Migration, Human Rights and Governance
Migration, Human Rights and Governance
Migration, Human Rights and Governance
andgovernance
Handbook for Parliamentarians N 24
Cover Page
Migrants and refugees crowd on board a boat some 25 kilometres from the Libyan
coast. The numbers of people risking their lives to cross the Mediterranean sea has
risen sharply in recent years. Massimo Sestini, 2014
Contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Abbreviations
Boxes
10
Introduction
14
Chapter 1
International migration today
17
19
20
22
24
26
28
31
35
Chapter 2
International law, migration and human rights
37
40
40
43
45
50
56
56
58
61
1
63
66
69
Chapter 3
Elimination of discrimination and equality of opportunity
andtreatment
71
71
77
82
84
87
90
Chapter 4
Key human rights principles regarding protection of migrants
93
94
98
99
4.3 Elimination of all forms of forced or compulsory labour, including trafficking for
forced labour and labour exploitation
105
4.3.1 What is forced labour?
106
107
4.3.3 Particular vulnerability of migrant workers to forced labour and trafficking 110
4.3.4 Factors underlying trafficking
4.4 Migrant childrens rights, including the abolition of child labour
4.4.1 Child labour
111
113
119
123
4.5.1 Right to leave, right to return to and free movement within a country
123
124
4.5.3 Non-refoulement
125
126
129
132
133
Chapter 5
Human rights-based governance of migration
135
136
5.1.1 Human rights, migration and the role of the United Nations system
5.2 A human rights-based approach to migration
139
143
146
146
147
148
148
151
151
155
159
161
164
165
166
Conclusion
175
176
Selected references
179
Annex I:
ASEAN Declaration on the Protection and Promotion
oftheRights of Migrant Workers
183
Annex II:
Article16 of the ICRMW and its application to migrant workers
187
and members of their families in an irregular situation
Annex III:
Declaration of the High-level Dialogue on International
Migration and Development
189
Acknowledgements
This handbook was jointly prepared by the International Labour Office (ILO), the Office
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) and the InterParliamentary Union (IPU). Its production was made possible through the generous
financial support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Finland.
Principal contributors: Lee Swepston (formerly ILO), Patrick Taran (Global Migration
Policy Associates and formerly ILO), Ryszard Cholewinski (ILO).
Joint inter-agency editorial committee: Ingeborg Schwarz, Rogier Huizenga (IPU);
Ryszard Cholewinski (ILO); Patrick Taran (Global Migration Policy Associates); and staff
of OHCHR Secretariat of the Committee on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant
Workers and Members of Their Families and of OHCHR Migration Team in the Research
and Right to Development Division.*
Other contributors:
ILO:
Luc Demaret, formerly of the Bureau for Workers Activities (ACTRAV)
Janelle Diller, Office of the Deputy Director-General/Policy (DDG/P)
Katerine Landuyt, International Labour Standards Department (NORMES)
Deepa Rishikesh, International Labour Standards Department (NORMES)
Isabelle Kronisch, Labour Migration Branch (MIGRANT)
IPU:
Rogier Huizenga, Manager, Human Rights Programme
Jonathan Lang, Consultant, Human Rights Programme
Foreword
Millions of people are on the move. The worlds policymakers and political leaders
face the complex challenge of ensuring that migration takes place in ways that are fair,
mutually beneficial and respectful of human rights.
There is no shortage of laws and policies on migration. Some measures recognize
the positive contribution of migrants and migration to economic welfare, to national
prosperity and to development. However, other measures react to migration
and to migrants as threatening phenomena. These measures can have negative
consequences, including violations of the human rights of migrants and their families.
Parliamentarians have a critical role to play to ensure a meaningful, balanced and
informed response to migration. They are first of all responsible for adopting adequate
laws on migration to give effect to international obligations entered into by the state
under the international treaty framework, in particular with respect to human rights
norms and labour standards. Parliamentarians, as well as governments, can and should
promote fair and effective policies in order to maximize the benefits of migration while
addressing the real challenges that host, transit and origin countries and migrants face.
The Inter-Parliamentary Union, the International Labour Office and the Office of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, according to their
respective mandates, have decided to produce this information tool that should help
parliamentarians to achieve the above objective.
The handbook offers responses to fundamental questions on migration, such as those
concerned with its root causes and possible responses in terms of good policies and
practices, as well as the challenges, both for migrants and for countries, in relation
to national well-being, development and social cohesion. The handbook proposes a
balanced approach to make effective laws and policies that address the human rights
of migrants and the governance of migration.
The handbook reflects the long experience of our three cooperating organizations and
our constituents worldwide. It contains examples of measures and practices relating
to migration that have worked successfully. It is intended to be useful not only for
parliamentarians, but also for government officials and civil servants as well as for
social partners and civil society. The ultimate objective of this Handbook is to promote
fair and rights-based migration policies, aligned with international norms and standards,
in the interest of all migrants as well as host, transit and origin countries.
Martin Chungong
Secretary General
Inter-Parliamentary Union
Guy Ryder
Director-General
International Labour
Organization
Abbreviations
ACHR
ACTRAV
ASEAN
AU
African Union
CARICOM
Caribbean Community
CEACR
CEDAW
CEMAC
CERD
CFA
CIS
CNIg
COMESA
CRC
EAC
EAEC
ECHR
ECOWAS
EESC
ESC
EU
European Union
FPI
FRA
GCC
GCIM
GDP
GFMD
GMG
HLD
HRC
ICC
ICCPR
ICERD
ICESCR
ICPD
ICRC
ICRMW
ILO
IMO
IOM
IPU
Inter-Parliamentary Union
KNOMAD
MERCOSUR
MoU
Memorandum of understanding
NHRIs
OAS
OAU
OHCHR
OSCE
PICUM
RCPs
SADC
SAWP
SDGs
SMEs
UDHR
UN
United Nations
UNCTAD
UN DESA
UNECA
UNESCO
UNHCR
UNICEF
UNODC
UPR
WHO
Boxes
Box 1.1
Box 1.2
Box 1.3
Box 1.4
Box 1.5
Box 1.6
Human interest story: helping migrants make the most of their money
Box 1.7
Box 1.8
Box 1.9
Box 1.10
Box 1.11
Box 1.12
Box 2.1
Box 2.2
Box 2.3
Box 2.4
Box 2.5
Box 2.6
Box 2.7
Box 2.8
Box 2.9
Box 2.10
10
Box 2.11
Box 2.12
Box 2.13
Box 2.14
Box 2.15
Box 2.16
Box 3.1
Box 3.2
Box 3.3
Box 3.4
Box 3.5
Box 3.6
Box 3.7
uman interest story: new law leads to new life for migrant
H
domesticworkers
Box 3.8
Box 3.9
Box 3.10
Box 3.11
Box 4.1
Box 4.2
Box 4.3
Box 4.4
Box 4.5
Box 4.6
Box 4.7
Box 4.8
Box 4.9
Box 4.10
Box 4.11
Box 4.12
Box 4.13
Box 4.14
Box 4.15
Box 4.16
Box 4.17
ICRMW
Box 4.18
Box 4.19
Box 4.20
Human interest story: migrant working girls, victims of the global crisis
Box 4.21
Box 4.22
Box 4.23
Box 4.24
Box 4.25
Box 4.26
Box 5.1
Box 5.2
Box 5.3
Box 5.4
Box 5.5
Box 5.6
Box 5.7
Box 5.8
12
Box 5.9
Box 5.10
Box 5.11
Box 5.12
Box 5.13
Human interest story: migrant workers get the short end of the stick
Box 5.14
Box 5.15
Box 5.16
Box 5.17
Box 5.18
13
Introduction
What does the handbook contain?
This handbook provides a step-by-step overview of the conditions, issues, tools and
policy responses regarding international migration that parliamentarians need to
understand to effectively carry out their responsibilities for ensuring the protection of the
rights of migrants and the governance of international migration under the rule of law.
Chapter 1 International migration today provides an overview of the principal
international migration trends. It documents the importance of labour migration for
countries of destination and countries of origin; outlines the impact of the global
economic downturn and employment crisis on migrants and migration; highlights
the issues of gender and migration with particular reference to migrant women; and
identifies the challenges migration brings in changing societies.
Chapter 2 International law, migration and human rights lays out the
foundations for migration governance in international law. Particular attention is given
to the principle of the rule of law and core international human rights instruments
and labour standards, with special attention devoted to the specific international
instruments concerned with the protection of migrant workers and the governance
of labour migration. An overview is also provided of how international human rights
treaties and labour standards are supervised. Relevant regional instruments relating
to migration governance, the protection of migrant rights, regional integration
communities and processes and bilateral agreements are also discussed.
Chapter 3 Elimination of discrimination and equality of opportunity and
treatment underscores that the principle of non-discrimination and equality serves as
an essential building-block for the effective enjoyment of most human rights (including
labour rights). It examines the application of this principle in international human
rights treaties and in the context of work. Specific attention is given to the particular
vulnerabilities to discrimination of certain categories of migrant workers, especially
migrant domestic workers, and their families. Some examples are provided of how
discrimination may affect migrants, with particular reference to application of the nondiscrimination and equality principle at the border.
Chapter 4 Key human rights principles regarding protection of migrants
looks in more depth at five fundamental human rights principles of particular relevance
to migrants, namely: (1) effective recognition of economic, social and cultural rights;
(2) freedom of association and the right to collective bargaining; (3) elimination of all
forms of forced or compulsory labour, including trafficking for forced labour and labour
exploitation; (4) migrant childrens rights, including the abolition of child labour; and
(5)a broad category labelled movement rights, which attempts to capture the diverse
human rights issues relating to the movement of persons, including free movement
within, and the right to leave and return to, a country, as well as restrictions on such
movement; protection of persons who face a real risk of human rights violations if
returned to their country of origin or a third country, such as the principle of non-
14
15
16
Chapter 1
International
migration today
Migration is a global phenomenon; no region and few countries are unaffected by it. In
2013, the number of international migrants moving between developing countries or
between high-income countries was equal to South North movements. Most countries
today are countries of origin, transit and destination for international migration. Migration
has long contributed to economic development and social well-being in both destination
and origin countries. It has existed since time immemorial, even if its character and
the numbers of migrants vary with time and circumstances. In this age of globalization
and increasing labour mobility, migration brings important benefits to both origin and
destination countries, and to migrants themselves so long as it occurs under proper,
regulated conditions. But migration also carries costs, particularly for countries of origin
and for the migrants and their families.
18
19
While the reasons for leaving their countries of origin and the basis for admitting them
to destination countries vary widely, many international migrants end up in the latters
labour markets. Indeed, this also applies to most refugees and family reunification
migrants once settled in destination countries, even when their original motivation for
moving was not necessarily to seek employment abroad.
Migration for employment today serves as an instrument to balance the skills, ages and
composition of national and regional labour markets and has become a key feature in
meeting economic, labour market and productivity challenges in a globalized economy.
It provides responses to changing needs for skills and personnel resulting from
technological advances, changes in market conditions and industrial transformations.
In countries with ageing populations, migration replenishes declining workforces with
younger workers, often increasing dynamism, innovation and mobility in the workforce.
It allows fast-developing economies to meet needs for labour and skills not yet available
from national workers. And in regions with more workers than the national economy
21
can absorb, itprovides a safety valve, allowing workers to find employment and
livelihoods not available in their own countries and often to return with skills they could
not have gained at home and a more secure foundation to develop their capabilities in
the future.
As important as migration is today to inclusive and sustainable economic and social
development, all indications suggest it will become even more significant over the
course of this decade and beyond. Populations and workforces are ageing and
declining in more and more countries, and migration will likely be an ever more
important source of skills to keep workforces viable and competitive in a globalized
world economy. Getting it right today on migration law and policy will be essential
to national performance and well-being tomorrow, so governments must address
migration appropriately, recognizing its importance to national economies and labour
markets and thus to economic development and social cohesion. Chapter5 elaborates
on some of the vital contributions gained from the linkages between migration,
employment and development.
22
In other words, there is little reason to fear migration and ample cause to welcome
it as long as appropriate measures are adopted to facilitate the aforementioned
advantages and benefits.
But migration poses challenges as well as advantages in destination countries,
relating most visibly to change and diversity. Migration often brings ethnic, cultural,
racial, religious and linguistic identities that differ from those previously dominant,
23
homogeneous or unique in host countries. For many if not most countries, this requires
adaptation and accommodation to the new identities, even to diversity itself. In the
case of significant differences, if not adequately addressed and appropriately regulated,
migration and diversity can give rise to social tensions. Addressing these tensions,
promoting integration and achieving social cohesion depends on implementing the
universal values of non-discrimination and equality of treatment, which in turn requires
legislative action and a regulatory framework. The principle of non-discrimination and
equal opportunity and treatment is discussed further in Chapter3.
24
Sources:
Migration and remittances: Recent development and outlook, Migration and Development Brief 24,
Migration and Remittances Team, Development Prospects Group, Washington, DC, D. Ratha, et al.,
World Bank, 13April 2015.
Issues Brief No.3: Migration as an enabler for inclusive social development, Global Migration Group
(GMG), November 2013.
However, there are also drawbacks to such migration, as the departure of migrant
workers often depletes national skills and diminishes the return on national resources
invested in education and training. The brain drain phenomenon can deprive countries
of the skills they need to support national development, business activity and local
innovation. Large-scale migration abroad can weaken national economies and drain
labour forces of skills and vitality, which is particularly damaging to small countries.
It is therefore important that long-term reliance on sending nationals for employment
abroad, as observed in some countries, be balanced with efforts to create decent jobs
at home and raise living standards for everyone.
