POLICY BRIEF Policy Coherence in Migration and Development at the Local Level

Similar documents
Bern, 19 September 2017

Mayoral Forum On Mobility, Migration & Development

2015: 26 and. For this. will feed. migrants. level. decades

Success Stories. A collection of good practices and lessons learnt by local actors harnessing the development potential of migration

IOM s contribution for the High Level Political Forum 2018 Transformation towards sustainable and resilient societies

FAO MIGRATION FRAMEWORK IN BRIEF

Guidelines on integrating migration into decentralised cooperation

EU input to the UN Secretary-General's report on the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

BERLIN GERMANY JUNE

UN Secretary-General s report on. the Global compact for safe, orderly and regular migration. Inputs of the International Labour Organization

Side event on the Global Compact on Migration

OPENING REMARKS. William Lacy Swing, Director General International Organization for Migration

Background. Types of migration

Quezon City, September 2016

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) is pleased to join this discussion on international migration and development.

Production Transformation INTERNATIONAL

International Dialogue on Migration (IDM) 2016 Assessing progress in the implementation of the migration-related SDGs

OUR WORK ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT

MECHELEN DECLARATION ON CITIES AND MIGRATION

Armenia, Migration & the Sustainable Development Goals

Country programme for Thailand ( )

ENHANCING MIGRANT WELL-BEING UPON RETURN THROUGH AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO REINTEGRATION

Concept Paper 20 March 2017

THEME CONCEPT PAPER. Partnerships for migration and human development: shared prosperity shared responsibility

European Union. (8-9 May 2017) Statement by. H.E. Mr Peter Sørensen. Ambassador, Permanent Observer of the European Union to the United Nations

Integrated Action Plan for Integration of Refugees Municipality of Thessaloniki May 2018

Global Migration Group (GMG) Task Force on Migration and Decent Work. Terms of Reference (as at 24 March 2016)

Global Expert Meeting on Migration in the Post-2015 Development Agenda

Governing Locally: City Leadership at the Front and Center in Implementing Migration Policy Promoting Development and Securing Protection

Moroccan position on the Global Compact for safe, orderly and regular Migration

Protection of migrants in countries of origin, transit and destination: the point of view of the Council of Europe

CLOSING REMARKS. Laura Thompson, Deputy Director General International Organization for Migration INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE ON MIGRATION

The Global Compact on Migration at the 10 th GFMD Summit Meeting

ISTANBUL MINISTERIAL DECLARATION on A Silk Routes Partnership for Migration

STANDING COMMITTEE ON PROGRAMMES AND FINANCE. Eighteenth Session

UN/POP/MIG-10CM/2012/02 3 February 2012

INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE ON MIGRATION

The Global Compact on Refugees UNDP s Written Submission to the First Draft GCR (9 March) Draft Working Document March 2018

Thematic Workshop on Migration for Development: a roadmap to achieving the SDGs April, 2018

Migration in the Post-2015 Development Agenda. Dr. Melissa Siegel WUN Migration Conference, 26 April 2015

Marrakesh Political Declaration

Speech: Homelessness in the EU and the Social Investment Package

Labour migration, decent work and development: The ILO Rights-Based Approach

Preparatory (stocktaking) meeting 4-6 December 2017, Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, Mexico. Concept note

Pillar II: Policy International/Regional Activity II.2:

CONTRIBUTION TO THE THIRTEENTH COORDINATION MEETING ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION 1. United Nations University (UNU)

ADVANCING DEVELOPMENT APPROACHES TO MIGRATION AND DISPLACEMENT UNDP POSITION PAPER FOR THE 2016 UN SUMMIT FOR REFUGEES AND MIGRANTS

The role of national mechanisms in promoting gender equality and the empowerment of women: achievements and challenges to the future

JAES Action Plan Partnership on Migration, Mobility and Employment

Committee on the Rights of the Child. The Rights of All Children in the Context of International Migration OUTLINE FOR PARTICIPANTS

GFMD Dialogue on the Global Compact on Migration

HELLENIC MINISTRY OF INTERIOR DEPARTMENT OF EUROPEAN AND INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION

The HLD. The 2013 United Nations General Assembly High-Level Dialogue on International Migration and Development

-Concluding Statement- Colombo, Sri Lanka

ACCORDINGLY, IN THIS FIRST STAGE OF CONSULTATION TO DEFINE THE COMPACTS, THE METROPOLIS MEMBER CITIES * SUBMIT THE FOLLOWING:

Reducing Discrimination and Changing Behaviour

CONTRIBUTION TO THE FIFTEENTH COORDINATION MEETING ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION 1. Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE)

