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Displaced by Climate, Marginalized by the State: Afro-Colombians in Medellín

with Michael Nabil Ruprecht
Rosenkranz Hall
115 Prospect Street, New Haven CT, 06511
202

This talk will explore the intersection of climate change and forced migration in conflict settings through the lens of Afro-Colombian internally displaced people (IDP). Drawing on original PhD fieldwork conducted between 2023 and 2024, Mr. Ruprecht's research examines how climate change-induced environmental degradation in Colombia’s Pacific coastal regions is accelerating violence-triggered internal displacement, in particular among Afro-descendant IDPs displaced from the rural areas of the Chocó Department to the marginalized periphery of Medellín, Colombia.

Michael Nabil Ruprecht is a fourth-year PhD Candidate in political science and international public law. He is pursuing his PhD at University College London (UCL) and is currently conducting research at Yale as a Visiting Scholar. Prior to his PhD, he worked for 10+ years with state institutions, UN agencies, international organisations, NGOs and academia. He holds a BA in Political Science and International Relations from the University of Melbourne, Australia; an MA in Political Science and International Relations from the University of Geneva, Switzerland, as well as an LLM in International Public Law from Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona, Spain.