Box 1.6 Human interest story: helping migrants make the most of their money
Mouss Bao is a 35 year-old migrant from Senegal who has been living in France
since 2006.
Like most migrant workers, he sends a substantial amount of his monthly salary
back to Louga, his hometown in north-western Senegal, near the coastal city of
Saint Louis. Every month, his mother and wife receive about 500 Euros through a
money transfer service.
They dont keep all the money that I send as I am expected not only to support
my parents and wife but also my extended family as a whole, including my
brothers and sisters, he explained during a financial education training session
in Paris organized by the French Federation of Migrant Workers organisations,
FORIM, and supported by the International Labour Organization.
Bao came to France nine years ago with a university degree in geography, but he
quickly developed an interest in financial education and became a trainer. This is
now his main professional activity.
Remittance flows to developing countries are constantly growing. [...] Top
recipients are India, China, the Philippines, Mexico, Nigeria and Egypt. Many other
African countries also depend heavily on remittances. []
Helping migrants make the most of their money, Geneva, ILO Newsroom,
International Labour Office.
25
26
27
28
and integration policies: cooperation between regional and local governments and civil
society organisations: Employment is a key part of the integration process, because
decent jobs are vital to immigrants self-sufficiency, and they enhance social relations and
mutual understanding with the host society (para.8.2).
The challenge of equality of treatment and non-discrimination, which is addressed in
greater depth in Chapter3, is not just a question of values. It is a question of whether
social cohesion and economic welfare are even possible. Discrimination unjustified
differential treatment denies equal opportunity, provokes conflict within populations
and undermines social cohesion. Discrimination reinforces attitudes that constrain
certain identifiable groups to marginalized roles and poor conditions. Consistent denial
of employment opportunities and good-quality education, relegation to life in the
ghettos, inadequate police protection and multiple discrimination in community life all
result in marginalization, exclusion and, ultimately, the breakdown of social cohesion.
Discrimination also prevents integration. The consequences of past policies that neither
anticipated nor prevented discrimination can be seen in the presence of migrant
ghettos, high unemployment, low school attainment and increased violence and crime
rates in numerous countries. The longer migrants and their offspring live and work in
host societies that do not take steps to include them, the more likely that prejudice and
discrimination will deny them the economic and educational attainments enjoyed by
majority populations. In some countries, the cumulative effects of past discrimination
have shaped a contemporary environment that is itself discriminatory.
It is clear that much more needs to be done to change negative political and public
perceptions of migrants and recognize the contributions they make to host societies.
This requires a range of measures: from legislation to combat discrimination and
xenophobia, to multi-stakeholder public education campaigns, to the improvement of
relevant evidence and knowledge.
Box 1.10 Recognizing the contribution of migrants and improving
perceptions
[] Migrants make significant and essential contributions to the economic, social
and cultural development of their host countries and their communities back
home. But too often these contributions go unrecognized, and instead the public
debate is dominated by xenophobic attitudes and discrimination, both in and
outside the workplace.
Discrimination based on ones migration status not only violates human rights, it is
also an impediment to decent work and to social integration more broadly.
Migrants in an irregular situation are often particularly at risk of abuse, as they are
more likely to face discrimination, exclusion, exploitation and abuse at all stages of
the migration process.
30
Against this backdrop, it is time for a major shift in the way we perceive migration.
We need to redouble our efforts to raise awareness of migrants positive social
and economic contributions to society. It is time to implement human rights
and labour standards more effectively and to put in place concrete measures to
combat discrimination and xenophobia, including:
legislative and other reforms to eliminate all forms of discrimination against
migrants;
strengthened law enforcement and criminal justice responses to xenophobia
and violence and enabling migrants to access justice;
multi-stakeholder campaigns to end negative and inaccurate public messages
and promote tolerance and respect for migrants; and
collection and dissemination of accurate data on discrimination and on the
positive contributions that migrants make to the development of both their host
countries and home communities. [...]
Extracts from Promote and protect the rights and fundamental freedoms of
all migrants, Joint statement by ILO Director-General, Guy Ryder, and United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, International Migrants
Day, 18December 2013.
On the occasion of International Migrants Day, OHCHR and ILO also launched a
series of cartoons to challenge myths and encourage a positive public perception
of migration.
31
32
In order to ensure that migration presents new opportunities for [women] and
a means for their economic empowerment through wider participation, as CEDAW
recommends, and enhance the important contributions they make to development
in both destination and origin countries, more gender-sensitive migration policies,
including policies on labour migration, need to be adopted. The Committee on the
Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families also
highlighted the gender perspective in its General Comment No.1 on migrant domestic
workers, adopted at its 13th Session in December 2010. Over the years, a number of
international organizations have developed important tools for governments and other
stakeholders to assist them in this task. One such tool is the ILO Information guide on
preventing discrimination, exploitation and abuse of women migrant workers, published
in 2003. Another is the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE)
Guide on gender-sensitive labour migration policies, published in 2009.
Box 1.12 The need for gender-sensitive labour migration policies
In order to ensure that international migration contributes substantially to the
achievement of equitable, sustainable and inclusive development, policymakers
and other stakeholders should take into account a gender-sensitive and rightsbased approach to developing labour migration policies. This would to enhance
equal protection, treatment and opportunities for both men and women migrant
workers and their families, and equally benefit countries of origin and destination.
Gender mainstreaming is still a challenge for all policies, and in particular
those designed to improve the governance of migration for employment. But
why are gender-sensitive labour migration policies so essential? For one thing,
such policies take into account how sociocultural roles, needs, opportunities,
constraints and vulnerabilities differ for women and men. They also guarantee that
human rights, including labour rights, are enjoyed equally by women and men
migrant workers and that migration legislation, policies and programmes promote
equality of opportunity and treatment in respect of employment and occupation
with a view to eliminating any discrimination based on sex.
33
Efforts to promote gender equality in labour migration policies may include special
gender-specific provisions (e.g. preferential treatment or affirmative action) to
compensate for long-term discrimination, particularly that suffered by women.
The main elements of a gender-sensitive labour migration policy include ensuring
gender equality and equity at all stages of the migration process:
decision-making, planning and preparation to go abroad in search of
employment and better wages;
recruitment and placement;
the journey or transit to the destination country;
living and working conditions abroad; and
return to and reintegration within the country of origin.
National policy on the protection of migrant workers in Brazil
Gender equality has been identified as a principal aim of Brazils National
Policy on the Protection of Migrant Workers, which refers to decent work as a
fundamental condition. The policy includes measures to combat discrimination
against migrant workers in employment and occupation and protect them
against forced labour, child labour and trafficking. It simplifies the administrative
procedures for immigration, providing for regularization of migrant status and
access to labour rights. The inter-ministerial Tripartite National Immigration
Council (CNIg), which is coordinated by the Ministry of Labour and Employment,
includes employer and worker organizations, and civil society and international
organizations as observers. CNIg is a permanent organ created to accompany the
policys development and implementation. ILO provides technical assistance with
monitoring, publication of studies, development of policies, and legislation, etc.
With its technical support, the database on migrant workers maintained by the
Ministry of Labour and Employment has been improved and expanded, with data
disaggregated by sex.
Source:
A practical guide on maximising the contribution of women migrant workers to development, Geneva,
G.Moreno-Fontes Chammartin, International Labour Office, forthcoming [footnotes omitted].
34
36
Chapter 2
International law,
migration and
human rights
A member of medical
staff plays with children
following a rescue operation
at sea in the Port of
Messina, Italy. International
law contains a number of
provisions concerning the
rights of migrant children,
agroup particularly affected
by migration. AFP/
Giovanni Isolino, 2015
37
38
greater array of rights to migrants whose admission and residence are authorized. This
question is discussed in more detail in Chapter3.
While human rights and international labour standards are generally applicable to
all migrants, in practice the extension and enforceability of human rights and labour
protections to all persons, including migrants, in the national context may depend on
which specific international instruments the country has ratified. There are overarching
reasons, however, why all migrants should be accorded the full measure of human
rights, including fundamental rights at work, provided for in international law.
Box 2.2 Three overarching reasons why it is important to protect the
human rights of migrants
First, it is a matter of both law and morality. Most national laws and constitutions
do not restrict their recognition of human rights to citizens or nationals only,
and accept that these rights are applicable to everyone physically present in the
territory of the state or subject to its jurisdiction. While there are limitations on
some rights that migrants and their families are accorded in international law, such
as the degree to which they have a right to residence and the right to political
participation in the country of destination, there are no limitations on their human
rights, such as the right to life, the right to be treated as persons everywhere
before the law, the right to freedom from slavery, forced or compulsory labour and
torture, the right to liberty and security of person, and human rights to education,
health and cultural identity. The core international human rights treaties protect
such rights, and virtually every country has ratified a number of them.
Second, while migration can and does take place in unregulated circumstances,
experience shows that well-governed migratory processes make far more
beneficial contributions to the economic and social development of origin, transit
and destination countries as well as the human development of both migrants
and nationals, and that they also contribute to social cohesion. This makes it
both appropriate and practical to put in place a legislative framework that is both
carefully thought out and correctly applied.
Third, a just, viable and sustainable migration system necessarily includes the
recognition of migrants human rights and attention to ensuring decent working
conditions for migrants. Treating people without respect for their rights places
the act of migration outside the regulation and protection of the law. When
this happens, states lose many of the advantages to be gained through proper
regulation and safe migration. Migrants whose rights are unprotected are more
likely to be subject to abuse and exploitation; they are more likely to be perceived
as unfair competition for jobs giving rise to social tensions; and their tax and social
contributions may not be collected or passed on to government.
39
law. On the other hand, the 1966 UN International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR), the 1966 International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
(ICESCR), the seven other core human rights treaties (see below), as well as international
labour standards in the form of ILO conventions are binding upon the countries which
have ratified them. In contrast, ILO recommendations, which are another form of
international labour standard, provide non-binding guidance, either as a complement to
accompanying ILO conventions or on stand-alone subjects, on which all ILO Member
States are bound to report as to the effect given. A unique characteristic of international
labour standards, including those relating to fundamental rights at work, is that these are
designed not only by governments but also by employers and workers representatives,
who together with governments comprise ILOs tripartite structure. Likewise, general
comments and recommendations adopted by the human rights treaty bodies serve to
provide guidance to States Parties on the implementation of their treaty obligations under
the core international human rightstreaties.
These instruments usually define the rights and entitlements of the persons and
populations concerned, and may establish their obligations as well. They also lay
out guidelines to states and provisions for implementing rights and obligations,
including mechanisms for application and supervision. In some areas, such as
international migration, international instruments may provide for specific measures
and mechanisms of international consultation and cooperation to implement basic
principles regarding rights, obligations and governance mechanisms.
Modern-day international norms addressing refugees and migrants began to emerge
nearly a century ago. The need to provide for protection of workers outside their own
countries was identified early in this process. It was explicitly raised after the First
World War in the Treaty of Versailles, which also established the Constitution of the
International Labour Organization. The first specific international treaty on migrant
workers was drawn up in the 1930s, and the ILO Migration for Employment Convention
(Revised) (No.97) was adopted in 1949, shortly after UDHR emerged in 1948.
Coincidentally, instruments and mechanisms to provide for recognition and protection
of refugees also emerged shortly after the First World War.
The specific instruments providing the basis for national migration laws, policies and
practice have been elaborated in seven branches of international law:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
This handbook focuses on the first two branches, as discussed in more detail in
subsequent sections of this chapter. A brief overview of the other branches and their
relevance to migrants is provided below.
41
International refugee law, namely the 1951 Geneva Convention Relating to the
Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol and related regional instruments, is amply
covered in Refugee protection: A guide to international refugee law, handbook for
parliamentarians No.2, jointly produced in 2001 by IPU and UNHCR.
Another category of persons for which UNHCR is responsible and where there are
important linkages to migration and human rights is stateless persons, and in 2005 IPU
and UNHCR also collaborated to prepare Nationality and statelessness: A handbook for
parliamentarians (No.22).
The main applicable instruments of international criminal law pertaining to migration
are the two Palermo Protocols to the UN Convention against Transnational Organized
Crime, adopted in 2000, namely the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish
Trafficking in Persons, especially Women and Children, and the Protocol against the
Smuggling of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air. These are discussed in Combating
trafficking in persons: A handbook for parliamentarians (No.16), jointly produced
in 2009 by IPU and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). This publication
encourages parliamentarians to take an active part in stopping human trafficking.
It contains a compilation of international laws and good practices developed to
combat human trafficking, and offers guidance to parliamentarians on how national
legislation can be brought in line with international standards. It outlines measures to
prevent the crime of trafficking in persons, prosecute offenders and protect victims.
It also contains advice on how to report on this crime and how to enlist civil society
in the cause. Another noteworthy publication in this field of law is the Handbook for
parliamentarians: The Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking in
Human Beings, prepared in 2007 by the Council of Europes ParliamentaryAssembly.
The principal instruments of international humanitarian law most relevant to migrants
are the four Geneva Conventions of 1949 and their Additional Protocols of 1977, which
are presented, among others, in the first handbook for parliamentarians Respect for
international humanitarian law, jointly produced in 1999 by IPU and the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
International consular law is enshrined in the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations
1963, its Optional Protocol concerning Acquisition of Nationality, and the Optional
Protocol concerning the Compulsory Settlement of Disputes, which also include
several provisions for the protection of a countrys nationals abroad. Most of the Vienna
Conventions 79 articles provide for the operation of consulates, the functions of consular
agents and the privileges and immunities granted to consular officials when posted to a
foreign country. But several provisions also specify the duties of consular officials when
citizens of their country face difficulties abroad. Of particular interest for the protection
of migrants is Article36, outlining obligations for competent authorities in cases of
the arrest or detention of a foreign national, to guarantee his or her inalienable right to
counsel and due process through consular notification and effective access to consular
protection. See the UN Audiovisual Library of International Law for a summary overview
of the Vienna Convention, by Juan Manuel Gmez Robledo, Deputy Foreign Minister for
Multilateral Affairs and Human Rights, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mexico.
International maritime law is an umbrella term that refers to the UN Convention on
the Law of the Sea, 1982, as well as the many instruments adopted under the auspices
42
of the International Maritime Organization (IMO), which include a number that are of
particular relevance to the rights of migrants, such as the International Convention for
the Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, and the International Convention on Maritime Search
and Rescue, 1979. Important as non-binding instruments are the Guidelines on the
Allocation of Responsibilities to Seek the Successful Resolution of Stowaway Cases,
1997 (revised 2011); Interim Measures for Combating Unsafe Practices Associated with
the Trafficking or Transport of Migrants by Sea, 1998 (revised 2001); and Guidelines on
the Treatment of Persons Rescued at Sea, 2004. For relevant extracts from the texts,
see Compendium of international migration law instruments, compiled by Richard
Perruchoud and Katarna Tmlov, International Organization for Migration (IOM) and
T.M.C. Asser Press, 2007. This field is also closely connected to the many international
labour standards adopted by ILO relating to the rights and working conditions of
seafarers, many of which have now been consolidated in the Maritime Labour
Convention, 2006, which entered into force on 20August 2013.
43
44
Migrants therefore enjoy the human rights available to all persons under UN and ILO
conventions (see next section), and under regional human rights instruments.
45
46
47
Moreover, jurisprudence at the regional level has reinforced the notion that international
labour standards and national labour laws should apply to all migrant workers.
48
49
and treatment for migrant workers and members of their families lawfully within the
territory, which implies taking active measures, some of which are set out in Article12.
Examples of such measures include cooperation with workers and employers
organizations and other appropriate bodies; enactment of legislation and adoption
of educational programmes as necessary to implement the national policy; repeal of
legislation and modification of administrative instructions and practices inconsistent
with the national policy; formulation and application of a social policy in consultation
with representative employer and worker organizations; and ensuring equal treatment
for all migrant workers with regard to their working conditions. Convention No.143
is accompanied by the Migrant Workers Recommendation, 1975 (No.151), which
sets out further guidance on equality of opportunity and treatment, social policy, and
employment and residence of migrant workers.
Box 2.8 Human interest story: edging closer to justice the journey of
migrant domestic workers in Lebanon
After witnessing war first-hand during the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, in July
2006, Jennifer [a Philippine national] who wishes to withhold her family name to
protect her identity, did not want to renew her contract to work in Lebanon as a
migrant domestic worker. []
The Philippine embassy took Jennifer in for two weeks, and arranged for her flight
back home. But after many months of arduous work in Lebanon, she was forced
to leave without her unpaid wages.
Although this was the end of Jennifers ordeal as a migrant domestic worker in
Lebanon, it was the start of her long journey to achieving justice through the
Lebanese judicial system. []
Under the Lebanese law, a migrant domestic worker has the right to file a
complaint in front of the judge or the police, and the right to a fair trial, like any
other Lebanese citizen [].
The first time a Lebanese court ruled in favour of a migrant domestic worker was
in 2005. Then, a judge ruled for the payment of 500,000 Lebanese liras around
US$ 330 to a migrant domestic worker, represented by Caritas, who was found
to have been abused and exploited by an employer in the Bekaa Valley in southeastern Lebanon.
Since then, many domestic workers in Lebanon have taken their cases to court.
While it is a slow and challenging process, their quest for justice has been
delivering results, and the consequences of these landmark rulings are trickling
down through society, slowly changing how many Lebanese perceive migrant
domestic workers and their rights. Today, compensation for abuse and forced
labour can reach up to US$ 20,000.
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This month, seven years after speaking to Jennifer at the Philippine Embassy in
Beirut, the Caritas lawyer [dealing with her case] finally had some good news.
Caritas had managed to get a ruling in her favour, and the wages owed to her by
former employers have now been transferred to her.
Edging closer to justice: The journey of migrant domestic workers in Lebanon,
ILO Media Centre, International Labour Office, 2014
with nationals in respect of remuneration and other conditions of work and terms of
employment (Article25), social security (Article27), access to medical care (Article28)
and education (Article30) are also protected.
Part IV of ICRMW enumerates the more specific rights of migrant workers and family
members who are in a documented or regular situation, such as those addressing
family reunification (Article44) and access to the labour market (Articles52 and 53).
Part V contains a number of provisions dealing with particular categories of migrant
workers, such as frontier workers, seasonal workers, project-tied workers and the selfemployed.
Part VI promotes sound, equitable, humane and lawful conditions in connection with
the international migration of migrant workers and members of their families, and sets
out principles for intergovernmental consultation and cooperation on the regulation of
labour migration.
As of 12August 2015, 87 countries and territories two-thirds of the some
130countries and territories for which international migration is an important feature
are bound by at least one of these three complementary conventions. While ICRMW
has not yet been ratified by any single high-income country, 11EU Member States
(among them most of the larger migrant destination countries), Israel, Norway and
New Zealand have ratified one or both of the ILO conventions on migrant workers.
Anumber of newly industrialized countries, such as Brazil, China (Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region) and Malaysia (Sabah) are also bound by Convention No.97.
One reason provided for non-ratification of ICRMW by high-income countries is
that the distinction between the economic and social rights afforded to migrant
workers and members of their families in an irregular situation and regular migrants
is insufficiently clear (EU Council Conclusions on the 2013 UN High-Level Dialogue
on Migration and Development and on broadening the development-migration nexus,
para.13). However, as observed below and in Chapter3, human rights apply to all
persons, irrespective of their nationality and migration status, and any differences in
treatment between nationals and non-nationals (including those in irregular status),
orbetween different groups of non-nationals, need to serve a legitimate objective,
andany action taken to achieve that objective must itself be proportionate and
reasonable (The economic, social and cultural rights of migrants in an irregular
situation, UnitedNations, 2014, p.24).
Box 2.9 Ratifications of ILO Conventions Nos.97 and 143 and the UN
migrant workers convention
ILO Migration for Employment Convention (Revised), 1949 (No.97)
Africa: Algeria, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius,
Nigeria, United Republic of Tanzania (Zanzibar), Zambia
Americas and Caribbean: Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Brazil, Cuba, Dominica,
Ecuador, Grenada, Guatemala, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, Trinidad and Tobago,
Uruguay, Venezuela
53
Asia and Pacific: Hong Kong (Special Administrative Region, China), Kyrgyzstan,
Malaysia (Sabah), New Zealand, Philippines, Tajikistan
Europe: Albania, Armenia, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cyprus, France,
Germany, Italy, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Republic of
Moldova, Serbia, Slovenia, Spain, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia,
UnitedKingdom
Middle East: Israel
ILO Migrant Workers (Supplementary Provisions) Convention, 1975
(No.143)
Africa: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Guinea, Kenya, Togo, Uganda
Americas and Caribbean: Venezuela
Asia and Pacific: Philippines, Tajikistan
Europe: Albania, Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cyprus, Italy, Montenegro,
Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Serbia, Slovenia, Sweden, the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia
International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant
Workers and Members of Their Families, 1990
Africa: Algeria, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Egypt, Ghana, Guinea, Lesotho, Libya,
Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda,
Senegal, Seychelles, Uganda
Americas and Caribbean: Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador,
ElSalvador, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua,
Paraguay, Peru, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Uruguay
Asia and Pacific: Bangladesh, Indonesia, Kyrgyzstan, Philippines, Sri Lanka,
Tajikistan, Timor-Leste
Europe: Albania, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Turkey
Middle East: Syria
This convention has also been signed by 18 countries (as of 12August 2015):
Africa: Benin, Cameroon, Chad, Comoros, Congo, Gabon, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia,
Sao Tome and Principe, Sierra Leone, Togo
Americas and Caribbean: Haiti, Venezuela
Asia and Pacific: Cambodia, Palau
Europe: Armenia, Montenegro, Serbia
55
56
In its General Comment No.30 (2004) on Discrimination against noncitizens, adopted in August 2004, the Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination (CERD) recommended that States Parties to the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) adopt
measures to [e]nsure that legislative guarantees against racial discrimination apply
to non-citizens regardless of their immigration status, and that the implementation
of legislation does not have a discriminatory effect on non-citizens. Moreover, it
recommended inter alia that states should adopt measures to ensure that public
educational institutions are open to non-citizens and children of undocumented
migrants residing in the territory of the State party; to eliminate discrimination
against non-citizens in relation to working conditions and work requirements;
and to prevent and redress the serious problems commonly faced by non-citizen
workers, in particular by non-citizen domestic workers, including debt bondage,
passport retention, illegal confinement, rape and physical assault. The Committee
clarified also that all individuals are entitled to the enjoyment of labour and
employment rights, including the freedom of assembly and association, once an
employment relationship has been initiated until it is terminated.
In its General Recommendation No.26 (2008) on Women migrant workers,
adopted in December 2008, the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
against Women affirmed that the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) applies to all women, including migrant
women, and that the latter should not be discriminated against in any sphere of
their lives.
In its General Comment No.20 (2009) on Non-discrimination in economic,
social and cultural rights (art. 2, para.2), adopted in June 2009, the Committee
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights confirmed that the term other status
in the non-discrimination provision, Article2(1) of the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, encompasses additional prohibited grounds
of discrimination, including that of nationality, with the result that the rights in the
Covenant apply to everyone including non-nationals, such as refugees, asylumseekers, stateless persons, migrant workers and victims of international trafficking,
regardless of legal status and documentation (para.30).
Human Rights Treaty Bodies General Comments, United Nations.
in April 2013. After examining the reports, the Committee adopts concluding
observations, which are transmitted to the State Party concerned. The Committee
has also started to issue general comments, the first of which was adopted at its 13th
Session in December 2010, concerning migrant domestic workers, providing guidance
on ICRMWs application to this group of migrant workers, who are particularly
vulnerable to abuse and exploitation. A second general comment on the rights of
migrant workers in an irregular situation and members of their families was adopted
by the Committee at its 18th Session, in April 2013. The Committees concluding
observations to States Parties, the general comments as well as the initial and periodic
reports of States Parties, are available from: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/CMW/
Pages/CMWIndex.aspx.
Once 10 States Parties have accepted the procedure, in accordance with Article77,
the Committee will also be able to consider individual complaints or communications
from individuals claiming that their rights under the ICRMW have been violated.
As of 12August 2015, three States Parties (El Salvador, Mexico and Uruguay) had
acceptedit.
58
As of 1June 2015, there were 41 thematic mandates and 14 country mandates under
the Special Procedures of the Human Rights Council. One very relevant thematic
mandate is that of the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, which
was established in 1999 by the former UN Commission on Human Rights and has
been extended on five occasions. Professor Franois Crpeau (Canada) is the current
incumbent. The Special Rapporteurs main functions include examining ways and
means to overcome the obstacles existing to the full and effective protection of the
human rights of migrants; requesting and receiving information from all relevant
sources, including migrants themselves, on violations of the human rights of migrants
and their families; formulating appropriate recommendations to prevent and remedy
violations of the human rights of migrants, wherever they may occur; and promoting
59
the effective application of relevant international norms and standards on the issue.
The Special Rapporteur is also required to take into account a gender perspective when
requesting and analysing information, and to give special attention to the occurrence of
multiple discrimination and violence against migrant women. The Special Rapporteur
presents regular reports, including on country visits, to the Human Rights Council and
to the General Assembly.
Box 2.13 Engaging with the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the
human rights of migrants
Since 2000, the Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants has engaged
with parliamentarians from a number of states while on fact-finding country
visits, including to Albania, Canada, Ecuador, Guatemala, Italy, Mexico, Peru,
thePhilippines, Romania, Senegal and South Africa.
The Special Rapporteurs visits may also help stimulate action, including at the
parliamentary level. During the 2001 visit to Ecuador, the authorities informed
the Special Rapporteur that accession to the International Convention on the
Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families
had been approved by the Congressional Commission on International Affairs
and National Defence. By the time the Rapporteurs report was published in
February 2002, Congress had ratified the Convention. The Ecuadorian Migration
Act was also amended by Congress, in 2004, pursuant to the Special Rapporteurs
recommendation that the Act be in compliance with the Convention.
The human rights of migrants are not only the subject of Professor Crpeaus
mandate but have also been considered under the thematic mandates of other special
rapporteurs and working groups, such as the Special Rapporteur on trafficking in
persons, especially in women and children, the Special Rapporteur on violence against
women, its causes and consequences and the Special Rapporteur on contemporary
forms of slavery, its causes and its consequences. The work of the Special Rapporteur
on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
intolerance is particularly important since migrants are one of the groups to which
the Special Rapporteur has to give particular attention when investigating incidents
of contemporary forms of racism and racial discrimination. Moreover, the work of the
Working Group on Arbitrary Detention has also drawn attention to the growing number
of state detention practices in respect of migrants around the world.
With the examination of all UN Member States within its first cycle (20062011) now
completed, UPR has proved to be a useful mechanism in drawing attention to the
human rights obligations of states towards certain groups of persons at risk, including
migrants. Frequent recommendations submitted to Member States by their peers
include ratification of international human rights instruments, including ICRMW.
60
Africa: The African Union (AU) at the level of the Heads of State Executive Council
adopted a broad strategic Migration Policy Framework for Africa in 2006. An entire
chapter of this document provides guidelines for the adoption of conventions and
specific measures to protect the human rights of migrants across the continent, and
the first chapter is devoted to labour migration. The Framework urges a comprehensive
approach to regulatory and administrative measures to ensure safe, orderly and
productive migration. The 2013 Youth and Women Employment Pact for Africa includes
promotion of regional and sub-regional labour mobility and calls for an AU and Regional
Economic Communities Labour Migration Plan. In response, the AU Commission,
together with ILO, IOM and the UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), have
developed a regional programme on Labour Migration Governance for Development
and Integration in Africa.
South America: The Andean Labour Migration Instrument was adopted in 2003
to promote the orderly flow of migration among the Member States of the Andean
Community (see Section2.5). It includes provisions recognizing the rights of migrants
and establishing flexible mechanisms for recognition of documents and labour force
participation by nationals of one Member State in another Member State.
Southeast Asia: The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) adopted a
non-binding Declaration on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Migrant
Workers in January 2007. This Declaration lays out general principles, the obligations of
destination and origin countries, and a number of commitments by ASEAN, including
a commitment in paragraph22 to develop an ASEAN instrument on the protection
and promotion of the rights of migrant workers. However, there is no explicit reference
in the Declaration to the non-discrimination and equality of treatment principle or to
the protection of migrants in irregular status. In July 2007, the ASEAN Committee on
the Implementation of the ASEAN Declaration on the Protection and Promotion of the
Rights of Migrant Workers (see Annex I) was established to oversee implementation
of the Declaration, including fulfilment of the commitment to develop an ASEAN
instrument.
Eastern Europe and Central Asia: The Commonwealth of Independant States (CIS),
which comprises the republics of the former Soviet Union, adopted in April 1994 an
Agreement on Cooperation in the Field of Labour Migration and Social Protection of
Migrant Workers, subsequently signed by all CIS member countries.
and protection of Member State nationals in other member countries. These provisions
usually include mechanisms to facilitate documentation for migrants and visa-free
movement across borders, and to regulate their access to labour markets. The most
advanced of these regional integration systems is the EU, comprising 28Member
States, 25 of which have established full free movement rights. The remaining
restrictions on access to the labour market for Bulgarian and Romanian nationals were
removed as of 1January 2015, although restrictions remain in place in some Member
States for nationals of Croatia which acceded to the EU on 1July 2013. The EU is also
developing a common legal and policy framework on migration from third countries
and has adopted a number of measures in such areas as visa and border policy; labour
migration, research and studies; sanctions on employers who hire migrants in an
irregular situation; and return and readmission. All of these measures contain important
rights for migrants.
Box 2.14 EU law and policy on migration from third countries
The EU gained more extensive competence over migration from third countries
in May 1999, when the Treaty of Amsterdam came into force and transferred
asylum and immigration matters which were formerly the subjects of
intergovernmental cooperation to the then first (Community) pillar giving the
EU Council of Ministers the mandate to adopt legally binding measures in a
specified number of areas. However, not all EU Member States are fully engaged
in this endeavour Denmark, Ireland and the UnitedKingdom secured optouts when the Treaty of Amsterdam entered into force. Moreover, as laid down
in the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, the EU does not have
the competence to determine admission volumes for third-country nationals to
the territory of Member States for the purpose of seeking employment or selfemployment. It has only limited competence in respect of their integration, with
the possibility of establishing incentives and providing support for Member State
actions to promote the integration of lawfully resident third-country nationals.
Since 1999, the role of European parliamentarians in adopting measures in this
field has increased incrementally, and the ordinary EU decision-making procedure
where the European Parliament has a co-decision function with the Council of
Ministers has now been extended to matters of asylum and migration.
To date, the substantive measures adopted have focused on steps towards the
creation of a common European asylum system, border and visa policy, prevention
of irregular migration, readmission and return, and trafficking in persons. None of
the adopted or proposed measures is devoted solely to the matter of protecting
the rights of third-country national migrant workers in an irregular situation.
The regulations establishing EU border and visa codes, however, contain antidiscrimination provisions, and some safeguards in the expulsion/return process,
including the detention phase, are provided for in the Returns Directive. Migrant
workers in an irregular situation may also bring complaints against employers
for outstanding unpaid wages, with the assistance of trade unions or other
associations, under the Employer Sanctions Directive.
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65
66
67
70
Chapter 3
Elimination of
discrimination and
equality of opportunity
andtreatment
The right to freedom from discrimination and to equality of opportunity and treatment is
the basis for the enjoyment of all other rights as well as a fundamental right in itself. It
is identified as such in the United Nations Charter, UDHR and the ILO Constitution, and
reiterated in all core international human rights instruments and labour standards.
71
cooperation in promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for
fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language, or religion.
The Preamble to the 1948 UDHR proclaims that all members of the human family are
entitled to equal and inalienable rights, underscoring the importance of the equality
principle as a foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world. Earlier, the
Declaration of Philadelphia concerning the Aims and Purposes of the ILO, which was
adopted by the International Labour Conference in 1944 and incorporated as an annex
into the revised ILO Constitution of 1946 (when ILO became the first specialized agency
of the UN), espouses the equality principle in the context of the pursuit of material wellbeing and spiritual development:
[A]ll human beings, irrespective of race, creed or sex, have
the right to pursue both their material well-being and their
spiritual development in conditions of freedom and dignity,
of economic security and equal opportunity (Part II(a)).
This proclamation is of particular relevance to those persons who move away from
home to seek a better life elsewhere, such as migrant workers.
In addition to the general reference to the non-discrimination and equality principle in
the Preamble cited above, Article2(1) of UDHR enumerates a number of prohibited
grounds of discrimination:
Everyone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms set
forth in this Declaration, without distinction of any kind,
such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or
other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or
otherstatus.
The use of the terms such as and other status in this clause indicates that the list
of prohibited grounds is not exhaustive and that other grounds, including nationality,
citizenship or immigration status, may also be contemplated.
Box 3.1 Major sources of international law proscribing discrimination
Elimination of discrimination generally
ILO Constitution, 1919 (as amended by the Declaration of Philadelphia, 1944)
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948, Article2
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,
1965
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 1966, Article2(1) and
Article26
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, 1966, Article2(2)
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women, 1979
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73
Similarly, the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has confirmed
that Article2(2), the non-discrimination provision in the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), prohibits unjustified distinctions
based on nationality and immigration status.
The ground of nationality should not bar access to
Covenant rights, e.g. all children within a State, including
those with an undocumented status, have a right to
receive education and access to adequate food and
affordable health care. The Covenant rights apply to
everyone including non-nationals, such as refugees,
asylum-seekers, stateless persons, migrant workers and
victims of international trafficking, regardless of legal status
and documentation.
General Comment No.20 (2009): Non-discrimination in
economic, social and cultural rights (art. 2, para.2, of the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights), para.30.
In that same General Comment (para.7) the Committee stated that, in contrast
to other rights enshrined in the Covenant, the non-discrimination principle is not
subject to progressive implementation according to Article2(1), but represents
an immediate obligation (together with that of enforcing the core content of the
rights enshrined in ICESCR).
With respect to the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Racial Discrimination (ICERD), the Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination (CERD) revised its recommendation on discrimination against noncitizens taking the opportunity to highlight the specific discrimination issues faced
by non-citizens. In General Recommendation No.30 (2004) on discrimination
against non-citizens (UN doc. CERD/G/GC/30), CERD addressed the meaning
of Article1(2) of ICERD, which appears at first glance to exclude distinctions
made in respect of non-citizens from the Conventions scope of application (This
Convention shall not apply to distinctions, exclusions, restrictions or preferences
made by a State Party to this Convention between citizens and non-citizens).
CERD has underlined that Article1(2) is to be interpreted as not undermining
the basic prohibition of discrimination or detracting from rights and freedoms
in international human rights law (para.2). Moreover, CERD has observed that
the state obligation in Article5 of ICERD to guarantee a range of civil, political,
economic, social and cultural rights to all persons without discrimination includes
the obligation to guarantee equal treatment between citizens and non-citizens,
with the exception of certain political rights, such as the right to vote and
stand for election (para.3). CERD has also issued the following definition of
discrimination and confirmed its applicability to distinctions based on citizenship
or immigrationstatus:
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78
779. It should also be ensured that migration laws and policies and their
implementation do not result in discrimination against migrant workers
based on race, colour and national extraction. The Committee has noted
particular difficulties in the application of the Convention with respect
to certain laws and regulations governing the employment of foreign
workers. These have included certain employment permit systems and
sponsorship systems severely restricting the possibility of workers
changing workplaces, employers or sponsors. The Committee considers
that where a system of employment of migrant workers places those workers in
a particularly vulnerable position and provides employers with the opportunity
to exert disproportionate power over them, this could result in discrimination
based on the grounds of the Convention. It is essential that under systems of
employment migrant workers enjoy the protection provided by the Convention,
in law and practice. Especially in countries where migrant workers constitute
a large proportion, and sometimes the majority of the working population, it is
important to keep the specific legislation governing migrant workers, including
sponsorship systems, under review. The Committee considers that providing
for appropriate flexibility for migrant workers to change their employer
or their workplace assists in avoiding situations in which they become
particularly vulnerable to discrimination and abuse. Providing legal
protection for migrant workers against discrimination and adequate and effective
dispute resolution mechanisms are essential in this context. Fear of retaliation by
the employer, including termination or non-renewal of their contract, should be
addressed through effective labour inspection and the access of migrant workers
to legal remedies, including accessible and speedy complaints procedures.
780. Migrant domestic workers, notably women, have been particularly
affected by the lack of legal protection against discrimination on the grounds of
the Convention and restrictive sponsorship systems Some positive steps have
been undertaken to address the situation of migrant domestic workers through
training and information campaigns, steps to review sponsorship systems,
the adoption of special regulations covering their conditions of work, model
employment contracts and the strengthening of complaints mechanisms.
781. Difficulties in application of the Convention to migrant workers also exist in
the context of legal employment restrictions for migrant workers in certain job
categories, or when precedence is given to residents in respect of hiring and
maintaining employment. The practical application of the legislation should
not lead to indirect discrimination against migrant workers on the grounds
set out in the Convention with respect to hiring and job security.
Giving globalization a human face, general survey on the fundamental conventions
concerning rights at work in light of the ILO Declaration on Social Justice for a Fair
Globalization, 2008, ILO, Report of the Committee of Experts on the Application
of Conventions and Recommendations, Report III (Part 1B), International Labour
Conference, 101st Session, 2012, Geneva, paras. 776781 [footnotes omitted].
79
ILO Convention No.111 was the first comprehensive international instrument dealing
specifically with non-discrimination and equality in respect of employment and
occupation. Other international instruments on discrimination are consistent with its
approach, though additional prohibited grounds for discrimination have steadily been
added. As underlined above, the enumeration of prohibited grounds in pertinent core
human rights instruments is illustrative and not exhaustive.
Prohibition of discrimination based on nationality is also the raison dtre of the three
specific conventions protecting migrant workers, ILO Conventions Nos.97 and 143
and ICRMW. Moreover, the grounds listed in the non-discrimination clause of ICRMW
(Article7) are broader than those found in the other core human rights treaties and
specifically include nationality. It should be noted that this provision is limited to the
rights found in ICRMW and does not provide for an autonomous right.
Box 3.6 Non-discrimination and equality in the migrant workers
conventions
ILO Migration for Employment Convention (Revised), 1949 (No.97)
Article6(1)
Each Member for which this Convention is in force undertakes to apply, without
discrimination in respect of nationality, race, religion or sex, to immigrants lawfully
within its territory treatment no less favourable than that which it applies to its own
nationals in respect of the following matters:
(a) in so far as such matters are regulated by law or regulations or are subject to the
control of administrative authorities
(i) remuneration, including family allowances where these form part of
remuneration, hours of work, overtime arrangements, holidays with pay,
restrictions on home work, minimum age for employment, apprenticeship
and training, womens work and the work of young persons;
(ii) membership of trade unions and enjoyment of the benefits of collective
bargaining;
(iii) accommodation;
(b) social security [with some exceptions] [...]
(c) employment taxes, dues or contributions payable in respect of the person
employed; and
(d) legal proceedings relating to the matters referred to in this Convention.
ILO Migrant Workers (Supplementary Provisions) Convention, 1975
(No.143)
Article1
Each Member for which this Convention is in force undertakes to respect the basic
human rights of all migrant workers.
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Article9(1)
Without prejudice to measures designed to control movements of migrants for
employment by ensuring that migrant workers enter national territory and are
admitted to employment in conformity with the relevant laws and regulations,
the migrant worker shall, in cases in which these laws and regulations have not
been respected and in which his position cannot be regularised, enjoy equality
of treatment for himself and his family in respect of rights arising out of past
employment as regards remuneration, social security and other benefits.
Article10
Each Member for which the Convention is in force undertakes to declare and pursue
a national policy designed to promote and to guarantee, by methods appropriate to
national conditions and practice, equality of opportunity and treatment in respect
of employment and occupation, of social security, of trade union and cultural rights
and of individual and collective freedoms for persons who as migrant workers or as
members of their families are lawfully within its territory.
Some of the measures to be taken to implement the national equality policy are
set out in Article12. Article12(g) specifically provides for equality of treatment in
respect of conditions of work.
