Thank you @bsindia for using @DECCMA's findings.
However, @DECCMA has investigated migration as a whole, of which only 7% (not 96% as mentioned in this article) have cited environmental reasons driving migration. Kindly rectify this.
As rising sea levels engulf entire islands, residents are migrating en masse, from the Bangladesh as well as the Indian side of Sundarban
By 2060, nearly 1.4 billion people across the world will be at risk of becoming environmental migrants
https://t.co/r9TJmr5RYp
#Migration findings from @DECCMA's sending and receiving area surveys in 1827 households of the Indian Bengal Delta are now published in this infographic -
https://t.co/4Wq3JCRFkF
Sahana Ghosh shares how @DECCMA has been a stepping stone for #migration and #adaptation research in Indian Sundarbans. She shared that DECCMA findings will make way into her ongoing work for @MongabayIndia
Prof S M Patnaik, VC of #UtkalUniversity, Odisha feels #climatechange research and findings should encompass #human experiences besides sharing model outputs.
At @DECCMA our research captures both from qualitative and quantitative research.
Prof Asha Hans addresses stakeholders at the Final Stakeholders Workshop in #Mahanadi delta and highlights how @DECCMA has incorporated #gender as a cross-cutting theme in its research.
Like #Satavaya of our #Mahanadi delta in India, citizens near El Max canal, Egypt, are being forced to move due to effects of #climatechange@DECCMA we feel that provisioning livelihoods in resettlement sites is necessary for any resettlement project. https://t.co/GdNaRmS6hz
We hosted a Focus Group Discussion at the Mahanadi delta today to gather people's experiences on #adaptation in the delta. This qualitative work aims to answer some questions which emerged from @DECCMA 's massive quantitative dataset on #migration and adaptation.
@sghstory We have Research Into Use focal points who look into the communications. You may get in touch with our RiU champion Katharine Vincent @katharine_v .
Dr Tuhin Ghosh & Sumana Banerjee shared @DECCMA findings from the Indian Bengal #Delta during an enlighten session for Indian and Japanese students organised by Nihongo Kaiwa Kyookai Society.
@DECCMA members share that heavy rainfall events are disastrous for Kolkata which is already plagued with poor living conditions for #migrants coming in from #Sundarbans@CollabAdapt https://t.co/A91k3svT8v