In 2017, 18.8 million people were internally displaced from changes in their environment globally that were not predicted far in advance. Environmental migration is driving by these sudden changes including floods, wildfires, cyclones, tornadoes, and hurricanes but also include slower moving disasters like droughts. All extreme weather events are increasing in probability due global warming from greenhouse gases. Estimates of the total number of environmental migrants, especially climate driven, is difficult to differentiate from billion migrants across the Earth today.
0 Comments
Your comment will be posted after it is approved.
Leave a Reply. |
Author
I am an assistant professor at Capstone College of Nursing. I have over eight years of experience in nursing, including work in behavioral, community, and global health. I received my bachelor of science in nursing from University of Nebraska, an Master of Science in Nursing Education from Daemen College, and my Doctorate in Nursing at Johns Hopkins University. I focus on nursing and environmental health through research that links ecosystem based adaptation with the resilience of vulnerable communities living with structural and contextual inequality and cumulative trauma. I collaborate with communities in developing innovative ways to improve the natural environment of communities. Specifically, my research focuses on the levels of vegetation (plants) remotely measured from space and relationships with physiological stress response and resilience. Archives
October 2020
Categories |