Articles14(a) and (c) allow for certain restrictions to the free choice of
employment for a period not exceeding two years, or restrictions regarding access
to limited categories of employment or functions when this is in the interests of
the State.
International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant
Workers and Members of their Families
Article1
The present Convention is applicable, except as otherwise provided hereafter, to
all migrant workers and members of their families without distinction of any kind
such as sex, race, colour, language, religion or conviction, political or other opinion,
national, ethnic or social origin, nationality, age, economic position, property, marital
status, birth or other status.
Article7
States Parties undertake, in accordance with the international instruments
concerning human rights, to respect and ensure to all migrant workers and
members of their families within their territory or subject to their jurisdiction the
rights provided for in the present Convention without distinction of any kind such
as to sex, race, colour, language, religion or conviction, political or other opinion,
national, ethnic or social origin, nationality, age, economic position, property, marital
status, birth or otherstatus.
81
Part III of ICRMW lists the human rights of all migrant workers and members of
their families, including those in an irregular situation, and many of these rights
are afforded to all migrant workers on the basis of equality with nationals. For
example, Article25(1) stipulates that migrant workers shall enjoy treatment not less
favourable than that which applies to nationals of the State of employment in respect
of remuneration and [...] (a) Other conditions of work [...] [and] (b) Other terms of
employment [...]. Other rights afforded to all migrant workers on equal terms with
nationals include the right to social security (Article27) and education for children
of migrant workers (Article30). Part IV of ICRMW grants additional rights to migrant
workers and members of their families who are documented or in a regular situation,
many of which are afforded on a basis of equality of treatment with nationals.
83
In June 2011, the International Labour Conference of ILO adopted the first international
legally binding international instrument specifically on domestic workers, Convention
No.189 on Decent Work for Domestic Workers, which is accompanied by a non-binding
Recommendation No.201. The Convention is important because it recognizes domestic
work as employment and contains provisions intended to improve protection and ensure
equality of treatment for all domestic workers, both nationals and non-nationals, who
comprise the majority of domestic workers in certain parts of the world. Convention
No.189 also contains a number of provisions specifically addressing the situation of
migrant domestic workers. As of 12August 2015, Convention No.189 has been ratified by
22countries (Argentina, Belgium, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic,
Ecuador, Finland, Germany, Guyana, Ireland, Italy, Mauritius, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay,
Philippines, Portugal, South Africa, Switzerland and Uruguay). It entered into force on
5September 2013. The adoption of Convention No.189 now offers parliamentarians
the occasion to discuss incorporating its content into national law and practice, notably
by way of ratification. Articles19(5)(b) and 19(6)(b) of the ILO Constitution require newly
adopted conventions and recommendations to be submitted to the competent national
authorities, which usually means parliaments, within 12 months (or 18 months in
exceptional circumstances) of their adoption.
Box 3.8 Enhancing the protection of migrants and domestic workers
inJordan
Following the adoption by the National Assembly of Act No.48 (2008) amending the
Labour Law, migrant and domestic workers are no longer excluded from the provisions of the Labour Code. Although implementation remains a concern, the Act was
welcomed by the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
against Women as a positive measure in combating discrimination against women,
including migrant women.
Discrimination against migrants needs to be addressed from two angles: the general
human right to be free from discrimination; and discrimination based specifically on
nationality and migration or migratory status.
Box 3.10 Discrimination based on nationality
Discrimination based on nationality is a major aspect of unjustified differential
treatment suffered by migrant workers. In globalized labour markets and
populations, nationality discrimination undermines not only social cohesion but
also economic stability, labour market coherency and decent work conditions.
Tolerance of discrimination that excludes certain workers from equality of
treatment allows sometimes explicitly for discriminated groups to be exploited
at sub-standard wages and conditions and exempted from protection under law.
This in turn worsens working conditions and leads to productivity losses, unfair
competition among employers and conflicts among workers and social groups.
85
While it has been less common for courts to recognize migration or migratory status
as a prohibited ground of discrimination, there are some examples where such a
distinction was seen as violating ECHR and ACHR. For example, in Ponomaryovi v.
Bulgaria (Application No.5335/05, judgment of 21June 2011), the European Court
of Human Rights ruled that requiring two Russian children living in Bulgaria with their
86
mother, who was married to a Bulgarian, pay fees for their secondary education on
account of their nationality and immigration status, as not required of Bulgarian citizens
or non-nationals with permanent residence permits, was not justified under Article14
of ECHR taken in conjunction with Article2 of Protocol No.1 to the ECHR, providing
for the right to education. The Inter-American Court on Human Rights has found in a
number of cases that States should respect human rights and guarantee their exercise
and enjoyment to all persons who are within their territory, without discrimination based
on their regular or irregular status, or their nationality, race, gender or any other
reason (for example, see Vlez Loor v. Panama, judgment of 23November 2010,
Inter-Am. Ct. H. R. (ser.C) No.218, para.100 and Nadege Dorzema et al. v. Dominican
Republic, judgment of 24October 2012, Inter-Am. Ct. H.R. (ser.C) No.251, para.238,
where the Court observed, among other violations, de facto discrimination against [a
group of undocumented Haitian nationals killed by the army in the Dominican Republic]
owing to their condition as migrants).
Border guards shall, in the performance of their duties, fully respect human dignity.
Any measures taken in the performance of their duties shall be proportionate to the
objectives pursued by such measures.
2.
While carrying out border checks, border guards shall not discriminate against
persons on grounds of sex, racial or ethnic origin, religion or belief, disability, age or
sexual orientation.
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89
91
92
Chapter 4
Key human rights
principles regarding
protection of migrants
Sharon, a Nigerian
sex worker, sits on her
makeshift bed outside
Rome. Many migrant sex
workers are victims of
human trafficking.
Paolo Patrizi, 2013
constrained by past law, existing policies and practices, and/or public and governmental
attitudes, often influenced by short-term political objectives.
This chapter looks a little more closely at five important issues in this connection:
recognition of economic, social and cultural rights; freedom of association and the
right to collective bargaining; elimination of all forms of forced or compulsory labour,
including trafficking for forced labour and labour exploitation; migrant childrens rights,
including protection from child labour; and rights relating to the movement of migrants
and their rights to liberty and security of the person, including protection against
detention and arbitrary expulsion.
94
As in the case of the human rights instruments, protecting specific groups of persons
at greater risk of human rights violations, such as women, children and persons
with disabilities, ICRMW was elaborated to specifically spell out the human rights
applicable to migrant workers. This instrument provides explicit norms for legislation
to ensure application of rights, including ESC rights, to non-nationals, otherwise
vulnerable to exclusion from protection in circumstances where they are not explicitly
covered. However, as already referred to in Chapter2 in the observations of the Special
Rapporteur on the rights of non-citizens and the Global Commission on International
Migration, there is a considerable gap between the principles found in international
human rights law and their application in practice to non-nationals, a position that has
also been underlined by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, with particular
reference to the application of ESC rights.
Box 4.3 The rights of non-citizens
For non-citizens, there is, nevertheless, a large gap
between the rights that international human rights law
guarantees to them and the realities that they face. In
many countries, there are institutional and pervasive
problems confronting non-citizens. Nearly all categories
of non-citizens face official and non-official discrimination.
While in some countries there may be legal guarantees
of equal treatment and recognition of the importance of
non-citizens in achieving economic prosperity, non-citizens
face hostile social and practical realities. They experience
xenophobia, racism and sexism; language barriers and
unfamiliar customs; lack of political representation;
difficulty realizing their economic, social and cultural rights
particularly the right to work, the right to education and
the right to health care [...]
The rights of non-citizens, New York and Geneva, United Nations, 2006,
Introduction, p.5.
Respect and protection for ESC rights remain particularly limited for migrants in
irregular situations. The rhetoric and practice in some countries of designating migrant
human beings as illegal serves to justify non-recognition of fundamental rights and
even denial that these rights apply. Moreover, obligations on officials to report such
migrants to the police or immigration authorities can have a serious effect on their
enjoyment of ESCrights.
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However, important initiatives at the regional level have underscored that ESC
rights apply to migrants in an irregular situation and can also be secured effectively
in practice. See in this regard the 2011 Report of the European Union Agency for
Fundamental Rights on the Fundamental rights of migrants in an irregular situation in
the European Union.
Box 4.5 Human interest story: bar exam passed, immigrant still cant
practise law
Cesar Vargas seemed to have checked all the right boxes in his quest to become
a lawyer in New York State. He made honors at both college and law school in
New York City, his home since coming to the United States from Mexico at age 5.
He interned with a State Supreme Court judge, a Brooklyn district attorney and a
United States congressman. And he passed the state bar exam.
The only obstacle that remained before he could become a certified lawyer was
an evaluation of his background and character by a committee appointed by the
State Supreme Court.
That committee rated him stellar. In the same stroke, however, they also
recommended against his certification as a lawyer. The reason: Mr. Vargas is
an unauthorized immigrant. The question of whether he should be allowed to
practice law, the committee said, was better suited to the courts or the Legislature
to decide. The matter, which now rests with the State Supreme Courts appellate
division, has become a test case for whether immigrants in [in the United States
irregularly] can practice law in New York.
I feel like Im getting left behind, Mr. Vargas, 30, said this week of his thwarted
bid to become a lawyer. After sacrificing so much, its left me with the sense that
all that work was for nothing. []
Last week, lawyers for Mr. Vargas, who has in recent years become a national
activist for immigration reform, submitted a brief to the appellate division of the
New York Supreme Court arguing why he should be allowed to practice law.
97
State law, he explained, does not appear to make immigration status a criterion for
admission. The crux of his argument, he said, is a paragraph in state judiciary law
that specifically precludes race, color, creed, national origin or alienage being
a foreigner as grounds for prohibiting admission.
Mr. Vargas also argued that he is currently allowed to work legally under a
program, known as deferred action, that provides work authorization to qualified
immigrants brought to the country [irregularly] as children. []
The ultimate fault of all of this is Congress, said Mr. Godnez Samperio, who
currently is authorized to work under the deferred action program. They have
refused to clarify the law and they have refused to pass immigration reform.
Adapted from Bar exam passed, immigrant still cant practice law, New York
Times, 3December 2013.
For parliamentarians, effective recognition and application of ESC rights starts with
ascertaining that national legislation explicitly protects these rights for non-nationals
as well as citizens. It will further require review of legislation and practice regarding
non-nationals in respect of employment, health, social security, housing, education
and other areas. Such a review would normally take into account national expectations
and means, while recognizing that all persons within a countrys territory, including
migrants, should have access to these benefits and services on a non-discriminatory
basis. A review would also provide the basis for improving legislation and encouraging
government action to ensure respect, protection and fulfilment of these rights.
Box 4.7 Protecting the social and economic rights of migrants inArgentina
The National Migration Law, adopted by Argentinas National Congress in 2004,
sets high standards for the promotion and protection of the social and economic
rights of migrants and their families. The Law stipulates that regular migrants are
to be provided with equal access to social services, including in the fields of health,
education, social security, employment and legal support. It also eases the criteria
for family reunification. Although the Law made such treatment partially conditional
upon regular entry into the country, reports indicate that it also resulted in many additional measures to further support migrants in irregular status, including the regularization of 200,000 migrants through the Patria Grande programme. Subsequent
measures also included granting migrants the right to vote in municipal elections.
Freedom of association in practice: Lessons learnt, global report under the followup to ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, International
Labour Conference, 97th Session, Geneva, International Labour Office, 2008,
p.56, para.228.
The right of all migrant workers to join and form trade unions is amply established
in international law and in international treaty body and court jurisprudence. As the
list of provisions below demonstrates, rights to freedom of association and collective
bargaining are widely recognized in international labour standards and human rights
instruments. Virtually every country in the world is bound by one or more of these
conventions, and the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights is applicable to
all states. Most countries are also members of ILO, and the 1998 Declaration on
Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work reaffirmed that the principles concerning
the fundamental rights which are the subject of the eight ILO core conventions,
including freedom of association, have to be respected, promoted and realized by all
Member States by virtue of their membership in ILO and irrespective of whether they
have ratified the convention in question.
Box 4.9 Provisions on the right to freedom of association in international
labour standards and human rights instruments
International labour standards
ILO Constitution 1919, as amended by the Declaration of Philadelphia and
incorporated into the Constitution in 1946
ILO Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize Convention,
1948 (No.87)
Workers and employers, without distinction whatsoever,
shall have the right to establish and, subject only to the
rules of the organisation concerned, to join organisations
of their own choosing without previous authorisation
(Article2).
ILO Right to Organize and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No.98)
International human rights
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948, Article23(4)
Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his
interests.
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 1966, Article22
1. Everyone shall have the right to freedom of association with others, including
the right to form and join trade unions for the protection of his interests.
100
2. No restrictions may be placed on the exercise of this right other than those
which are prescribed by law and which are necessary in a democratic society in
the interests of national security or public safety, public order (ordre public), the
protection of public health or morals or the protection of the rights and freedoms
of others. This article shall not prevent the imposition of lawful restrictions on
members of the armed forces and of the police in their exercise of this right.
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, 1966, Article8(1)
1. The States Parties to the present Covenant undertake to ensure:
(a) The right of everyone to form trade unions and join the trade union of his
choice, subject only to the rules of the organization concerned, for the promotion
and protection of his economic and social interests. No restrictions may be placed
on the exercise of this right other than those prescribed by law and which are
necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security or public
order or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others;
(b) The right of trade unions to establish national federations or confederations and
the right of the latter to form or join international trade-union organizations;
(c) The right of trade unions to function freely subject to no limitations other than
those prescribed by law and which are necessary in a democratic society in the
interests of national security or public order or for the protection of the rights and
freedoms of others;
(d) The right to strike, provided that it is exercised in conformity with the laws of
the particular country.
