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Agri-labour mobility in a changing climate: A systems approach to vulnerability and precarity among migrant farmworkers

Migrant farmer struggle in a flood in their camp
A powerful flash flood sweeps through a hazelnut pickers campsite in the province of Ordu. Photo: Unknown

New Study by CMES Researcher Sinem Kavak: How Climate Change Shapes the Lives of Migrant Farmworkers.

Read the article here (External link).

Highlights

  • Examines climate change vulnerability of migrant farmworkers through a critical political economy lens.
     
  • Synthesises a decade of qualitative data from multiple regions and historicises agri-labour migration in Turkey.
     
  • Moves beyond hazard-based studies to climate change to analyse climate vulnerability in interaction other vulnerabilities.
     
  • Introduces concept of agri-labour mobility systems to analyze systemic effects of climate change on multi-sited livelihoods.
     
  • Examines shocks in these systems posed by climate change and resulting patterns of slow violence, mobility and immobility.
     

Abstract
This research explores the climate vulnerability of migrant farmworkers within the climate-sensitive commercial agriculture of the Mediterranean Basin, through a case study of Turkey. In Turkey a vast majority of the farmworkers belong to Kurdish and Arab ethnic groups, including internally displaced people (IDPs) and Syrians. Utilising a critical political economy approach to vulnerability and synthesising a decade of qualitative data, we examine farmworkers’ experience of climate change. The findings demonstrate that climate vulnerability operates across three interconnected levels: (1) direct exposure to climate extremes, (2) indirect socio-economic impacts on livelihoods, social and political vulnerabilities, and (3) systemic effects arising from the interaction of multiple climate events across multiple locations of labour. To this end, we introduce the concept of agri-labour mobility systems. These operate through an ad hoc system of routes shaped by labour demands at specific points in production cycles and the minimum income thresholds required to offset the costs of migration. This framework allows us to analyse vulnerability beyond hazard-based frameworks by incorporating the political economy of farm labour and emphasising intersecting social, economic, political, and climate-related vulnerabilities. Finally, we assert that experiences with climate change for mobile livelihoods can only be understood by looking at the migration routes, multiple commodities and locations and the continuity of the experiences with the climate irregularities.

About the authors: 

Sinem Kavak

Lennart Olsson

Mine Islar

 

Read the article here (External link).