Climate Migration and Disasters: Cooperative Security in Southeast Asia
Dr.Supreecha Hiranburana


The escalating impact of climate change has emerged as one of the most pressing challenges facing Southeast Asia in the 21st century. This region, characterized by its extensive coastlines, densely populated lowlands, and vulnerability to extreme weather events, faces unprecedented challenges in managing climate-induced displacement and migration. This article examines the intricate relationship between climate change, human displacement, and the imperative for cooperative security measures in Southeast Asia.
The scale of climate-induced displacement in Southeast Asia is staggering, with the region accounting for approximately 30% of all displacements in the Asia-Pacific region between 2010 and 2021. During this period, over 225 million people were displaced in the Asia-Pacific region, highlighting the magnitude of the crisis. Countries such as Vietnam, Myanmar, Laos, and Thailand are particularly vulnerable to climate-related disasters, which have resulted in severe economic disruption and widespread displacement of communities.
Climate change manifests in multiple forms that drive displacement and migration. Rising global temperatures have led to more frequent and intense extreme weather events, including typhoons, floods, and droughts. Sea-level rise poses an existential threat to coastal communities, while biodiversity loss impacts traditional livelihoods and food security. These environmental changes force millions of people to relocate annually, with projections suggesting up to 200 million climate migrants globally by 2050.
The concept of climate migration encompasses both voluntary and forced displacement. While some individuals and communities can plan and execute strategic relocation as an adaptation strategy, others face sudden displacement due to rapid-onset disasters. This distinction is crucial for policy development and humanitarian response planning. However, the lack of comprehensive legal frameworks specifically addressing climate migration presents a significant challenge, often leaving displaced populations in precarious situations without adequate protection or support.
Cooperative security has emerged as a crucial framework for addressing these challenges in Southeast Asia. This approach recognizes that climate change and its associated displacement effects transcend national borders and require collaborative solutions. The core principles of cooperative security for climate change include:
Shared Responsibility: Nations must acknowledge their collective obligation to address climate change and its impacts on human mobility. This involves both mitigation efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and adaptation strategies to help vulnerable communities cope with environmental changes.
Holistic Understanding of Security: The security implications of climate migration extend beyond traditional military concerns to encompass human security, environmental security, and economic stability. This comprehensive approach requires integrated policy responses that address multiple dimensions of vulnerability.
Trust-Building Mechanisms: Effective regional cooperation depends on establishing and maintaining trust between nations. This includes sharing data, resources, and expertise related to climate change impacts and migration patterns, as well as coordinating disaster response efforts.
Conflict Prevention: Climate-induced migration can exacerbate existing social tensions and potentially lead to conflict. Cooperative security frameworks must include mechanisms for preventing and managing such conflicts through dialogue, mediation, and equitable resource allocation.
Looking ahead, Southeast Asian nations must strengthen their cooperative security mechanisms to address the growing challenges of climate migration. This includes developing regional frameworks for managing displacement, establishing early warning systems for climate-related disasters, and creating sustainable funding mechanisms for adaptation and resilience-building initiatives.
The success of these efforts will depend on several key factors: political will to implement and enforce cooperative agreements, adequate financial resources for adaptation and mitigation measures, and the capacity to coordinate responses across multiple jurisdictions and stakeholders. Furthermore, the involvement of civil society organizations, local communities, and international partners will be essential in ensuring that cooperative security measures effectively address the needs of displaced populations while promoting regional stability and resilience.
In conclusion, climate migration represents one of the most significant challenges to security and stability in Southeast Asia. The magnitude and complexity of this issue demand a cooperative approach that transcends national boundaries and traditional security paradigms. By strengthening regional cooperation and developing comprehensive frameworks for addressing climate-induced displacement, Southeast Asian nations can better protect vulnerable populations and build resilience against future climate-related challenges.

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References
ADB. (2023). Climate Change, Migration and Adaptation in Southeast Asia. Manila: ADB.
IDMC. (2022). Global Report on Internal Displacement 2022. Geneva: IDMC.
IPCC. (2023). Climate Change 2023: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Cambridge University Press.
IOM. (2024). Migration, Environment and Climate Change in Asia-Pacific. Bangkok: IOM.
World Bank. (2023). Climate Change Action Plan for Southeast Asia 2021-2025. Washington, DC: World Bank.

 

 

 

Cooperative Security in Southeast Asia.

Dr.supreecha Hiranburana

 

Researcher studies factors of cooperative security in Southeast Asia. To studies the building of security at the national level, cooperative security, and constructivism involving norms, identity, and culture as a framework for the analysis.

The mutual cooperation of countries in Southeast Asia in regional Security engages a new form of threat for the nations of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Also involved is a new scientific approach based on knowledge and experience. The concept of cooperative security focuses on willingness to cooperate in terms of a widespread network of relationships including many parties and actors who formally and informally play roles in building security.
Security factors in consonance with constructivism can be explained as follows:
The aspect of norms refers to rules and regulations promulgated and accepted in ASEAN. The aspect of identity is the mutual perception of being a member located in the same region, even if there is a variety of languages and religions. The aspect of culture refers to the perception of norms and identity.
However, cooperative security must still confront obstacles and challenges even though there is still cooperation. This is because at the political level each member nation differs. Cooperation in operation needs time in order to build knowledge and experience. The ASEAN nations have ways in which they cooperate in the midst of diversity. Cooperation is then applied to a kind of cooperative security appropriate to ASEAN ways. At present, all of the ASEAN nations have sought to promote cooperation when natural disasters have struck. This type of cooperation strengthens the nations at both national and international levels. This will result in the development of strong cooperative security and other types of cooperation in a framework of cooperation in the future.

 

 

References

Acharya, A. (2014). Constructing a Security Community in Southeast Asia: ASEAN and the Problem of Regional Order (3rd ed.). Routledge.

Guan, B. T. C. (2016). Critical Reflections on International Relations in Southeast Asia. International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, 16(1), 39-67.

Tan, S. S. (2017). Multilateral Asian Security Architecture: Non-ASEAN Stakeholders. Routledge.

Hiranburana, S. (n.d.). Cooperative Security in Southeast Asia.