International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers
and Members of Their Families (ICRMW), 1990, Articles26 and 40 [see below]
Specific conventions on migrant workers
ILO Convention No.97, Article6(1)
Each Member for which this Convention is in force undertakes to apply, without
discrimination in respect of nationality, race, religion or sex, to immigrants lawfully
within its territory, treatment no less favourable than that which it applies to its
own nationals in respect of the following matters:
(ii) membership of trade unions and enjoyment of the benefits of collective
bargaining;
ILO Convention No.143, Article10
Each Member for which the Convention is in force undertakes to declare and
pursue a national policy designed to promote and to guarantee, by methods
appropriate to national conditions and practice, equality of opportunity and
treatment in respect of employment and occupation, of social security, of trade
union and cultural rights and of individual and collective freedoms for persons
who as migrant workers or as members of their families are lawfully within
itsterritory.
101
ICRMW, Article26
1. States Parties recognize the right of migrant workers and members of their
families:
(a) To take part in meetings and activities of trade unions and of any other
associations established in accordance with law, with a view to protecting their
economic, social, cultural and other interests, subject only to the rules of the
organization concerned;
(b) To join freely any trade union and any such association as aforesaid, subject
only to the rules of the organization concerned;
(c) To seek the aid and assistance of any trade union and of any such association
as aforesaid.
Article40
1. Migrant workers and members of their families shall have the right to form
associations and trade unions in the State of employment for the promotion and
protection of their economic, social, cultural and other interests.
That the right to freedom of association, including the right to form and join trade
unions, is included in both ICCPR and ICESCR demonstrates that it is at once a civil,
political, economic and social right. Both of these instruments also give due regard to
the ILO Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize Convention,
1948 (No.87), adopted 18 years earlier. Moreover, UDHR, ICCPR and ICESCR all
underscore that trade union rights apply to everyone and can only be subject to
narrow restrictions in respect of the armed forces and police, or on the grounds of
national security, public order and the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.
While ICRMW appears to limit the right to form trade unions to migrant workers in a
regular situation (compare Articles26 and 40 above), these provisions should be read
in the context of those found in the more general core international human rights
instruments as well as ILO Convention No.87.
Indeed, ILO and UN supervisory bodies have reinforced the universal application of
these rights; the fact of a worker being a migrant, or even an undocumented migrant,
does not permit the state concerned to restrict the right to join and form trade unions.
In this regard, Article2 of ILO Convention No.87 reads:
Workers and employers, without distinction whatsoever,
shall have the right to establish and, subject only to the
rules of the organisation concerned, to join organisations of
their own choosing without previous authorisation.
The ILO Committee on Freedom of Association has stated that this provision applies to
all workers, including migrant workers in an irregular situation.
102
Box 4.10 Trade union rights and migrant workers in an irregular situation
In March 2001, the ILO Committee on Freedom of Association concluded that
the Spanish Foreigners Law (Basic Act No.4/2000), which made the exercise
of trade union rights by migrant workers dependent on authorization of their
presence or residence in Spain, was not in conformity with the broad scope of
Article2 of ILO Convention No.87. The Committee stated that Article2 covers
all workers and that exceptions were only permissible in relation to the armed
forces and the police as provided for in Article9. The Committee invited the ILO
Governing Body to approve the recommendation to the Spanish Government,
as concerns the legislation in cause, to take into account the terms of Article2 of
Convention No.87, according to which workers, without distinction whatsoever,
have the right to join organizations of their own choosing. In 2007, the Spanish
Constitutional Court found that the requirement imposed by Basic Act No.4/2000
on foreign nationals to be lawfully resident in Spain in order to exercise the
fundamental rights of assembly, association, trade union membership and strike
constituted an unjustified restriction and is therefore contrary to the Constitution.
Rulings Nos.236/2007 of 7November and 259/2007 of 19December. In its
Observation published in 2011, CEACR noted with satisfaction the adoption of Act
No.2/2009 of 11December, reforming Basic Act No.4/2000 and integrating into
the provisions of the Act the contents of the rulings of the Constitutional Court.
It noted that the new Section 11 of Basic Act No.4/2000, in accordance with the
wording set out in Basic Act No.2/2009, provides that foreign nationals shall have
the right to organize freely or to join an occupational organization and to exercise
the right to strike under the same conditions as Spanish workers.
Source:
Case No.2121, complaint of 23March 2001 by the General Union of Workers of Spain (UGT); ILO,
Committee on Freedom of Association, Report No.327, Vol. LXXXV, 2002, Series B, No.1, paras.561
562, available from ILO NORMLEX. Spain, Observation on Convention No 87; ILO, Report of the
Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations, Report III (Part 1A),
International Labour Conference, 100th Session, Geneva, 2011, at p.160.
In practice, however, migrant workers are still unable to freely exercise these rights
in many situations, or in some instances to exercise them at all. The 2008 ILO Global
Report on Freedom of Association identified the following constraints on the exercise of
trade union rights:
In a number of countries, legislation still limits the right
of migrant workers to organize. In some, only citizens are
allowed to form trade unions. In some others, freedom
of association is denied to migrant workers in irregular or
unauthorized status. Some union constitutions also make
membership of migrant workers subject to a number
of conditions. Migrant workers may be concentrated in
jobs not sought after by nationals, in isolated workplaces,
or in sectors that are not protected by labour legislation
(agricultural or domestic workers in some countries) or
103
104
105
Everyone has the right to be free from slavery, servitude and all forms of forced and
compulsory labour, as expressly recognized in UDHR (Article4) and ICCPR (Article8).
The right to be free from forced labour is also one of the ILO fundamental rights, as
underscored in the 1998 ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at
Work, and therefore must be respected by every ILO Member State, irrespective of
whether it has ratified ILOs Forced Labour Convention, 1930 (No.29) or the Abolition
of Forced Labour Convention, 1957 (No.105). States, moreover, have broadly accepted
this right, as reflected in the numbers of states 178 and 175, respectively (as of
12August 2015) that have ratified these two ILO conventions. In recent years, the
scope of this right has been expanded to include trafficking in human beings, and
greater efforts have also been undertaken to prevent the scourge of forced labour
and protect victims, as in the Protocol to the Forced Labour Convention adopted
by the International Labour Conference in June 2014. These are discussed in more
detailbelow.
106
107
Box 4.12 The Palermo Trafficking Protocol and the ILO Forced Labour
Convention No.29
A crucial element of the definition of trafficking is its
purpose, namely, exploitation, which is specifically defined
to include forced labour or services, slavery or similar
practices, servitude and various forms of sexual exploitation. The notion of exploitation of labour inherent in this
definition allows for a link to be established between the
Palermo Protocol and Convention No.29, and makes clear
that trafficking in persons for the purpose of exploitation
is encompassed by the definition of forced or compulsory
labour provided under Article2, paragraph1, of the Convention. This conjecture facilitates the task of implementing
both instruments at the national level.
Eradication of forced labour, General Survey concerning the Forced Labour
Convention, 1930 (No.29), and the Abolition of Forced Labour Convention, 1957
(No.105), Report of the Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions
and Recommendations, Geneva, International Labour Office, International Labour
Conference, 96th Session, 2007, para.77.
Part II of the Palermo Protocol also contains important provisions to protect and assist
trafficking victims in respect of relevant court and administrative proceedings as well
as their physical, psychological and social recovery, including appropriate housing;
counselling and information in a language they can understand, in particular as
regards their legal rights; medical, psychological and material assistance; employment,
education and training opportunities; physical safety; and the possibility of obtaining
compensation for damage suffered (Article6). There are also provisions on the status
to be provided to trafficking victims so that they can remain in a State Partys territory,
either temporarily or permanently (Article7), and on their repatriation to the State Party
of their nationality or where they hold permanent residence (Article8).
OHCHR has also issued the Recommended Principles and Guidelines on Human Rights
and Human Trafficking, which contain important guidelines on protection and support
for trafficked persons (Guideline 6), including child victims of trafficking (Guideline8).
Box 4.13 OHCHR Recommended Principles and Guidelines on Human
Rights and Human Trafficking Guideline 6: Protection and support for
trafficked persons
The trafficking cycle cannot be broken without attention to the rights
and needs of those who have been trafficked. Appropriate protection
and support should be extended to all trafficked persons without
discrimination.
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109
the status or condition arising from a pledge by a debtor of his personal services or of
those of a person under his control as security for a debt, if the value of those services
as reasonably assessed is not applied towards the liquidation of the debt or the length
and nature of those services are not respectively limited and defined (Supplementary
Convention on the Abolition of Slavery, the Slave Trade, and Institutions and Practices
Similar to Slavery, 1956, Article1(a)).
Box 4.14 Addressing labour exploitation: the Gangmasters Act in the
UnitedKingdom
In response to concerns about the exploitation of migrant workers, including
an incident in which 23 migrants in irregular status drowned in February
2004 while picking cockles off the coast of England, the Parliament of the
UnitedKingdom adopted the Gangmasters (Licensing) Act in 2004 to strengthen
the protection of migrant workers in the food service industry. The Act created
the Gangmasters Licensing Authority, which issues obligatory licences to food
agencies after assurances that proper labour standards are enforced. The Act
employs a broad definition of the term worker to include those persons in the
UnitedKingdom who are working without authorization. A 2009 follow-up report
by state regulators noted, among other things, the positive influence of the Act in
improving workers conditions.
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112
113
UDHR and the core international human rights instruments protect all persons,
including children, and several of these instruments include specific provisions
relating to children, and notably the state obligation to reduce infant mortality and
ensure healthy child development (ICESCR, Article12(2)(a)); protection of children
from economic and social exploitation (ICESCR, Article10(3)); the right to education
(ICESCR, Article13); the right of the child to be registered after birth, to have a name
and to acquire a nationality (ICCPR, Article24); and protection of children in case of
dissolution of a marriage (ICCPR, Article23(4)). ICRMW also contains a number of
specific provisions outlining the obligations of States Parties towards the families of
migrant workers, including children, as well as on the rights of such children.
Box 4.17 ICRMW
Obligation of States Parties to respect the liberty of parents or legal guardians,
at least one of whom is a migrant worker, to ensure the religious and moral
education of their children in conformity with their own convictions
Article12(4);
Obligation of States Parties to pay particular attention, inter alia, to the problems
that may be posed to minor children by the deprivation of a migrant workers
liberty Article17(6);
The right of each child of a migrant worker [...] to a name, to registration of
birth and to a nationality Article29;
The basic right of children of all migrant workers to access [...] education on
the basis of equality of treatment with nationals of the State concerned, with
access to public pre-school educational institutions or schools not [to] be
refused or limited by reason of the irregular situation with respect to stay or
employment of either parent or by reason of the irregularity of the childs stay in
the State of employment Article30;
Obligation of States Parties to facilitate the reunification of migrant workers [in
a regular situation] with their spouses or persons who have with the migrant
worker a relationship that, according to applicable law, produces effects
equivalent to marriage, as well as with their minor dependant unmarried
children Article44(2);
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There is also a wide range of international labour standards specifically aimed at the
protection of children against child labour, as outlined in the next section.
The principal instrument safeguarding the rights of children in international law,
including migrant children, is the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), adopted
by the UN General Assembly on 20November 1989 (resolution 44/25). As of 12August
2015, it has gained virtually universal ratification (195 States Parties). The Convention
requires States Parties to undertake all appropriate legislative, administrative, and
other measures for the implementation of the rights recognized in the [CRC] (Article4).
They are also to be guided, in all their actions concerning children, by the following
overarching principles:
Non-discrimination (Article2);
The best interests of the child as the primary consideration in all actions concerning
children (Article3);
The inherent right to life of every child and the obligation to ensure to the maximum
extent possible the survival and development of the child (Article6); and
The right of the child to freely express his or her views in all matters affecting him
or her and to have them taken into account (Article12 and General Comment No.5
(2003): General measures of implementation of the CRC).
In September 2012, the Committee on the Rights of the Child, responsible for
monitoring the application by States Parties of CRC, held a Day of General Discussion
on the Rights of All Children in the Context of International Migration, in which it
outlined a number of key recommendations encompassing the whole range of a childs
migration experience. The recommendations concern not only the principles identified
above but also a number of rights, including the right of the child to identity, including
name and nationality; the right to liberty; freedom from all forms of violence, including
in the migration context; the right to family life; economic, social and cultural rights,
with particular reference to the right to health; protection from economic exploitation
(see also child labour below); access to regular and safe migration channels and a
secure residence status; and rights in conflict situations.
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116
In 2005, the Committee adopted General Comment No.6 (2005) on the Treatment of
Unaccompanied and Separated Children Outside Their Country of Origin, providing guidance on the protection, care and appropriate treatment of such children based on the entire
CRC legal framework, with particular reference to the principles of non-discrimination, best
interests of the child and the right of the child to express his or her views freely.
Box 4.19 Parliamentarians protect all childrens rights
Kenya
In December 2001, the Parliament of Kenya adopted the Children Act, translating
into law the principles enshrined in the Convention on the Rights of the Child
and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child. The Act was last
reviewed and amended in 2010; it broadly defines the term child to include
any human being under the age of 18, protects children against discrimination
regardless of origin, and guarantees government support and protection to children
without a proper identity and nationality. Following on a parliamentary workshop
organized in 2000 to study the issue of child labour, the Act also addresses this
issue and guarantees children protection from economic exploitation.
