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The discourse of ¿climate migrations¿ will reinforce the old borders (physical and mental) and create new ¿climate borders¿ between India and Bangladesh. In International Relations State system is expected uphold five basic social values security, freedom, order, justice and welfare but climate change would be challenging all these social values. This work revolves around interrelated key concepts of critical geopolitics, imaginative geographies and borders in order to map out geopolitics of fear, deployed through the imaginative geographies of climate induced migrations, and analyze its implications for India and Bangladesh. This work stated that a critical social science intervention in the nascent discourse of ¿climate change migration¿ is needed, in order to uncover and analyze the political uses and abuses of climate fear, and growing securitization and militarization of climate change policy and responses. Far from being the problem of National Security and the state and non state actors needs to desecuretise the issue of climate induced migration and shift their attention towards the most neglected aspects of climate affair i.e. the issue climate ethics and equity.
Research Paper (postgraduate) from the year 2017 in the subject Politics - International Politics - Region: South Asia, Central University of Haryana (Arya College), language: English, abstract: This paper will examine how the national law initiatives can be broadened and revived with upcoming ¿climate refugees¿.Indiäs geopolitical position in South Asia is popular for asylum seekers, migrant workers and future flows of climate refugees. Without the legal recognition, refugees in India have difficulties in accessing basic facilities such as employment, medical facilities, education and health care. It is now widely known that climate change will significantly affect India. There are few studies available on how climate change is going to affect the migration of people. It has been claimed that 70,000 people of the 4.1 million living in the Indian part of the Sundarbans islands would be rendered homeless by 2020. India is home to nearly 190,000 refuges originating from various countries around the world. Yet, refugee protection in India is regulated solely at policy level by national administrative authorities. There are no laws that distinguish between refugees and foreigners in India. Thus, there is a clear gap within the law which requires immediate action and attention. India needs to develop its own Refugee Protection laws.
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