: Environmental Decline, Political Economy, and Adaptation Plans
Chapter 9: Iran: Environmental Decline, Climate Displacement, and Growing Protests
Chapter 10: GCC: Climate Change and the Political Economy of Adaptation
Chapter 11: Morocco: Politics, Green Investment, and Adaptation Plans
Chapter 12: Conclusion: Weighing the Uncertainty
Product details
| Published | 05 Feb 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 328 |
| ISBN | 9798216376590 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Mahmood Monshipouri weaves theories of forced displacement, climate disasters, and systemic
human rights abuse together with careful empirical work to show the complexities of climate-induced
displacement. This is a must-read for anyone interested in understanding the experiences of climate
refugees and the tools available to mitigate human suffering. Students and instructors alike will find
the content accessible, engaging, and thought-provoking.Courtney Hillebrecht, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
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This timely and richly researched book offers a groundbreaking synthesis of climate change, forced
migration, and human rights in the Middle East. It challenges readers to rethink the emerging category
of 'climate refugees' and the global justice obligations they invoke via a human rights frame. A vital read for scholars, policymakers, and advocates seeking to understand how the climate crisis is reshaping
human mobility and rights in one of the world's most vulnerable regions.Hussein Banai, Indiana University, Bloomington
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With clarity and moral force, Monshipouri shows how environmental decline spills into displacement,
human rights, and fragile sovereignties, making the 'climate refugee' one of the defining figures of
our age. This is a work of both witness and warning, reminding us that the struggle for survival in the
Middle East is inseparable from the struggle for justice everywhere.Anthony Tirado Chase, Occidental College
