Thailand
In 2008, the Parliament of Thailand adopted the Civil Registration Act, which
affirmed the right to birth registration for all children born in Thailand, including
those born to displaced persons, migrant workers, and migrant parents with no
legal status in Thailand. The Act has been praised by United Nations agencies as
making a major contribution towards preventing statelessness and, more broadly,
protecting the human rights of vulnerable children.
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States Parties recognize the right of the child to be protected from economic
exploitation and from performing any work that is likely to be hazardous or to
interfere with the childs education, or to be harmful to the childs health or physical,
mental, spiritual, moral or social development.
2.
States Parties shall take legislative, administrative, social and educational measures
to ensure the implementation of the present article. To this end, and having regard
to the relevant provisions of other international instruments, States Parties shall in
particular:
a. Provide for a minimum age or minimum ages for admission to employment;
b. Provide for appropriate regulation of the hours and conditions of employment;
c. Provide for appropriate penalties or other sanctions to ensure the effective
enforcement of the present article.
As this provision implies, not all work by children is considered child labour or
prohibited by national legislation or international standards. Two of the ILO fundamental
conventions, the ILO Minimum Age Convention, 1973 (No.138) and the Worst Forms of
Child Labour Convention, 1999 (No.182), seek to abolish child labour. As of 12August
2015, Convention No.138 had been ratified by 168 and Convention No.182 by 179
of ILOs 186 Member States. Under Convention No.138, all employment or work is
forbidden for children with certain specified exceptions (see below) before the age
of 15 or the end of compulsory schooling, whichever age is higher. Members are also
called on to raise progressively the minimum age for employment or work. Convention
No.138 additionally contains certain flexibility provisions, particularly for developing
countries, which may, after consultation with the organizations of employers and workers
concerned, where such exist, initially specify a minimum age of 14. The Convention also
contains an allowance for light work (which does not harm the health, development,
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120
121
The children of migrants (and refugees) are often particularly vulnerable to hazardous
work in the agricultural sector, which is characterized by a high incidence of child
labour. Worldwide, among child labourers aged 517, 59percent work in that sector,
often to help their parents reach quotas impossible for an unaided worker to meet. In
some countries, migrant children are employed to produce commodities for export, for
instance cocoa and rubber, or to cut flowers. This increases the importance of ensuring
that the agricultural sector, often excluded from labour legislation, is effectively
regulated. Another key sector is services, which employs 32percent of all child
labourers, 7percent of whom perform domestic work.
A prohibition of child labour is inherently difficult to enforce, and may be especially
difficult with migrant children and of course even more so where they have been
trafficked or are otherwise undocumented.
An ILO-IPU handbook for parliamentarians prepared in 2002, Eliminating the worst
forms of child labour: A practical guide to ILO Convention No.182 (No.3), provides
further information and guidance for parliamentary action on this subject.
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Everyone lawfully within the territory of a State shall, within that territory, have the
right to liberty of movement and freedom to choose his [her] residence.
2.
Everyone shall be free to leave any country, including his [her] own.
3.
The above-mentioned rights shall not be subject to any restrictions except those
which are provided by law, are necessary to protect national security, public order
(ordre public), public health or morals or the rights and freedoms of others, and are
consistent with the other rights recognized in the present Covenant.
4.
No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter his [her] own country.
The Human Rights Committee, which monitors State Party application of ICCPR,
commented on this article in General Comment No.27 (1999) on Freedom of
Movement, clarifying that the reference to his [her] own country in Article12(4) is a
broader concept than country of nationality and therefore may also apply to persons
who are not nationals of the country in question, such as stateless persons and nonnationals who are long-term residents.
Box 4.22 The right to enter ones own country
The wording of Article12, paragraph4, does not distinguish
between nationals and aliens (no one). Thus, the persons
entitled to exercise this right can be identified only by
interpreting the meaning of the phrase his own country.
The scope of his own country is broader than the concept
country of his nationality. It is not limited to nationality in
a formal sense, that is, nationality acquired at birth or by
conferral; it embraces, at the very least, an individual who,
because of his or her special ties to or claims in relation to a
given country, cannot be considered to be a mere alien.
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The rights to leave any country and to return to ones own country are also explicitly
recognized in Article8 of ICRMW, which is found in Part III of ICRMW and thus
applies to all migrant workers and members of their families, including those in an
irregularsituation:
1.
Migrant workers and members of their families shall be free to leave any State,
including their State of origin. This right shall not be subject to any restrictions except
those that are provided by law, are necessary to protect national security, public
order (ordre public), public health or morals or the rights and freedoms of others and
are consistent with the other rights recognized in the present part of the Convention.
2.
Migrant workers and members of their families shall have the right at any time to
enter and remain in their State of origin.
These rights are reiterated in regional human rights provisions, such as Article2
of Protocol No.4, 1963 to ECHR, 1950, Articles12(1) and (2) of ACHPR, 1981 and
Article22 of ACHR, 1969. The relevance of these rights has been aptly illustrated in
the Case of Expelled Dominicans and Haitians v. Dominican Republic, in which the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights (judgment of 28August 2014, series C No.282,
para.389) ruled, among other matters, that the Dominican Republic had violated the
rights to move freely within a country and to enter ones own country in Article22 of
ACHR by destroying the identity documents of Dominicans of Haitian descent and not
admitting those without official documents.
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the regulation of migration is subject to the principles and norms of international law, in
particular human rights obligations.
These obligations include adherence to the principle of non-refoulement and the
presumption that access to the territory should be allowed to persons at risk of torture
or other serious human rights violations, as well as persons in need of international
refugee protection. Further pertinent obligations are to ensure the right to liberty
and security of the person, which is challenged when migrants, particularly those
in an irregular situation, are subject to administrative detention; to prohibit arbitrary
expulsion, including collective expulsion; and to observe other human rights, such
as the right to family and private life. Such obligations clearly limit the sovereign
prerogative and discretion of states in these areas.
4.5.3 Non-refoulement
Refoulement of non-nationals to a country where there are substantial grounds
for believing they may be subjected to a real risk of torture or to cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment or punishment is prohibited under international and regional
human rights instruments. The Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman
or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, 1984, contains an explicit provision to this
effect in Article3(1): No State Party shall expel, return (refouler) or extradite a person
to another State where there are substantial grounds for believing that he would be
in danger of being subjected to torture. The principle of non-refoulement is widely
recognized as constituting a norm of international customary law. The absolute
prohibitions on torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment in
Article7 of ICCPR and Article3 of ECHR have been similarly interpreted by the Human
Rights Committee and the European Court of Human Rights, respectively. In regard to
refugees, international refugee law establishes a prohibition on the return of refugees
to any place where they face persecution under Article33(1) of the 1951 Convention
relating to the Status of Refugees.
Box 4.23 Application of Article3 of ECHR in expulsion cases
[I]t is well established in the case-law of the Court that
expulsion by a Contracting State may give rise to an issue
under Article3 [...], and hence engage the responsibility
of that State under the Convention, where substantial
grounds have been shown for believing that the person
in question, if expelled, would face a real risk of being
subjected to treatment contrary to Article3 [...] in the
receiving country. In these circumstances, Article3 [...]
implies the obligation not to expel the person in question
to that country.
Chahal v. UnitedKingdom, Application No.22414/93, European Court of Human
Rights, judgment of 15November 1996, para.74.
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126
In his 2012 report to the UN Human Rights Council, the Special Rapporteur on the
human rights of migrants also focused on the detention of migrants in an irregular
situation, putting forward a number of comprehensive and detailed conclusions and
recommendations to UN Member States.
Box 4.24 Detention of migrants in an irregular situation
Conclusions and recommendations of the Special Rapporteur on the
human rights of migrants
68. Detention for immigration purposes should never be mandatory or automatic.
According to international human rights standards, it should be a measure of last
resort, only permissible for the shortest period of time and when no less restrictive
measure is available. []
69. The reasons put forward by states to justify detention should be clearly
defined and exhaustively enumerated in legislation. If, as a measure of last resort,
a State resorts to detention for immigration-control purposes in an individual case,
this should be considered only when someone presents a risk of absconding or
presents a danger to their own or public security.
70. Administrative detention should not be applied as a punitive measure for
violations of immigration laws and regulations, as those violations should not be
considered criminal offences.
71. The Special Rapporteur calls on states to adopt a human rights-based
approach to migration and review their legislation and policies on detention of
migrants, ensuring that national laws are harmonized with international human
rights norms that prohibit arbitrary detention and inhumane treatment.
72. The Special Rapporteur calls on states to consider progressively abolishing the
administrative detention of migrants. In the meantime, Governments should take
measures to ensure respect for the human rights of migrants in the context of
detention, including by:
(a) Ensuring that procedural safeguards and guarantees established by international
human rights law and national law are applied to any form of detention. []
(b) Ensuring that migrants in detention are accurately informed of the status of
their case and of their right to contact a consular or embassy representative
and members of their families. []
(c) Ensuring that the law sets a limit on the maximum length of detention pending
deportation and that under no circumstance is detention indefinite. There should
be automatic, regular and judicial review of detention in each individual case. Administrative detention should end when a deportation order cannot be executed.
(d) Ensuring that migrants under administrative detention are placed in a public
establishment specifically intended for that purpose or, when this is not
possible, in premises other than those intended for persons imprisoned under
criminal law. The use of privately run detention centres should be avoided. []
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(e) Ensuring that the Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons under
Any Form of Detention and Imprisonment are applied to all migrants under
administrative detention. [...]
(f) Applying the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners to
migrants under administrative detention. []
(g) Giving particular attention to the situation of women in detention, ensuring
that they are separated from men, and attended and supervised only by
women officers, in order to protect them against sexual violence, and avoid
the detention of pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers.
(h) Ensuring that legislation does not allow for the detention of unaccompanied children and that detention of children is permitted only as a measure of last resort
and only when it has been determined to be in the best interests of the child, for
the shortest appropriate period of time and in conditions that ensure the realization of the rights enshrined in the Convention on the Rights of the Child. []
(i) Ensuring that legislation prevents trafficked persons from being prosecuted,
detained or punished for illegal entry or residence in the country or for the
activities they are involved in as a consequence of their situation as trafficked
persons. []
(j) Taking into due consideration the particular vulnerabilities of specific groups of
migrants including victims of torture, unaccompanied older migrants, migrants
with a mental or physical disability and migrants living with HIV/AIDS. []
(k) Applying stateless status determination procedures to stateless migrants,
and provide persons recognized as being stateless with a lawful
immigrationstatus.
73. The Special Rapporteur would like to remind Governments that alternatives to
detention should not become alternatives to unconditional release, whenever such
release is a possibility. []
74. The Special Rapporteur encourages states to collect disaggregated data on the
number of migrants in administrative detention, the number of migrants who are
subject to different types of non-custodial measures and the compliance rate with
these measures, in order to evaluate their effectiveness. []
Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants, Franois
Crpeau, United Nations General Assembly, Human Rights Council, 20th Session,
UN doc. A/HRC/20/24 (2April 2012).
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129
The widely ratified ACHR clearly provides in Article22(9) that: The collective expulsion
of aliens is prohibited. In the Case of Expelled Dominicans and Haitians v. Dominican
Republic, referred to above, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (judgment
of 28August 2014, series C No.282, para.384) found the Dominican Republic to
be in breach of Article22(9) as it did not examine the cases of three of the expelled
individuals on the basis of their particular circumstances, but only in a collective
manner. ACHR also includes a prohibition on mass expulsion, in Article12(5),
though expressed somewhat differently: The mass expulsion of non-nationals shall
be prohibited. Mass expulsion shall be that which is aimed at national, racial, ethnic
or religious groups. In its amicus intervention in the case of Hirsi Jamaa v. Italy, the
OHCHR affirmed as a central matter, that each person in a group of non-nationals
intercepted by a state vessel at sea also enjoys protection against rendering, without his
or her consent, to any other State, without a prior reasonable and objective examination
of the particular circumstances of that particular individuals case. This due process right
ensures that all applicable grounds under international law and national law that may
negate the expulsion of that particular individual are duly considered, including, but not
limited to the prohibition of refoulement (Amicus brief filed on behalf of OHCHR
in the case of Hirsi Jamaa and others v. Italy in the European Court of Human Rights,
Application no. 27765/09, 4May2011).
Article22 of ICRMW reiterates the prohibition of collective expulsion and delineates
specific procedural safeguards to protect the rights of all migrant workers and members
of their families who are subject to expulsion on an individual basis. This provision is
important because it goes beyond the previous protections afforded by international
human rights law to non-nationals in the expulsion process, which were limited to nonnationals lawfully in the territory, as reflected in Article13 of ICCPR:
An alien lawfully in the territory of a State Party to the
present Covenant may be expelled therefrom only in
pursuance of a decision reached in accordance with law
and shall, except where compelling reasons of national
security otherwise require, be allowed to submit the
reasons against his [her] expulsion and to have his [her]
case reviewed by, and be represented for the purpose
before, the competent authority or a person or persons
especially designated by the competent authority.
The full text of Article22 is reproduced below to facilitate parliamentary review of
national law and practice and to serve as a guide for legislation and administrative
regulations.