European Platform against Poverty and Social Exclusion

BUILDING NATIONAL CAPACITIES FOR LABOUR MIGRATION MANAGEMENT IN SIERRA LEONE

Co-facilitators draft resolution of May 6th

MiGRATION GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK

THE RABAT PROCESS COMMITTED PARTNERS CONCRETE ACTIONS

Low Carbon Development, 100% Renewable Energy and Poverty Reduction in Tanzania. Workshop, 25 th Feb. in Dar es Salaam

INFORMAL CONSULTATIONS OF THE IOM COUNCIL STEERING GROUP. Original: English Geneva, 12 June 2007 INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE ON MIGRATION 2007

Dialogue #2: Partnerships and innovative initiatives for the way forward Intergovernmental Conference, 11 December 2018 Marrakech, Morocco

International Organization for Migration (IOM)

Concept Note. Side Event 4 on Migration and Rural Development

CITIES IN CRISIS CONSULTATIONS - Gaziantep, Turkey

Report Template for EU Events at EXPO

UNHCR Europe NGO Consultation 2017 Regional Workshops Northern Europe. UNHCR Background Document

Almaty Process. Introducing the Almaty Process - Theme: [slide 2] Key facts of the Almaty Process: [slide 3] Key Areas of [slide 4]

IOM-UNDP PROGRAMME GLOBAL JOINT. Mainstreaming Migration into National Development Strategies. Newsletter Issue 01 January 2016

Inter-state Consultation Mechanisms on Migration and the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

Labour Migration Academy Enhancing Protection, Promoting Sustainable Development and Facilitating Fair and Effective Labour Migration Governance

Contributions of migrants and diaspora to all dimensions of sustainable development, including remittances and portability of earned benefits.

Terms of Reference YOUTH SEMINAR: HUMANITARIAN CONSEQUENCES OF FORCED MIGRATIONS. Italy, 2nd -6th May 2012

This action is funded by the European Union

Migration and Development Sonia Plaza Expert Group Meeting on Integrated approaches to international migration November 1, 2017

A Role for the Private Sector in 21 st Century Global Migration Policy

Africa-EU Civil Society Forum Declaration Tunis, 12 July 2017

POLICY BRIEF No. 5. Policy Brief No. 5: Mainstreaming Migration into Development Planning from a Gender

GMG Statement at the Third Meeting of the GFMD Friends of the Forum

2010 INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE ON MIGRATION MIGRATION AND SOCIAL CHANGE. Societies and Identities: the Multi faceted Impact of Migration

PICUM Five-Point Action Plan for the Strategic Guidelines for Home Affairs from 2015

High-level Breakfast Meeting on Decent Work and Fair Labour Migration

Seventh Global Meeting of Chairs and Secretariats of Regional, Inter-regional and Global Consultative Processes on Migration (GRCP 7)

KEYNOTE ADDRESS: GFMD Thematic Workshop Implementation of the Global Compact for Migration at the National Level 21 March 2019, Geneva

Strengthening Sport-Related Policy Coherence. Commonwealth Toolkit and Self-Evaluation Checklist

Submitted by the President-Designate of the Third Review Conference

Final Summary of Discussions

Submission from the International Organization for Migration (IOM)

Item 4 of the Provisional Agenda

Migration Initiatives 2015

LABOUR MIGRATION TODAY: THE ORIGIN COUNTRIES PERSPECTIVE

EESC MEETING. Speech by Morten Kjærum. Director of the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA)

Mind de Gap! Annual Forum 2012 of the European RC/RC Network for Psychosocial Support. Resilience and Communication. Paris, October 2012

The Europe 2020 midterm

SDGs Monitoring in Ghana: Strategies and Challenges

STRENGTHENING WOMEN S ACCESS TO JUSTICE: MAKING RIGHTS A REALITY FOR WOMEN AND GIRLS

CLOSING REMARKS. William Lacy Swing, Director General International Organization for Migration

Transcription:

