Dear GEP colleagues,

Happy to share that I will be starting a 5-year project on climate mobility in 
borderland contexts early next year, focussed on the West African, Bengal and 
Pacific borderlands, and for that, I am now recruiting two fully-funded PhD 
positions. The project is based at the Environmental Policy Group, Wageningen 
University (The Netherlands) and will work in active collaboration withthe 
Calcutta Research Group (India), the United International University 
(Bangladesh); the University of Melbourne (Australia); University of Ghana; 
University of the Cape Coast (Ghana); and Deltares (The Netherlands).



More information about the two PhD projects, including how to apply, can be 
found here:


PhD position 
1:https://www.wur.nl/en/vacancy/PhD-position-Climate-mobility-in-the-West-African-Borderlands.htm


PhD position 
2:https://www.wur.nl/en/vacancy/PhD-position-Climate-mobility-in-the-Bengal-and-Pacific-Borderlands.htm



Could you share this with interested candidates, and anyone you think might be 
suitable? Deadline for application is December 20, 2021.For questions, 
candidates can always email me at [email protected]



With many thanks and best regards,


Ingrid



Dr. Ingrid Boas

Associate Professor

Environmental Policy Group

Wageningen University, NL



Some more background on project, in case of interest



Project title:Climate change-related mobility in the borderlands

It is a 5-year research program funded by the Netherlands Scientific 
Organisation (NWO)’s Vidi program, led by Dr. Ingrid Boas. Its objective is to 
examine the nexus between climate change and human mobility in borderland 
contexts. The project will focus on communities who have historically been 
mobile in relation to environmental challenges. Think of pastoralists or 
nomadic fishers, or people living in dynamic deltas. We aim to uncover how 
their mobility is being affected by climate change. Is climate change 
disrupting or changing their mobility patterns and if so, how? How do the 
historical and socio-cultural ways of moving intersect with these dynamics? And 
how does this play out in settings of cross-border movement and border 
controls? How is the relation between climate change and mobility mediated by 
the drivers, politics and history of the borderlands in question? The project 
will centralize the lived experiences and perspectives of those moving, both 
through participatory mobile/visual methods and collaborative forms of 
knowledge utilization. In collaboration with Deltares, we will also use 
interdisciplinary tools to identify the role of climate change in accounts of 
mobility.

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