dc.description.abstract | The movement or displacement of people,
communities, or populations due to adverse weatherrelated
events such as floods, prolonged droughts,
rising sea levels, and increased prevalence of invasive
species (Boas, 2021; Clement et al., 2021) have
made climate mobility an emerging issue within the
climate change discourse. These human movements
can be forced or voluntary migration and relocations,
but may also be temporary or permanent, internal
or cross-border. The International Organization for
Migration (IOM) observes that without concrete
climate action by 2050, about 90 million people in
North Africa will become internal climate migrants,
another 86 million people in Sub-Saharan Africa will
migrate within their own countries due to climate
change, and an additional 32 million intra-regional
migrants will be recorded in West and East African
countries (IOM, 2022). Nearly 21.9 million people were displaced annually
in the last 10 years due to climate change, meaning
that climate-induced disasters account for twice
as many displacements as those attributed to
non-climatic events (International Displacement
Monitoring Centre, 2021). In Africa, the leading
causes of human mobility vary from region to
region. | en |