UN Joint Migration and Development Initiative 4 TH GLOBAL MAYORAL FORUM ON HUMAN MOBILITY, MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT BERLIN, 26-27 JUNE 2017 Summary POLICY BRIEF Policy Coherence in Migration and Development at the Local Level Policy coherence in migration and development is crucial since migration is affected by and affects all governance sectors from health to education and from housing to social security. Thus, specific migration related policies may be rendered ineffective if education, labour and other such policies do not effectively respond to the specific needs and rights of migrants and displaced persons. While less explored, policy coherence in migration and development at the local level is particularly poignant given that migration and displacement is now mainly an urban phenomenon. Thus cities are increasingly at the forefront of responding to migration and displacement. This Policy Brief will therefore highlight the lessons learnt and recommendations that have arisen from the UN Joint Migration and Development s (JMDI) efforts to support cities foster policy coherence in migration and development at the local level. Context Policy coherence for migration and development can be defined as policies that pursue synergies to advance shared objectives, actively seek to minimise or eliminate negative side effects of policies, (and) prevent policies from detracting from one another or from the achievement of agreed-upon development goals. 1 Thus, policy incoherence occurs when there is either a lack of awareness of how a policy fits into the existing portfolio of policies, or when there is a lack of understanding of the causal relations leading to faulty assumptions regarding what the policy can achieve. 2 Policy incoherence in migration and development can be horizontal, i.e. within the policy areas of one administration, or vertical, between different levels of governance. This is reflected in the below Figure. With regards to vertical policy incoherence, at the subnational level, cities are expected to implement or adhere to national law. However, when there is a lack of coordination between the national and local levels, or a lack of transfer of competencies, support and allocation of sufficient resources, these may often be incoherent with or not adequately respond to the needs and realities at the local level. For example, it is common practice to ensure all children attend primary and secondary school and which is enforced at local level. However, national migration policy can also require cities to report any irregular migrants. Children whose parents are irregular migrants may therefore risk deportation by enrolling their children in school. Horizontal incoherence can occur, for example, between policies on gender equality and access to justice when migrant women, particularly irregular migrant women, are unaware of or unable to access support and justice when suffering from domestic abuse or other forms of gender discrimination. A further example occurs when employment and anti-discrimination policies exist to promote fair and equal access to work, yet displaced persons, refugees or irregular migrants are legally not entitled to such opportunities. This forces such persons to seek work in the 1 HONG, A. & KNOLL, A. 2016. Strengthening the Migration-Development Nexus through Improved Policy and Institutional Coherence. KNOMAD Working Paper. 2 PICCIOTTO, R. 2005. The Evaluation of Policy Coherence for Development. Evaluation, 11, 311-330.

informal sector and lead to exploitation, severely hindering their ability to successfully integrate and contribute to society. Figure 1: Illustration of types of policy incoherence National Authorities Horizontal across sectors Vertical Territory Horizontal across sectors While several recent initiatives, such as the IOM s Migration Governance Index 3 and the KNOMAD Thematic Working Group s Dashboard of Indicators on Policy Coherence for Migration and Development 4 and the UNDP-IOM programme on Mainstreaming Migration into National Development Policies 5 have examined and fostered policy coherence in relation to migration and development at the national level, evidence from the UN Joint Migration and Development Initiative shows that policy coherence in migration and development is also crucial at the local level (horizontal), between the local and national levels (vertical) and can lead to enhanced development impact. This is particularly important given that cities often lack the competencies, knowhow, human and financial resources to respond to migration yet are at the forefront of doing so. Thus, while a national response is crucial, this must be aligned with local realities since persisting inequalities, one of the identified drivers of migration, exist not only among different countries, but also within countries, thus necessitating an integral and bottom up approach from the local level. 6 When this alignment and coordination does take place, this allows for multi-level coherence whereby cities can feed their expertise and knowledge into national policy making for more responsive and pertinent national policies that can, in turn, be successfully implemented at the local level. To support cities enhance their policy coherence in migration and development, the JMDI has developed a Dashboard of Indicators on Policy Coherence in Migration and Development at the Local Level. 7 This provides cities with an understanding of the linkages between migration and development and a set of indicators on how to measure 3 https://publications.iom.int/system/files/pdf/migration_governance_index_2016.pdf 4 http://www.oecd.org/dev/migration-development/knomad-dashboard.htm 5 https://www.iom.int/mainstreaming-migration-national-development-strategies 6 JMDI (2015) White Paper: Mainstreaming Migration into Local Development Planning and Beyond. Geneva, International Organization for Migration. 7 For more information on the JMDI and access to all its tools and publications, see here: www.migration4development.org

