----- Forwarded Message ----- From: nucleo interdisciplinar de estudos
migratorios NIEM <niem.migr@xxxxxxxxx>To: "niem-migracao@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"
<niem-migracao@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>Sent: Friday, December 24, 2021, 08:40:11 AM
GMT-5Subject: [niem-migracao] World Migration Report 2022 [OIM/IOM]
De: IOM Publications <publications@xxxxxxx>
Date: qui, 16 de dez de 2021 09:16
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World Migration Report 2022
Since 2000, IOM has been producing its flagship world migration reports every
two years. The World Migration Report 2022, the eleventh in the world migration
report series, has been produced to contribute to increased understanding of
migration and mobility throughout the world. This new edition presents key data
and information on migration as well as thematic chapters on highly topical
migration issues, and is structured to focus on two key contributions for
readers:
- Part I: Key information on migration and migrants (including
migration-related statistics); and
- Part II: Balanced, evidence-based analysis of complex and emerging
migration issues.
This flagship World Migration Report has been produced in line with IOM’s
Environment Policy and is available online only. Printed hard copies have not
been made in order to reduce paper, printing and transportation impacts.
Table of Contents:
- Editorial, review and production team
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Photographs
- List of figures and tables
- List of appendices
- Foreword
- Chapter 1 – Report overview: technological, geopolitical and
environmental transformations shaping our migration and mobility futures
- Part I: Key data and information on migration and migrants
- Chapter 2 – Migration and migrants: A global overview
- Chapter 3 – Migration and migrants: Regional dimensions and developments
- Chapter 4 – Migration research and analysis: Recent United Nations
contributions
- Part II: Complex and emerging migration issues
- Chapter 5 – The Great Disrupter: COVID-19’s impact on migration,
mobility and migrants globally
- Chapter 6 – Peace and security as drivers of stability, development and
safe migration
- Chapter 7 – International Migration as a stepladder of opportunity:
What do the global data actually show?
- Chapter 8 – Disinformation about migration: an age-old issue with new
tech dimensions
- Chapter 9 – Migration and the slow-onset impacts of climate change:
Taking stock and taking action
- Chapter 10 – Human trafficking in migration pathways: trends,
challenges and new forms of cooperation
- Chapter 11 – Artificial Intelligence, migration and mobility:
implications for policy and practice
- Chapter 12 – Reflections on migrants’ contributions in an era of
increasing disruption and disinformation REPEAT
- Appendices
- References
2021 / 540 pages
ISBN 978-92-9268-078-7
ISBN 978-92-9268-076-3 (PDF)
English
Available for PDF download
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| MRS No. 69 – A reset for overseas migration? Recent developments in
Filipinos’ migration in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic
Authored by Jeremaiah M. Opiniano, this Migration Research Series paper
explores some of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on Filipino overseas
migrants and the responses and measures adopted by the Philippines in 2020. It
reviews the main implications and challenges that were raised by the pandemic
between 25 March 2020 and 24 March 2021, from issues concerning repatriations
and returns, to decreasing overseas employment and the impact on international
remittances.
2021 / 18 pages
English
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| Support Needed for Families of Missing Migrants: Evidence from IOM’s
“Assessing the Needs of Families Searching for Relatives Lost in the Central
and Western Mediterranean” Project
This policy briefing identifies 10 recommendations that States, regional
organizations, intergovernmental organizations and civil society can take to
help meet their obligations towards families of missing migrants – to support
them in their search for loved ones and as they cope with the impacts of loss.
The recommendations are informed by a research project carried out by a team of
researchers coordinated by IOM’s Missing Migrants Project, based at the Global
Migration Data Analysis Centre (GMDAC), and are in line with the actions listed
under Objective 8 of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration.
2021 / 26 pages
ISBN 978-92-9268-164-7
ISBN (PDF) 978-92-9268-163-0
English
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| Familias de personas migrantes desaparecidas: su búsqueda de respuestas y el
impacto de la pérdida – Lecciones de cuatro países
Este informe resume las principales conclusiones del proyecto de investigación
cualitativa realizado entre abril de 2019 y marzo de 2021 por el Proyecto
Migrantes Desaparecidos de la OIM sobre los desafíos y las experiencias de las
familias de personas migrantes desaparecidas en Etiopía, el Reino Unido, España
y Zimbabue. En los cuatro países, se entrevistó a 76 familias con parientes
desaparecidos y a más de 30 actores clave (incluidas organizaciones no
gubernamentales, activistas, autoridades gubernamentales, organizaciones
internacionales y académicos). La investigación descubrió que en estos países
no existen respuestas institucionales especializadas para los casos de personas
migrantes desaparecidas, y que los marcos y mecanismos oficiales existentes
para la búsqueda de personas desaparecidas en los contextos nacionales no están
adaptados para abordar la dinámica propia de los trayectos migratorios
irregulares.
