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This book features emergent research on environmental migration, particularly in the context of a world beginning to emerge from the grip of a debilitating public health crisis that kept many firmly rooted in place while displacing others internationally. With famines, vast wildfires, droughts, and record heatwaves uprooting human settlements internationally, research on migration in the face of emerging risks is urgent. This book includes several case studies, historical analyses, projections, models, and recommendations for both policy and future research directions. The contributions to…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book features emergent research on environmental migration, particularly in the context of a world beginning to emerge from the grip of a debilitating public health crisis that kept many firmly rooted in place while displacing others internationally. With famines, vast wildfires, droughts, and record heatwaves uprooting human settlements internationally, research on migration in the face of emerging risks is urgent. This book includes several case studies, historical analyses, projections, models, and recommendations for both policy and future research directions. The contributions to this edited collection stem from academics and practitioners in this fertile interdisciplinary field of academic inquiry and focus on the intersection of population and environment studies, history, geography, law, diaspora studies, economics, public health, and sociology.

Thomas Walker is a Professor of Finance and Director of the Jacques Ménard - BMO Centre for Capital Markets at ConcordiaUniversity. He has published over 80 articles and edited books on emerging risk management, corporate finance, sustainability, and fintech.

Jane McGaughey is the Johnson Chair of Québec and Canadian Irish Studies at Concordia University. She is the author of Ulster's Men (2012) and Violent Loyalties (2020). She is the principal investigator of the "Gender, Migration, and Madness" and "Mothers in Time of Cholera" research projects.

Gabrielle Machnik-Kekesi is a Research Associate at the Emerging Risks information Center at Concordia University. She holds an Individualized Program Master's degree from Concordia University and a Master's in Information Studies from McGill University. She was awarded a Hardiman Research Scholarship (2021-2025) at the University of Galway, where she is conducting her PhD research.

Victoria Kelly is a Research Assistant at the Emerging Risks Information Center at ConcordiaUniversity and holds a BSc in Biology and Irish Studies. She has been involved in numerous book projects in the area of sustainability and climate change. Victoria's research focuses on the urban, social, and economic management of the 1832 Cholera epidemic in Montreal.


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Autorenporträt
Thomas Walker holds a BSc in Management Information Systems from the Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany, and an MBA and PhD degree in Finance from Washington State University. Prior to his academic career, he worked for several years in the German consulting and industrial sector at such firms as Mercedes Benz, Utility Consultants International, Lahmeyer International, Telenet, and KPMG Peat Marwick. His research interests are in emerging risk management, corporate finance, venture capital, sustainability & climate change, fintech, corporate governance, securities regulation and litigation, insider trading, and institutional ownership, and he has published over 70 articles, book chapters, and edited books in these areas. Jane McGaughey is the Johnson Chair of Québec and Canadian Irish Studies (2021-26). She joined the School of Irish Studies at Concordia in 2012 as the Assistant Professor of Irish Diaspora Studies. She completed her Ph.D. at Birkbeck College,University of London, in 2008.  Her first book, Ulster's Men: Protestant Unionist Masculinities and Militarization in the North of Ireland, 1912-1923 was published by McGill-Queen's University Press in 2012. She was a co-editor of Ireland and Masculinities in History (Palgrave, 2019). Her second monograph, Violent Loyalties: Manliness, Migration, and the Irish in Canadas, 1798-1841, was published with Liverpool University Press in 2020. She has been the principal investigator on research grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), the Fonds de Recherche Québec Société et Culture (FRQSC), the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Ireland Canada University Foundation.  Gabrielle Kathleen Machnik-Kekesi holds an Individualized Program master's degree from Concordia University (Gender Studies and Modern Irish History), which was funded by both the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council and theFonds de recherche du Québec en Société et Culture, and a master's in Information Studies from McGill University (Archival Studies focus).  Her research interests include the Irish Revolution, sustainability, food history, and cultural heritage. Gabrielle was awarded a Hardiman Research Scholarship at NUI Galway and is conducting her PhD research under the supervision of Dr Nessa Cronin. Victoria Kelly holds a BSc in Biology with an additional major in Irish Studies. She has worked with the Emerging Risks Information Center at Concordia University since 2020, where she has been involved in numerous book projects and research papers in the area of sustainability, climate change, and with management. She plans to continue her studies with an independent master's degree examining the 1832 Cholera epidemic in Montreal and its management on a social, urban, economic, and medical level, drawing parallels with the recent COVID-19 pandemic.