Publication

Jan 2012

Since the early 1980s, climate change has exacerbated a trend of migration from densely populated mountainous areas in Georgia, chiefly in the Svaneti and Adjara regions. There, the livelihoods of the mountain populations have increasingly been threatened by natural disasters. Over the past thirty years, tens of thousands of people have been made homeless as a result of flooding, landslides and avalanches. However, the needs of so-called ecological migrants, or eco-migrants, ie, people who have been displaced from their homes due to natural disasters, are a severely neglected issue in Georgia.

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Author Justin Lyle
Series ECMI Working Papers
Issue 53
Publisher European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI)
Copyright © 2012 European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI)
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