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1 – Données

2 – Lutter contre les facteurs négatifs

3 – Fourniture d’informations

4 – Identité légale et papiers

5 – Filières de migration régulière

6 – Recrutement et travail décent

7 – Réduire la vulnérabilité

8 – Sauver des vies

9 – Combattre le trafic de migrants

10 – Éradiquer la traite de personnes

11 – Gérer les frontières

12 – Contrôle, évaluation et orientation

13 – Alternatives à la rétention

14 – Protection consulaire

15 – Accès aux services de base

16 – Intégration et cohésion sociale

17 – Éliminer les discriminations

18 – Perfectionnement et reconnaissance des qualifications

19 – Contributions des migrants et diaspora

20 – Envois de fonds

21 – Retour digne et réintégration durable

22 – Protection sociale

23 – Coopération internationale

General

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Priorité à la dimension humaine

Coopération internationale

Souveraineté nationale

Primauté du droit et garanties d’une procédure régulière

Développement durable

Droits de l’homme

Prise en compte de la problématique femmes-hommes

Adaptation aux besoins de l’enfant

Approche mobilisant l’ensemble des pouvoirs publics

Approche mobilisant l’ensemble de la société

Périmètre géographique mondial

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Afrique

Amériques

Asie

Europe

Océanie

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Afghanistan

Albanie

Algérie

Andorre

Angola

Antigua-et-Barbuda

Argentine

Arménie

Australie

Autriche

Azerbaïdjan

Bahamas

Bahreïn

Bangladesh

Barbade

Bélarus

Belgique

Belize

Bénin

Bhoutan

Bolivie (État plurinational de)

Bosnie-Herzégovine

Botswana

Brésil

Brunéi Darussalam

Bulgarie

Burkina Faso

Burundi

Cabo Verde

Cambodge

Cameroun

Canada

République centrafricaine

Tchad

Chili

Chine

Colombie

Comores

Congo

Costa Rica

Côte d’Ivoire

Croatie

Cuba

Chypre

Tchéquie

République démocratique du Congo

Danemark

Djibouti

Dominique

République dominicaine

Équateur

Égypte

El Salvador

Guinée équatoriale

Érythrée

Estonie

Eswatini

Éthiopie

Fidji

Finlande

France

Gabon

Gambie

Géorgie

Allemagne

Ghana

Global

Grèce

Grenade

Guatemala

Guinée

Guinée-Bissau

Guyana

Haïti

Honduras

Hongrie

Islande

Inde

Indonesia

Iran (République islamique d’)

Iraq

Irlande

Israël

Italie

Jamaïque

Japon

Jordanie

Kazakhstan

Kenya

Kiribati

République populaire démocratique de Corée

République de Corée

Kosovo*

Koweït

Kirghizistan

République démocratique populaire lao

Lettonie

Liban

Lesotho

Libéria

Libia

Liechtenstein

Lituanie

Luxembourg

Madagascar

Malawi

Malaisie

Maldives

Mali

Malte

Îles Marshall

Mauritanie

Maurice

Mexique

Micronésie (États fédérés de)

Monaco

Mongolie

Monténégro

Maroc

Mozambique

Myanmar

Namibie

Nauru

Népal

Pays-Bas

Nouvelle-Zélande

Nicaragua

Niger

Nigéria

Macédoine du Nord

Norvège

Oman

Pakistan

Palaos

Panama

Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guinée

Paraguay

Pérou

Philippines

Pologne

Portugal

Qatar

République de Moldova

Roumanie

Fédération de Russie

Rwanda

Saint-Kitts-et-Nevis

Sainte-Lucie

Saint-Vincent-et-les Grenadines

Samoa

Saint-Marin

Sao Tomé-et-Principe

Arabie saoudite

Sénégal

Serbie

Seychelles

Sierra Leone

Singapour

Saint-Martin (partie néerlandaise)

Slovaquie

Slovénie

Îles Salomon

Somalie

Afrique du Sud

Soudan du Sud

Espagne

Sri Lanka

Soudan

Suriname

Suède

Suisse

République arabe syrienne

Tadjikistan

République-Unie de Tanzanie

Thaïlande

Timor-Leste

Togo

Tonga

Trinité-et-Tobago

Tunisie

Türkiye

Turkménistan

Tuvalu

Ouganda

Ukraine

Émirats arabes unis

Royaume-Uni de Grande-Bretagne et d’Irlande du Nord

États-Unis d’Amérique

Uruguay

Ouzbékistan

Vanuatu

Venezuela (République bolivarienne du)

