Project Description
Managed retreat, called climate relocation, is a purposeful and coordinated movement of people and assets from risky areas and resettling them in relatively safer locations. Retreat is contentious because it affects people’s sense of place and identity, livelihoods, communities, and sovereignty. Some people see managed retreat as an adaptation to climate change, while others see it as a failure to adapt in place. My work on retreat covers several issues including its environmental and social justice implications and the intersections with race, class, gender, and social differences. I also examine concerns about the valuation of land in monetary terms, reinforcement of Western conception of property rights, buyout processes that favor some and not others, and the role of retreat in the unmaking and re-making of place as well as linkages to the expansion of new megadevelopments in coastal areas that benefit mostly wealthy groups.
My collection of scholarships on managed retreat programs seeks to advance inclusive, equitable, and just forms of adaptation for disadvantaged and marginalized communities, whether this means implementing in-situ resilience strategies, migration, retreat programs, or resettlement in safer and sustainable ecologies. I have worked with communities, policymakers, activists, students, nonprofit leaders, scholars from different disciplines, and backgrounds to address questions about justice and equity in managed retreat programs. My co-edited book on this topic engaged with indigenous scholars, artists, ecologists, feminist scholars, lawyers, urban planners, architects, poets, cultural heritage scholars, audiovisual communicators, adaptation scholars, and disaster risk reduction practitioners. I currently serve on the organizing committee for “NSF FIRE-PLAN: Assessing Managed Retreat as an Adaptive Response to Wildfire Risk” led by Liz Koslov and Kathryn McConnell.
Publications
Ekoh S, Lemir T, Ajibade I (2023) Climate Change and Coastal Megacities: Adapting through Mobility. Global Environmental Change, 80, 102666. Read Open Access
Ajibade I, Sullivan M, Lower C., Yarina L., Reilly L (2022) Are managed retreat programs successful and just? A global mapping of success typologies, justice dimensions, and trade-offs. Global Environmental Change. 76, 102576. Read Open Access
Ajibade Idowu (2022) The Resilience Fix to Climate Disasters: Recursive and Contested Relations with Equity and Justice-Based Transformations in the Global South. Annals of American Geographer. 112 (8) 2230-2247 Read Open Access
Ajibade, I. & Siders, A. R. (Eds) (2022). Global Views on Climate Relocation and Social Justice. Routledge: Taylor & Francis Group. pp1-324
Ekoh S, Lemir T, Ajibade I, and Kristiansen S (2022) Flood Risk Perceptions and Future Migration Intentions of Lagos Residents. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction. 83, 103399 Read Open Access
Siders A.R, and Ajibade I. (Eds.) (2021). Introduction: Managed retreat and environmental justice in a changing climate. Special Issue. J Environ Stud Sci, Springer. 11(3), 287-293. Read Open Access
Siders A.R, Ajibade I & Casagrande, D (2021) The transformative potential of retreat as climate adaptation in coastal areas. Current Opinion on Environmental. Sustainability. 50, 272-280 Read Open Access
Ajibade I, Sullivan M, and Haeffner M (2020) Why Climate migration is not managed retreat: six justifications. Global Environmental Change.65, 102187. Read Open Access
Ajibade Idowu (2019) Planned retreat in Global South megacities: disentangling policy, practices, and environmental justice. Climatic change 157: 299-317 Read Open Access
Collaborators

Meghan Sullivan

Chris Lower