2021 / 66 pages
Spanish
ISBN 978-92-9268-153-1
ISBN (PDF) 978-92-9268-152-4
Also available in English |
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| Mongolia: Migration and Employment Study
Within the framework of the project, Understanding and Managing Internal
Migration in Mongolia (UMIMM), a study on employment was conducted to improve
evidence-based policymaking on internal migration. This report provides
policymakers and key private sector stakeholders with information related to
current challenges faced by internal migrants in accessing decent and formal
employment; suggests mechanisms and policies to protect internal migrants from
exploitation; and analyses the respective competencies and capacities of
stakeholders, including the Municipality of Ulaanbaatar, to foster improved
management of labour migration. It proposes systems and approaches to support
internal labour migrants through training, employment promotion programmes and
access to financial services to improve their economic situation. Rural–urban
cooperation mechanisms to support labour migration must also be explored to
contribute to reducing both urban and rural poverty.
2021 / 104 pages
English
ISBN 978-92-9268-110-4
ISBN (PDF) 978-92-9268-109-8
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| Migration Governance Indicators Profile 2021 | Republic of Madagascar
This Migration Governance Indicators (MGI) profile presents a summary of
well-developed areas of migration governance in Madagascar as well as areas
with potential for further development, as assessed through the MGI. The MGI is
a standard set of approximately 90 indicators to assist countries in assessing
their migration policies and advance the conversation on what well-governed
migration might look like in practice.
The incorporation of Sustainable Development Goal Target 10.7 into the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development created the need to define “planned and
well-managed migration policies”. In 2015, the International Organization for
Migration (IOM) developed the Migration Governance Framework (MiGOF). The
Framework offers a concise view of an ideal approach that allows a State to
determine what it might need to govern migration well and in a way that suits
its circumstances.
2021 / 32 pages
English
Also available in French |
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| Migration Policy Practice (Vol. XI, Number 3, October–December 2021)
The new issue of Migration Policy Practice focuses on COVID-19’s socioeconomic
impact on migrants and displaced persons in the Middle East and North Africa
(MENA). It provides an overview of the diverse effects of COVID-19 on a wide
range of populations (i.e. labour migrants, refugees and internally displaced
persons) across several countries (e.g. Yemen, Libya, Lebanon) and touches upon
various topics (e.g. remittances, access to employment and social protection,
mobility).
Since the onset of the pandemic, international organizations, think tanks and
academic institutions have produced considerable amounts of data on the
socioeconomic impact of COVID-19 on migration in the MENA region and, so to
say, “mainstreamed” the pandemic in their ongoing research efforts. Despite
this, a number of knowledge gaps must still be addressed, and it is difficult
to fully comprehend the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic has had on mobile
populations’ socioeconomic outcomes in the region. What data do we need, and
how can we get them?
2021 / 60 pages
ISSN 2223-5248
English
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| Manuel du participant – Orientation canadienne à l’étranger: guide
d’orientation avant le départ à l’usage des nouveaux arrivants au Canada
The Canadian Orientation Abroad (COA) program is a global initiative funded by
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) and implemented worldwide
by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in about 60 locations
annually.
The COA Participant Workbook presents practical information that refugees need
to know before they resettle to Canada, so they can make informed decisions
about their new life. Information contained in the workbook is presented in
simple language and in a visual manner that both conveys meaning and aids in
retention. It is a tool used during in-person pre-arrival orientation sessions
and during refugees’ self-study.
The COA Participant Workbook was developed in consultation with IRCC, external
partner organizations who assist refugees, field experts and refugees
themselves.
2021 / 182 pages
English
ISBN 978-92-9268-138-8
ISBN (PDF) 978-92-9268-137-1
Also available in English and Dari
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| Cross-border Tuberculosis Control along the Viet Nam and Cambodia Border
(Vietnamese)
In 2020, Viet Nam was one of the 30 highest-burden countries globally with
tuberculosis (TB) and multi-drug resistant TB, whereas Cambodia was one of the
30 highest-burden countries with TB. While both nations have made significant
progress in reducing TB rates in recent years, they lack the financial
resources needed to eliminate TB as a public health problem. Within this
context of strained health resources, migrant populations – internal migrants
within each of the two countries and cross-border migrants on the Viet
Nam–Cambodia border – can easily be missed or overlooked in national efforts to
detect TB.
2021 / 80 pages
English
ISBN (PDF) 978-92-9268-141-8
Also available in English
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| Migration Governance Indicators Profile 2021 | North Macedonia
This Migration Governance Indicators (MGI) profile presents a summary of
well-developed areas of migration governance in North Macedonia as well as
areas with potential for further development, as assessed through the MGI.
The MGI is a standard set of approximately 90 indicators to assist countries in
assessing their migration policies and advance the conversation on what
well-governed migration might look like in practice.
The incorporation of Sustainable Development Goal Target 10.7 into the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development created the need to define “planned and
well-managed migration policies”. In 2015, the International Organization for
Migration (IOM) developed the Migration Governance Framework (MiGOF). The
Framework offers a concise view of an ideal approach that allows a State to
determine what it might need to govern migration well and in a way that suits
its circumstances.
2021 / 32 pages
English
Also available in Albanian and Macedonian
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| Migration Governance Indicators Second Profile 2021 | Republic of Mali
This Migration Governance Indicators (MGI) profile presents a summary of
well-developed areas of migration governance in Mali as well as areas with
potential for further development, as assessed through the MGI. The MGI is a
standard set of approximately 90 indicators to assist countries in assessing
their migration policies and advance the conversation on what well-governed
migration might look like in practice.
The incorporation of Sustainable Development Goal Target 10.7 into the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development created the need to define “planned and
well-managed migration policies”. In 2015, the International Organization for
Migration (IOM) developed the Migration Governance Framework (MiGOF). The
Framework offers a concise view of an ideal approach that allows a State to
determine what it might need to govern migration well and in a way that suits
its circumstances.
2021 / 32 pages
English
Also available in French
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| Sentiment towards Migration during COVID-19: What Twitter Data Can Tell Us
This report discusses the essential findings and learnings from a collaborative
research project with the University of Liverpool, investigating the use of
Twitter data to track immigration sentiment during the early stages of the
COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, the report will (a) demonstrate how immigrants
have experienced acts of discrimination and racism in five countries (the
United States of America, the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy and Germany); (b)
determine to what extent (anti-)immigration sentiment has shifted in reaction
to increasing geographical spreads and fatality rates of COVID-19; and (c)
assess how acts of discrimination and racism towards immigrants during the
early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic vary by country.
2021 / 38 pages
ISBN 978-92-9268-139-5
ISBN (PDF) 978-92-9268-002-2
English
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| Migration Governance Indicators Second Profile 2021 | Ukraine
This Migration Governance Indicators (MGI) profile presents a summary of
well-developed areas of migration governance in Ukraine as well as areas with
potential for further development, as assessed through the MGI. The MGI is a
standard set of approximately 90 indicators to assist countries in assessing
their migration policies and advance the conversation on what
well-governed migration might look like in practice.
The incorporation of Sustainable Development Goal Target 10.7 into the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development created the need to define “planned and
well-managed migration policies”. In 2015, the International Organization for
Migration (IOM) developed the Migration Governance Framework (MiGOF). The
Framework offers a concise view of an ideal approach that allows a State to
determine what it might need to govern migration well and in a way that suits
its circumstances.
2021 / 36 pages
English
Also available in Ukrainian
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| Research Study on Assessing the Effectiveness of Migration Restrictions in
Ulaanbaatar City and Migrants’ Vulnerability
Within the framework of the project, Understanding and Managing Internal
Migration in Mongolia (UMIMM), a study on the effectiveness and impacts of
internal migrant registration restrictions in Ulaanbaatar was conducted to
provide evidence for advocacy groups and policymakers to advocate for
vulnerable rural-to-urban migrants affected by the measure. The study assessed
the pros and cons of the migration restrictions and investigated whether these
measures have contributed to reversing rural-to-urban migration trends or
resulted in an increase in the number of unregistered migrants and associated
impacts.
2021 / 80 pages
ISBN 978-92-9268-044-2
ISBN (PDF) 978-92-9268-043-5
English
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| Blumen und Steine - Handbuch zur Selbshilfe für syrische Männer in
Deutschland
Blumen und Steine: Handbuch zur Selbsthilfe für syrische Männer in Deutschland
wurde in den Jahren 2020 – 2021 von der Unit für „Mentale Gesundheit und
psychosoziale Unterstützung“ (MHPSS) der IOM Deutschland entwickelt. Das
Handbuch basiert auf dem „Self-Help Booklet for Men Facing Crisis and
Displacement“, das von IOM Libanon 2014 – 2015 entwickelt wurde. Das Handbuch
zur Selbsthilfe für syrische Männer in Deutschland basiert auf
semi-strukturierten Interviews und Fokusgruppendiskussionen mit syrischen
Männern und ihren Familien. Der Text wurde von zwei psychosozialen BeraterInnen
entwickelt und wird durch eigens für das Handbuch entwickelte Kunst der
syrischen Künstlerin Diala Brisly ergänzt. Das Handbuch ist auf Englisch,
Arabisch und Deutsch erhältlich.
2021 / 52 pages
ISBN 978-92-9268-100-5
ISBN (PDF) 978-92-9268-099-2
German
Also available in English
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| Migration Governance Indicators Profile 2021 | Federal Republic of Nigeria
This Migration Governance Indicators (MGI) profile presents a summary of
well-developed areas of migration governance in Nigeria as well as areas with
potential for further development, as assessed through the MGI.
The MGI is a standard set of approximately 90 indicators to assist countries in
assessing their migration policies and advance the conversation on what
well-governed migration might look like in practice.
The incorporation of Sustainable Development Goal Target 10.7 into the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development created the need to define “planned and
well-managed migration policies”.
In 2015, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) developed the
Migration Governance Framework (MiGOF). The Framework offers a concise view of
an ideal approach that allows a State to determine what it might need to govern
migration well and in a way that suits its circumstances.
2021 / 36 pages
English
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| For more information please contact:
International Organization for Migration
Publications Unit
17 Route des Morillons, P.O. Box 17, 1211 Geneva 19, Switzerland • Tel:
+41.22.7179.111 • Fax: +41.22.798.6150
E-mail: publications@xxxxxxx
or visit IOM Online Bookstore. |
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