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Willingness to help climate migrants: A survey experiment in the Korail slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh
by
Castellano, Rachel
, Prakash, Aseem
, Dolšak, Nives
in
Climate action
/ Climate change
/ Demographic aspects
/ Developing countries
/ Earth Sciences
/ Economic aspects
/ Environmental refugees
/ Extreme weather
/ LDCs
/ NGOs
/ Nongovernmental organizations
/ People and Places
/ Politics
/ Psychological aspects
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Slums
/ Social aspects
/ Social Sciences
/ Urban poor
/ Weather
/ Weather extremes
2021
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Willingness to help climate migrants: A survey experiment in the Korail slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh
by
Castellano, Rachel
, Prakash, Aseem
, Dolšak, Nives
in
Climate action
/ Climate change
/ Demographic aspects
/ Developing countries
/ Earth Sciences
/ Economic aspects
/ Environmental refugees
/ Extreme weather
/ LDCs
/ NGOs
/ Nongovernmental organizations
/ People and Places
/ Politics
/ Psychological aspects
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Slums
/ Social aspects
/ Social Sciences
/ Urban poor
/ Weather
/ Weather extremes
2021
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Willingness to help climate migrants: A survey experiment in the Korail slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh
by
Castellano, Rachel
, Prakash, Aseem
, Dolšak, Nives
in
Climate action
/ Climate change
/ Demographic aspects
/ Developing countries
/ Earth Sciences
/ Economic aspects
/ Environmental refugees
/ Extreme weather
/ LDCs
/ NGOs
/ Nongovernmental organizations
/ People and Places
/ Politics
/ Psychological aspects
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Slums
/ Social aspects
/ Social Sciences
/ Urban poor
/ Weather
/ Weather extremes
2021
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Willingness to help climate migrants: A survey experiment in the Korail slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh
Journal Article
Willingness to help climate migrants: A survey experiment in the Korail slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh
2021
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Overview
Bangladesh faces a severe rural to urban migration challenge, which is accentuated by climate change and the Rohingya crisis. These migrants often reside in urban slums and struggle to access public services, which are already short in supply for existing slum dwellers. Given the inadequacy of governmental efforts, nonprofits have assumed responsibility for providing essential services such as housing, healthcare, and education. Would local slum-dwellers in Dhaka be willing to support such nonprofits financially? We deploy an in-person survey experiment with three frames (generic migrants, climate migrants, and religiously persecuted Rohingya migrants) to assess Dhaka slum-dwellers’ willingness to support a humanitarian charity that provides healthcare services to migrants. Bangladesh is noted as a climate change hotspot and its government is vocal about the climate issue in international forums. While we expected this to translate into public support for climate migrants, we find respondents are 16% less likely to support climate migrants in relation to the generic migrants. However, consistent with the government’s hostility towards Rohingya, we find that respondents are 9% less likely to support a charity focused on helping Rohingya migrants. Our results are robust even when we examine subpopulations such as recent arrivals in Dhaka and those who have experienced floods (both of which could be expected to be more sympathetic to climate migrants), as well as those who regularly follow the news (and hence are well informed about the climate and the Rohingya crisis).
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
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