Viet Nam

Yémen

Zambie

Zimbabwe

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Projets

Migration waves, which started in the 1990s, have led to an outflow of Moldovan nationals, with a quarter of the population residing abroad (approximately 720,000 persons according to the National Bureau of Statistics).
Designed as a regional programme, THAMM supports partner institutions in North Africa to draft and implement policies and mechanisms for safe, orderly and regular migration, as well as fostering cooperation and regional exchange between relevant stakeholders in North Africa.
Migrating out of Poverty is a research consortium with partners in Asia and Africa that explores between migration and poverty. One of their main themes is looking at gender as it plays out in household decision-making, labour market participation, and development outcomes.
Launched in April 2019, the ED4D project aims to encourage the Ghanaian and Ethiopian diaspora in the Netherlands, or Dutch entrepreneurs in collaboration with the diaspora, to commit themselves as entrepreneurs to the development of the private sector in Ghana and Ethiopia.
Running from August 2019 to April 2022, this project aims to support regional and national efforts to reduce the risk and impact of disaster displacement on persons at risk of being displaced in developing small islands states in the Pacific.
This joint project seeks to improve migrant workers and refugees’ access to decent work and sustainable livelihoods by ensuring their employability, and access to employment opportunities and social protection programs implemented in Mexico City and Santiago.
Why? Migration is complex and uncertain. To be effective, migration policies need to explicitly acknowledge these two features of contemporary mobility.
The project aims to support and facilitate the advancement of the European Integrated Border Management; approaches to IBM strategies both at the EU level, including Technical and Operational European IBM strategy recently developed by Frontex, and the country level in the EU Member States and
This 2-year project is aimed at protecting children affected by migration in eight countries of Southeast, South and Central Asia, including Uzbekistan. The project will be implemented till the end of 2020.
Under the EU funding and support the project aims to enhance management of mobility and legal migration between the EU and India, as well as to prevent and address the challenges related to irregular migratory flows.
The objective of the EU Readmission Capacity Building Facility (EURCAP) – launched in April 2016 – is to contribute to effective and efficient cooperation in migration governance between the EU and its partner countries through capacity-building initiatives.
The objective of the project is to reduce poverty and achieve sustainable peace through employment-focused, equitable and inclusive economic development.
Livelihood approach to tackle climate migration: the project has until now succeeded in changing lives for over 10,000 households of coastal areas, and is expected to benefit over 60,000 people who are at risk due to climate change.
The project contributes to strengthen the competition in the remittance market by enabling a new player, the Savings and Credit Associations (SCAs), who are the main local grassroots rural finance provider in Moldova, to provide international remittance services.
Specific projects on reducing remittance costs have been implemented in Burundi, Tunisia, Sudan, Zimbabwe (2016-2019) including advocacy with government and other stakeholders on the need to reduce remittance transfer costs.
Includ-EU brings into play a bottom-up approach to identifying and respectively tackling issues surrounding the migration and asylum policies.
From 2011 to 2018, this pilot project aimed to mainstream migration into the national development planning and other sectoral policies from a multi-stakeholder and whole-of-government approach. The main outcomes were capacity-building and peer-to-peer leaning among the countries involved.
PROMISE seeks to improve migrants’ employment opportunities and working conditions through promoting safe migration and skills development in cooperation with the private sector, training institutions, civil society and governments.
The overall objective of the project is to improve opportunities for regulated labour mobility and decent work within the IGAD countries through the development of models of intervention, in the broader context of the regional integration.
Many scholars have written about the merger of concerns about crime and concerns about migration and, in doing so, on the different consequences of the blurring of boundaries between crime control and migration control for individuals in their encounters with law enforcement officials.

About the Migration Network Hub

What is the Migration Network Hub?

The Hub is a virtual “meeting space” where governments, stakeholders and experts can access and share migration-related information and services. It provides curated content, analysis and information on a variety of topics.

The Hub aims to support UN Member States in the implementation, follow-up and review of the Global Compact for Migration by serving as a repository of existing evidence, practices and initiatives, and facilitating access to knowledge sharing via online discussions, an expert database and demand-driven, tailor-made solutions (launching in 2021).

What content is displayed in the Hub?

The Hub aims to help you find information on migration, ranging from policy briefs and journal articles, existing portals and platforms and what they offer, to infographics and videos. The different types of resources submitted by users undergo peer review by a panel of experts from within the UN and beyond, before being approved for inclusion in the Hub. To provide guidance to users based on findings of the needs assessment, the content is ordered so that more comprehensive and global resources are shown before more specific and regional ones. Know a great resource? Please submit using the links above and your suggestion will be reviewed. Please see the draft criteria for existing practices here.

Apply to join the Peer Review Roster

Content submitted to the Migration Network Hub is first peer reviewed by experts in the field from both the UN and beyond. Applications are welcomed to join the roster on an ongoing basis. Learn more here.

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*Toutes les références au Kosovo doivent être comprises dans le contexte de la résolution 1244 (1999) du Conseil de sécurité des Nations Unies.