policy coherence and suggestions, examples and resources on how to enhance this. This will be an important tool for cities to monitor their contributions to the migration-related elements of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Main Findings Mitigating policy incoherence therefore necessitates a solid understanding of how all policies affect and are affected by migration and displacement. The experience of the JMDI shows that by inserting or mainstreaming 8 migration as a parameter across different local policy areas, horizontal policy coherence can be enhanced and will thus strengthen the local development impact of any migration and development policies. 9 Such a multisector approach necessitates a multi-stakeholder approach that brings together all the variety of actors that are affected by or involved in migration and displacement issues. Successful practices in achieving this have seen the creation of special units within city administrations. These tend to be in charge of ensuring coherence and coordination across various sectors, and oftentimes, directly overseeing and providing explicit services for migrants and displaced persons. The Province of Pichincha s Human Mobility Unit (HMU) provides a pertinent example in this regard. This unit consists of trained officials that (i) promote the integration of migration and displacement issues across all governance and development policies and (ii) provide a one-stop orientation and service provision centre for migrants and displaced persons and (iii) work to raise the awareness of the general population on migrants and displaced persons rights and how they contribute positively to local development in a bid to foster social cohesion and mitigate xenophobia. With regards to the former, the HMU regularly provides capacity building and awareness on migrants and displaced persons rights and needs across all governance areas through workshops, training sessions and lobbying activities. This allows officials in sectors like health or education to understand how their policies may be negatively affecting this population and able to adapt and adjust policies in order to enhance coherence. Such information and understanding is collated through studies carried out in partnership with academia and the HMU s direct contact with migrants and displaced persons and their associations through the services and orientation it provides. To ensure the sustainability and effectiveness of such units, dedicated human and financial resources are necessary. Moreover, specific ordinances, laws or policies can support the institutionalisation of their mandate. In Pichincha, the Provincial Government approved the Equal Rights and Social Development Ordinance which provides a legitimate and legal backbone to the mission of the HMU that allows for and promotes the adoption of public policies, programmes, and projects in all sectors that promote equal rights among all inhabitants of Pichincha, regardless of migratory status. The work of the regions of Calabarzon and Bicol in the Philippines is an example of successful efforts to promote vertical policy coherence in migration and development between all levels of governance. This was achieved through the establishment of various coordination mechanisms at the different levels and coordinated from the regional level. Firstly, regional Committees on Migration and Development (CMD) were created and institutionalised within the Regional Development Councils Social Development 8 For guidance on how to mainstream migration into local development planning, see JMDI (2015) White Paper: Mainstreaming Migration into Local Development Planning and Beyond. Geneva, International Organization for Migration. 9 JMDI (2015) White Paper: Mainstreaming Migration into Local Development Planning and Beyond. Geneva, International Organization for Migration.

Committees which allow for migration and development issues to be integrated into all development plans and programmes. The CMDs consist of representatives from various government entities at the regional level as well as civil society, academia and very importantly, migrants and their families or organisations. The CMDs work to promote the integration of migration and displacement into all development planning in the region as well as support the cities in the region to localise these efforts at the municipal level. At the local level, local centres and councils on migration and development were established with corresponding budget and personnel to lead the main activities in each municipality. Technical working groups were also established at the local level to bring in the expertise and support of various key actors to oversee the integration of migration into their local development planning. At the national level, the regional CMDs partnered with the state through the Commission for Filipinos Overseas and work to foster coordination, dialogue and mutual knowledge sharing and support between the local and national levels. What also became clear was the essential need to ensure that migrants, displaced persons and their associations and diasporas were crucial actors to involve and empower throughout the entire development, implementation and evaluation of policy coherence efforts, as only by achieving this will policies be coherent with the realities and needs across the various sectors. They also play an extremely important role in fostering development themselves through their own initiatives, entrepreneurship, investment and support to integrate newcomers etc. When cities engage and empower migrants, displaced persons and their organisations, this legitimises and strengthens their efforts and allows for their alignment with local development priorities, further contributing to policy coherence. Moreover, particularly when diaspora and migrants development initiatives are linked to decentralised cooperation 10 dynamics, this allows cities to foster policy coherence between territories and better address migration and development throughout the entire migratory cycle in both the host and origin territories. An example of this can be found between the regions of Kasserine and Tuscany in Tunisia and Italy respectively. To support cities build such cooperation dynamics or integrate migration into existing relationships, the JMDI has also elaborated a set of Guidelines on Integrating Migration into Decentralised Cooperation. This will be an important tool to support cities enhance the effectiveness of their development initiatives and specifically contribute to achieving SDG 17 on global partnerships for sustainable development. Recommendations National authorities need to recognise the importance of empowering cities in their endeavours to ensure horizontal policy coherence in migration and development at the local level through the adequate allocation of human and financial resources, transfer of competencies and support for decentralisation processes in accordance with national policies and standards; National authorities, together with cities, should create mechanisms to promote and support the dialogue on policy coherence on migration and development between the national and local levels for vertical policy coherence; Cities should engage in understanding the local/regional features of migration and development across all sectors through the participation and consultation with migrants and displaced persons in order to be able to develop evidence-based policies; 10 Decentralised cooperation can be understood as understood as international development cooperation carried out in partnership between local and regional governments and their territorial stakeholders

Cities should promote the institutionalisation of policy coherence activities within agreements, laws and policies and ensure their implementation by setting up multistakeholder consultation and coordination mechanisms and providing the necessary capacity building and financial resources to achieve this; International organisations should continue to set up platforms of dialogue that gather and strengthen the voice of local actors and spread this voice into national and international Fora for enhanced vertical policy coherence up to the global level. The continued hosting of the Global Mayoral Forum on Mobility, Migration and Development back to back with the Global Forum on Migration and Development would be a positive step in this direction; International organisations should build on their global experience to develop tools that are tailor made for local actors to support them in their policy coherence efforts. The forthcoming Dashboard of Indicators and Guidelines on Policy Coherence at the Local Level being developed by the JMDI will be of extreme importance in this regard.