Protecting Rights and Dignity in Climate Mobility Regional Conference

A one-day conference examining policy responses to climate displacement and the protection of vulnerable coastal and island communities.

Date: 30 April 2026

Location: Xavier Hall, Bangkok, Thailand

Background

The impacts of climate change and their cascading effects are primary drivers of both internal and cross-border movement. Policy frameworks have failed to recognise climate displacement and the multiple risks faced by vulnerable populations, including violations of fundamental human rights, exclusion, and the lack of durable solutions. Protecting vulnerable communities by upholding their rights and dignity, through legal, political, and social measures, is essential to durable solutions for displaced people in the context of climate change.

This one-day conference will draw on research and experience from various countries to identify how policies impact the protection of island and coastal communities displaced (either temporarily or permanently) by, or vulnerable to, climate change, and to review lessons learned from climate mobility programmes in the region. The conference will reference policy research papers on the theme of protection, such as the 2023 UNSW Kaldor Centre Principles of Climate Mobility and the state-led Nansen Initiative, which addressed movements across international borders in the region in 2015.

This conference is primarily led and supported by the Jesuit Refugee Service Asia Pacific’s Research and Advocacy for Climate Policy and Action (RACPA) programme. The Adaptation Research Alliance co-hosts this conference.

Objectives

The conference will:

  • Deepen our understanding of how internal and international border displacements occur across island and coastal communities in the Asia Pacific in the context of worsening climate and disaster risks. 
  • Identify policy gaps and advocacy pathways to promote the protection of climate-displaced communities through effective research and advocacy, and develop responsive and inclusive measures. 

Agenda

AMActivityDescriptionResource
0800Registration JRSAP
0830Welcome and IntroductionIntroduction to the conference background and objectivesJRSAP
0845-0915 Opening Session: Protection FrameworksUnderstanding protection frameworks in forced displacement in the context of climate change
(0915-1015) Session I: Policy gaps and opportunities to promote the protection of climate-vulnerable populations: case studies Case studies and research analyse how existing national and sub-national policy frameworks address (or fail to address) protection, dignity, and durable solutions for people affected by climate-related displacement, and to identify practical entry points for strengthening these frameworks.
0915-0945  Indonesia: Analysing national policy and protection of climate-vulnerable populations

Philippines: Promoting protection by integrating climate mobility in local development planning 
Percik Institute  




Environmental Science for Social Change, Barangay Nocnocan and Talibon Municipal Government
1015Open ForumQuestions, comments on the two sessionsEmcee
1030BreakRefreshments provided 
(1100-1200) Session II: Faith-based responses to climate vulnerability Examining the role of faith-based actors in enabling protection and durable solutions and how faith-based institutions contribute to human rights and dignity, social legitimacy, and complement state-led protection mechanisms
1100-1120    1120-1145Christian: Understanding protection of vulnerable populations from interfaith perspectives and climate justice 

Islam: Role of religious institutions and communities in response to disasters and displacement 
ACT Alliance



Percik and Islamic religious leader
1145Open ForumQuestions, comments on the two sessionsEmcee
1200LunchGroup lunch provided 
PM  
1300Group Photo

Documentary Film Showing
All participants gather for a group photo in the session hall. 

Sa Among Isla (In Our Island) is a short documentary film about the hard choices island communities in central Philippines are facing in a changing climate. The film is directed by Ms Ditsi Carolino and produced by RACPA.
(1330-1430) Session III: Ensuring protection in climate mobility programsExploring how protection principles can be embedded in climate mobility interventions—particularly planned relocation and cross-border arrangements—while avoiding harm, exclusion, and loss of agency.
1330-1400    Australia: Mobility with dignity—advocacy and policy lessons on protection drawn from the Tuvalu–Australia Treaty experienceJRS Australia 
1400Panel Discussion: 

Government planned relocation—innovations and learnings in ensuring protection for the displaced in Indonesia and the Philippines
Nathan Setyawan, ST, M.Eng.Regional Planning and Development Agency of Central Java Province, Indonesia 

Gerry Araneta, Eng., EnPPlanning and Development Coordinator, Municipal Government of Talibon, Philippines
1430Open ForumQuestions, comments Emcee 
1530Actions beyond borders: what needs to happen now?Discusses the implications of cross-border climate mobility for regional cooperation, climate change adaptation, humanitarian response, and disaster risk reduction, and explores realistic ways to enhance the protection and dignity of climate-displaced persons and communities.Albert Salamanca, Adaptation Research Alliance 
1600Synthesis Synthesizes and shares the key protection gaps, policy and programme entry points at national and regional levels, and suggestions for collaboration Sylvia Miclat, ESSC 

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