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Back to results

Projects

Consortium of 15 entities in 11 EU member states, headed by the Centre of Excellence in Terrorism, Resilience, Intelligence and Organised Crime Research (CENTRIC).
The Creative Europe programme can fund activities that recognise and celebrate the contribution refugees and migrants make to cultural diversity in Europe. Culture can be a means for refugees and migrants to meet, communicate with and become part of existing communities.
MIGNEX – Aligning Migration Management and the Migration–Development Nexus – is a five-year research project (2018–2023) with the core ambition of creating new knowledge on migration, development and policy. It involves researchers at nine institutions in Europe, Africa and Asia.
The LINK IT project aimed at delivering better integration outcomes for Syrian refugees resettled from Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey to Germany, Portugal, Romania and the United Kingdom.
Achievements set by initiatives implemented under the Budapest Process translated into an EU funded project that aims at maximising the development potential of migration and mobility within the Silk Routes region and towards major labour receiving countries.
This project investigated asylum seekers’ views on their experience with the asylum procedure in EU Member States. The project, which ran from 2009 to 2010, delivered two thematic reports and fact sheets on 27 countries.
The Teaching Immigration in European Schools (TIES) project develops innovative teaching modules to bring academic knowledge on migration into European classrooms.
TRAFIG, Transnational Figurations of Displacement, is an EU-funded Horizon 2020 research and innovation project.
The COMMIT project (Facilitating the Integration of Resettled Refugees in Croatia, Italy, Spain and Portugal) aimed at maximizing the integration outcomes of resettled refugees in Croatia, Italy, Spain and Portugal by enhancing pre-departure orientation, strengthening community support, fostering
Why? Migration is complex and uncertain. To be effective, migration policies need to explicitly acknowledge these two features of contemporary mobility.
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.
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
In close collaboration with national authorities and experienced Partners, through the HELIOS project IOM aimed at promoting the integration of beneficiaries of international protection residing in temporary accommodation schemes into the Greek society, through the following components: Integration
The website of the Centre for Global Development provides an overview of current pilot projects of Global Skills Partnerships and links to resources concerning these pilots.
EUDiF is the first EU-funded project that works towards fostering an informed, inclusive and impactful diaspora-development ecosystem on a global scale.
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 Mayors Dialogue is a city-led initiative that will deliver innovative and practical solutions for human mobility in African and European cities.
Includ-EU brings into play a bottom-up approach to identifying and respectively tackling issues surrounding the migration and asylum policies.
This campaign, inaugurated in 2015, aims to address problems relating to immigration detention of children by enhancing co-operation between parliaments, ombudspersons, competent government bodies and civil service. See video here.
DIASDEV, a joint project initiated by the French Development Agency and the Caisse des Dépôts from France, Italy, Morocco, Senegal and Tunisia, will be carried out in partnership with public-sector financial institutions in in 2021.

About the Migration Network Hub

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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).

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*References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).