Panel Discussion: "What does the future hold for cities, climate change and migration"

Speaker
Prof Michael Keith, Prof Susan Parnell, Prof Tim Schwanen, Prof Kazem Rahimi
Event date
Event time
17:00 - 18:00
Venue
Oxford Martin School
34 Broad Street
Oxford
OX1 3BD
Venue details

Corner of Catte and Holywell Streets

This talk is live in person at the Oxford Martin School and also online

Event type
Lectures and seminars
Event cost
Free
Disabled access?
Yes
Booking required
Required

55% of the world’s population lives in urban areas. By 2050 this will rise to 70% - almost 2.5 billion people. Nearly one billion of these people live in informal settlements.

Cities will also be key in responding to climate change and transformation to sustainable consumption and production. Cities consume close to 2/3 of the world’s energy and account for more than 70% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Almost half a billion urban residents live in coastal areas, increasing their vulnerability even more.

So, how can we design and develop cities to be resilient to the effects of climate change? How can we provide for affordable housing and infrastructure, promote sustainable economic development and work towards a zero carbon future? And to add to all this, how can we factor migration into this urban management in the era of climate change?

Climate change has rarely, until now, been the sole factor prompting migration, but it most certainly exacerbates it. Yet, there remain gaps in our knowledge and evidence of this.

The Oxford Martin Programme on Informal Cities is collecting new and harmonising existing evidence including geospatial data and satellite imagery to study informal neighbourhoods, economies, health and climate change in cities. With diverse expertise in anthropology, geography, mathematics, data science and epidemiology, the team are investigating the migration effects of climate change and the implications for cities, with a specific focus on Addis Ababa and Delhi.

This panel discussion will look at these challenges, particularly in times of re-emerging conflicts and the global pandemic and investigate what urgent action can academics, policy-makers and the global community take.

This talk is live in person at the Oxford Martin School and also online.

To register to attend in person use the in-person registration on the Oxford Martin School website here.
Register to watch this talk online via Crowdcast here.

The talk will also be streamed via YouTube, but please note you will not be able to take part in the interactive Q&A session unless you join the talk on CrowdCast. No need to register for the YouTube streaming.