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Environmental and climatic change unevenly impact populations due to differences across sociodemographic characteristics. Demographic characteristics and processes in turn contribute to differentials in vulnerability, adaptation, and mitigation. Papers in this session will explore the relationship between sociodemographic characteristics and demographic and environmental change on the three component population processes of fertility, mortality, and migration.
Disparate social impacts by satellite and self-report: Extreme precipitation and reported flood impacts in Pernambuco, Brazil - Mohamad AlAbbas, University of Pennsylvania; Leticia Marteleto, University of Pennsylvania; Emily Carroll Hannum, University of Pennsylvania
Extreme Heat, Living Alone, and Cognitive Decline: The Buffering Role of Neighborhood Social Cohesion - Haena Lee, Sungkyunkwan University; Kathleen Cagney, University of Michigan; Linda J. Waite, University of Chicago; Justin H Lim, Seoul National University
Rainfall Change, Fertility and Kin Co-residence - Isabel H. McLoughlin Brooks, University of Michgican; Emily Treleaven, University of California, San Francisco; Margaret Frye, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
The Impact of Climate on Changes in the Spatial Distribution of China's Population Since 2000 - Chen Chen, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences