Introducing Climate-Related Counterurbanisation: Individual Adaptation or Societal Maladaptation?
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Date
2024
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd
Open Access Color
HYBRID
Green Open Access
Yes
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Publicly Funded
Yes
Abstract
Climate disruption today and anticipated future climate breakdown are reshaping demographic and spatial processes, with profound consequences for societies across the globe. Specifically, migration can become a key strategy to attempt to respond to and cope with environmental change. This paper seeks to make sense of one type of migration, counterurbanisation, in this climate breakdown era. It provides conceptual clarity to what is termed 'climate-related counterurbanisation' vis-`a-vis wider climate-induced migration and positions climate disruption within the counterurbanisation literature. Climate-related counterurbanisation is presented as a largely voluntary movement down the settlement hierarchy as a direct or indirect response to climate change, with positive representations of 'rurality' central to the relocation decision: individual adaptation. However, it is mediated by numerous geographically variegated and specific environmental, cultural, social and economic factors. Indeed, it may ultimately come to be seen more as maladaptation than adaptation. While moving from urban to rural may make sense at individual household level, such relocations can overall have much more negative impacts on host rural communities or the urban people left behind.
Description
Gkartzios, Menelaos/0000-0001-9429-4553
Keywords
Counterurbanisation, Climate Breakdown, Mobilities, Adaptation, Maladaptation
Fields of Science
Citation
WoS Q
Q1
Scopus Q
Q1

OpenCitations Citation Count
6
Source
Habitat International
Volume
143
Issue
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CrossRef : 9
Scopus : 15
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Mendeley Readers : 58
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15
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Web of Science™ Citations
10
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Page Views
266
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16
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