RETHINKING GROUNDS: MIGRATION, ANTHROPOCENE AND COVID-19

被引:0
|
作者
Khalid, Sadaf [1 ]
Ahmad, Farhan [2 ]
Apakina, Liudmila Vyacheslavovna [3 ]
Banu, Sameena [4 ]
机构
[1] IILM Univ, Sch Social Sci & Humanities, Knowledge Pk 2, Greater Noida 201306, Uttar Pradesh, India
[2] Prince Sattam Bin Abdulaziz Univ, Coll Sci & Humanities, Dept English, Abdullah Bin Amer, Al Kharj 16278, Saudi Arabia
[3] RUDN Univ, Peoples Friendship Univ Russia, Inst Russian Language, Russian Language Dept, Miklukho Maklaya 6, Moscow 117198, Russia
[4] Prince Sattam Bin Abdulaziz Univ, Coll Sci & Humanities, Dept English, Abdullah Bin Amer, Alkharj 16278, Saudi Arabia
来源
关键词
Anthropocene; Covid-19; migration; education; student; CLIMATE-CHANGE; FUTURE; HEALTH;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Thesis. The paper highlights Anthropocene challenges during Covid-19 and student's struggle. The Anthropocene is debatable because to its emphasis on human primacy and humanism, as well as the ways in which it conceals problematic aspects of human diversity, such as gender and cultural disparities, and the close ties that exist between people, technology and other creatures along with its relationship with migrations. Concept. A rising number of individuals now depend on migration for their livelihoods on a global scale. However, the migration processes of industrialised and developing nations have significantly differed. In contrast to industrialised countries, where migration is more driven by pull reasons like wealth, safety, and freedom than by push causes like poverty, unemployment, regional inequities, family movement, marriage, and natural disasters, such as those in India. The greatest modern challenge is figuring out how to lessen the effects of the physical and biological changes brought about by human activity on a global scale in a new geological era known as the Anthropocene. Results and Conclusion. The paper confirms the significance of interactions between humans and the environment is underappreciated in the present definitions of globally linked systemic risk. This leads to a bias in favour of solutions that downplay the Anthropocene's new realities. The present study confirms a comprehensive understanding of the dangers associated with the Anthropocene and migration, or hazards that arise from processes of human-driven migration, interact with the world's social-ecological interconnection.
引用
收藏
页码:19 / 33
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Rethinking the role of the school after COVID-19
    Colao, Annamaria
    Piscitelli, Prisco
    Pulimeno, Manuela
    Colazzo, Salvatore
    Miani, Alessandro
    Giannini, Stefania
    LANCET PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 5 (07): : E170 - E170
  • [22] RETHINKING SOCIAL REPRODUCTION IN THE TIME OF COVID-19
    Dattani, Kavita
    JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIAN POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2020, (85): : 51 - 56
  • [23] Rethinking African Futures after COVID-19
    Mueller-Mahn, Detlef
    Kioko, Eric
    AFRICA SPECTRUM, 2021, 56 (02) : 216 - 227
  • [24] Rethinking the role of hydroxychloroquine in the treatment of COVID-19
    Meyerowitz, Eric A.
    Vannier, Augustin G. L.
    Friesen, Morgan G. N.
    Schoenfeld, Sara
    Gelfand, Jeffrey A.
    Callahan, Michael V.
    Kim, Arthur Y.
    Reeves, Patrick M.
    Poznansky, Mark C.
    FASEB JOURNAL, 2020, 34 (05): : 6027 - 6037
  • [25] Rethinking the Role of Jails Amid COVID-19
    Nowotny, Kathryn M.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2022, 112 (11) : 1582 - 1583
  • [26] Rethinking Residency Conferences in the Era of COVID-19
    Gottlieb, Michael
    Landry, Adaira
    Egan, Daniel J.
    Shappell, Eric
    Bailitz, John
    Horowitz, Russ
    Fix, Megan
    AEM EDUCATION AND TRAINING, 2020, 4 (03) : 313 - 317
  • [27] Rethinking the Ethics of the Covid-19 Pandemic Lockdowns
    Miller, Daniel
    Moss, Alvin
    HASTINGS CENTER REPORT, 2023, 53 (04) : 3 - 9
  • [28] Rethinking leadership models after COVID-19
    Abramiuc , Teodora
    Popa, Raluca Andreea
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BUSINESS EXCELLENCE, 2021, 15 (01): : 494 - 504
  • [29] Rethinking the First COVID-19 Death in Turkey
    Aykac, Nilufer
    Yasin, Yesim
    TURKISH THORACIC JOURNAL, 2020, 21 (04): : 291 - 292
  • [30] Long COVID-19: Rethinking mental health
    Gallegos, Miguel
    Portillo, Nelson
    Martino, Pablo
    Cervigni, Mauricio
    CLINICS, 2022, 77