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131
132
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Chapter 5
Human rights-based
governance of migration
Secretary-General of
the United Nations
BanKimoon addresses the
Global Forum on Migration
and Development (GFMD),
calling on countries to
design policies aimed at
optimizing the benefits
ofmigration. AFP/
Jonathan Nackstrand, 2014
This chapter responds to IPUs call for a human rights-based approach to the governance of migration. That is a concept parliamentarians need to consider carefully when
discussing a global phenomenon that has human beings at its centre: migrants and
their families, many of whom find themselves in vulnerable situations. This chapter
explains the concept of migration governance in a human rights context, with particular
reference to the international level, and identifies a number of elements of a human
rights-based approach to migration governance. It then considers how the human
rights of migrants can best be protected at the national level, including the use of
human rights indicators to better understand some of the gaps and challenges in this
regard. Such a methodology could help in planning for a human rights-based approach
to migration governance and in complying with the international human rights norms
and labour standards described in previous chapters.
Given that decent work and the quest for better livelihoods are at the core of much
international migration today, this chapter also devotes space to the governance of
labour migration, identifying the principal contours and elements of rights-based
legislation and policy in this field in countries of origin and destination, and in the
context of bilateral as well as regional cooperation. Human rights-based governance
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136
The concept of migration governance is thus more inclusive and responsive to the
phenomenon of international migration than the concept of migration management,
which implies that migration is a matter solely for the organs of government.
Box 5.3 The levels of migration governance and the role of
parliamentarians
Migration is governed at various levels. Policies in destination countries focus
primarily on regulating incoming migration and its economic and social
consequences, including the integration of migrants and their treatment in the
workplace and in society generally. States also design policies to address the
impact of people leaving the country and to harness the economic and social
benefits of remittances and diaspora contributions (see Section 5.4). In order
to deal effectively with the multidimensional aspects of migration, many states
institute mechanisms for coordination between relevant ministries and other
stakeholders.
A range of governance arrangements for migration have been developed at
bilateral and regional levels. At the bilateral level, states typically conclude formal
agreements or non-binding MoUs, covering such matters as the recruitment
and treatment of migrant workers in particular sectors of the economy (e.g.,
domestic work). Concrete policies involving various concessions of sovereignty to
a higher level of authority have been developed to facilitate the mobility of people
regionally, in such regional political and economic communities as the EU, the
CIS, the Eurasian Economic Community (EAEC), ASEAN, MERCOSUR, CARICOM,
EAC, ECOWAS and SADC (see also Chapter2).
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138
140
A more political explanation for the lack of consensus in this area is the view that
determining who crosses a states borders and who is allowed membership of that
states society are quintessential matters of national sovereignty, and that multilateral
engagement on these issues would inevitably diminish it. On the other hand, in
proposing a human rights framework for global migration governance, the UN Special
Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants has argued that a highly unregulated
system with multiple, often competing actors could in fact limit national sovereignty
and that migration governance at the global level should be seen as reclaiming
sovereignty, not ceding it:
States have the power to determine who enters and
stays in their territory. More governance does not
mean giving up this sovereignty. On the contrary, states
would have more control if there was more migration
governance. More governance simply means improving
the coordination and cooperation between states, leading
to better-governed migration that would better respect
the human rights dimension, thus further protecting
states from allegations of human rights abuses against
migrants. As the scope and complexities of migration
continue to grow, the alternative to more robust global
migration governance is a highly unregulated system
with a range of uncoordinated actors, including from the
private sector. More migration governance would also
assist states in combating the exploitation of migrants by,
inter alia, traffickers, smugglers, recruitment agencies and
unscrupulous employers.
Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants, UN doc. A/68/283,
5August 2013, p.17, para.90.
Parliamentarians in all countries affected by international migration need to play a
greater role in discussions on the governance of migration and related human rights
issues. The contemporary reality of international migrants and the challenges entailed
in protecting their human rights requires a comprehensive and coordinated effort by
all stakeholders, including relevant agencies and entities of the UN system and IOM.
An inter-agency Global Migration Group (GMG) composed of 17 UN entities and IOM
is in fact tasked with promoting wider application of all international and regional
norms relating to migration and ensuring more coherent, comprehensive and better
coordinated approaches to international migration.
141
142
Recent decisions taken by its principals in the context of the internal review carried
out during 20122013 will enable GMG to be a more visible actor with respect to
the migration and human rights agenda, to ensure greater coherence between the
work plans and activities of UN system agencies and entities and to function more
efficiently and predictably as an internal coordination mechanism of the UN system.
In addition to the measures outlined, these decisions include the establishment of
a small joint administrative support team, the extension of chairing periods from
six months to one year and joint fundraising for specificactivities. OHCHR chaired
GMG in 2010 (JulyDecember) and ILO in 2014.
Sources:
Global Migration Group website: http://www.globalmigrationgroup.org.
Migration and human rights: Improving human rights-based governance of international migration,
Geneva, United Nations, 2013, pp.2829.
RESPECT
PROTECT
FULFIL
Source: Migration and human rights. Improving human rights-based governance of international migration,
Geneva, United Nations, 2013, p.18.
145
workers. The Second Committee of the General Assembly has considered the issue
of international migration and development in a separate process, while the Member
States of the Human Rights Council adopt an annual resolution on the human rights of
migrants, in addition to adopting resolutions on related issues such as birth registration
and the right of everyone to recognition everywhere as a person before the law. The
UPR has created a platform for all UN Member States to engage with each other
on human rights issues, including migration (see Chapter2). During the first cycle
(20062011) all UN Member States were reviewed and urged to ratify instruments
relating to the human rights of migrants, in particular ICRMW. Recommendations
included the improvement of data collection on the human rights situation of migrants,
enhancement of their access to health care and other services, the release of migrant
children from detention, and the implementation of national action plans to protect
migrants from discrimination. Moreover, as noted above, ILOs International Labour
Conference in 2004 adopted a rights-based approach to labour migration. In November
2013, an ILO Tripartite Technical Meeting on Labour Migration endorsed this approach
and issued detailed Conclusions setting out ILOs agenda of work for the coming years,
including the effective protection of migrant workers, particularly low- and middleskilled workers.
As noted above and in Chapters 2 and 3, landmark international conferences related
to migration, such as the International Conference on Population and Development
and the World Conference against Racism, and the follow-up processes initiated in the
aftermath of these conferences, have also played an important role in moving forward
the agenda on migration and human rights.
147
those who do not move, such as families left behind in countries of origin and children
born to migrant parents in countries of destination.
Agencies also provide technical assistance and capacity-building support to states and
other stakeholders, including training for migration officials; support for the review,
adoption or amendment of relevant legislation, with related legal training; and capacitybuilding support for, and partnerships with, a range of ministries, regional authorities,
national human rights institutions, non-governmental organizations, and workers and
employers organizations concerned with the governance of migration.
and return figures are rarely indicative of the total population of migrants, men and
women, in an irregular situation. Population censuses, the main source of statistics
on migrant populations, are of limited value in tracking irregular and marginalized
migrants. Another data gap relates to temporary migrant workers, who are frequently
more at risk of poor treatment in the workplace given the sectors in which they are
often employed (e.g. agriculture, construction). While the numbers of temporary
migrant workers in a regular situation are recorded by many governments, they will
only be captured by the global estimates of international migrants if they have been in
the country one year or more.
A human rights perspective can also help to reorient the collection of data beyond
traditional sources, and to analyse such sources as population statistics or economic
indicators with an eye on vulnerability, discrimination and exclusion. In addition,
providing a more accurate and rights-based picture of migration by documenting the
economic and social contributions of migrants, investigating the wider public impact
of denying them access to essential services and conducting more research on the
human rights and social impact of remittance flows, for example can help to improve
public perceptions of migration and combat xenophobia. A number of these gaps
relating to data were discussed in greater detail at the Day of General Discussion of the
Committee on Migrant Workers on the role of migration statistics for treaty reporting
and migration policies in April 2013.
In relation to the standard-setting and monitoring functions in various parts of the
UN system, a lack of overview and of coherence among the various monitoring
mechanisms could lead to unnecessary duplication and gaps, particularly where
mandates are haphazard or diffuse. Similarly, while there is an impressive array of
programmes and projects currently being undertaken to protect and promote the
human rights of all migrants, in practice, the sheer number of actors, with sometimes
overlapping mandates related to migration and human rights has resulted, as noted
earlier, in a somewhat fragmented institutional picture at the international and regional
levels. Such a picture can make it difficult for Member States and other stakeholders,
including parliamentarians, to identify the agencies and entities with the most relevant
and appropriate mandate for the technical assistance being sought. Finally, despite
the important space provided to norm-based migration issues by the UN, it is a reality
that global discussion on the human rights aspects of migration has tended to be more
subdued, with a tendency to focus prominently on the more economic dimensions of
migration and its development implications (see below). The lack of a comprehensive,
inclusive, participatory and accountable global dialogue on migration and human rights
remains an important governance gap.
Box 5.6 OHCHR recommendations on improving human rights-based
governance of international migration
As relevant, Member States, the UN system and IOM, and other stakeholders should
149
(a) Continue to strengthen and promote the coordination function of the Global
Migration Group (GMG) in relation to migration and human rights, particularly
in order to support the wider application of all relevant international and
regional instruments and norms relating to migration, and to encourage the
adoption of more coherent, comprehensive and better coordinated approaches
to the issue of international migration.
The GMG should ensure that states and other stakeholders seeking technical
assistance on migration and human rights issues are provided with a clear
entry point to the different parts of the UN system and IOM working on
such issues, to match competence and expertise according to the different
mandates of the agencies involved.
(b) Strengthen discussions on migration and the human rights of migrants within
the deliberations of the Human Rights Council, and specifically to:
(i) enhance and strengthen the examination of migration and human rights
issues within the universal periodic review;
(ii) include consideration of the human rights of migrants within its annual panel
discussions on, inter alia, the rights of the child and womens humanrights;
(iii) hold an annual panel discussion on the human rights of all migrants.
(c) Establish a UN-led multi-stakeholder initiative on indicators on migration and
human rights. Human rights indicators are necessary in order to build capacity
to develop rights-based policy at the national and local levels, and to develop
tools for monitoring, implementation, capacity-building and advocacy. What is
needed is a methodology to highlight the human rights norms and principles,
spell out the essential attributes of the rights enshrined in international
instruments and translate this narrative into contextually relevant indicators
and benchmarks for implementing the human rights of migrants at country
level. Such an initiativecould:
(i) develop a set of human rights indicators, specifically concerned with
migrants and migration with a focus on the most vulnerable [see below].
The indicators could be targeted to inform emerging debates related to the
Post-2015 UN Development Agenda;
(ii) elaborate guidelines for more reliable and accurate data collection on the
human rights aspects of migration, including disaggregation by age, sex
and sector of employment and where possible by legal status;
(iii) enhance knowledge on and monitoring of the human rights situation
of migrants, through disseminating the indicators through the universal
periodic review process and the work of other relevant human rights
mechanisms, and producing publicly available information to address
popular concerns surrounding migration.
Migration and human rights: Improving human rights-based governance of
international migration, Geneva, United Nations, 2013, pp.4243.
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151
Policy management, human rights and statistical systems are closely interrelated
and thus need to be in tune with each other for promoting the well-being of people.
Devising a policy or statistical indicator is not a norm or value-neutral exercise. Yet,
integrating human rights in these processes is not only a normative imperative, it
also makes good practical sense. Failing to do so can have real consequences.
I believe that this Guide will represent an important reference and resource from
this perspective. There is a long way to go in improving our capacities for human
rights implementation. There are numerous challenges in the collection and
dissemination of information on human rights. What to monitor, how to collect
information and interpret it from a human rights perspective, and the inherent
danger of misusing data, are but some of the concerns addressed in this publication. The Guide also reminds us of the limitations that are intrinsic to any indicator.
In particular, it cannot and should not be seen as a substitute for more in-depth,
qualitative and judicial assessments which will continue to be the cornerstones
of human rights monitoring. Instead, the indicators and methods described in
this Guide are primarily meant to inform more comprehensive assessments and
are neither designed nor suitable for ranking the human rights performance of
states. The primary objective here is to highlight the human rights norms and
principles, spell out the essential attributes of the rights enshrined in international
instruments and translate this narrative into contextually relevant indicators and
benchmarks for implementing and measuring human rights at country level. []
I trust that the continued engagement, dialogue and cooperation among all
stakeholders, including the human rights and development communities, will truly
help foster human rights-based and people-centred development at country level.
Indicators are in this sense a potential bridge between the human rights and the
development policy discourses.
Most importantly, we should never forget that behind every piece of statistical
data are human beings who were born free and equal in dignity and rights. We
must strive to make their human rights stories, especially those of the powerless,
visible through robust indicators and to use them in constantly improving our
human rights policies and implementation systems to bring positive change to
peoples lives.
outcome indicators. These make it possible to consider: (1) the commitments that
states have made in terms of the legal and policy framework; (2) key process issues,
such as the scope and application of the legal and policy framework, programme
implementation, financing and remedial action; and (3) the individual and collective
outcomes of those commitments. Indicators also pick up cross-cutting principles,
including accountability, prohibition of discrimination, and rights to equality,
participation, and access to justice (Human rights indicators for migrants and their
families: Overview, p.5).
Under the auspices of the World Banks Global Knowledge Partnership on Migration
and Development (KNOMAD) and its Thematic Working Group on Migrant Rights
and Social Aspects of Migration, OHCHR, UNICEF and Migrant Forum in Asia are
collaborating with ILO and other partners in developing human rights indicators for
migrants and their families, with an initial focus on the rights to education, health and
decent work. See the recent publication on Human rights indicators for migrants and
their families, KNOMAD Working Paper No.5, April 2015.
Box 5.8 Examples of human rights indicators for migrants and their
families in the context of accessibility to rights
Accessibility is a critical attribute, which determines the development outcomes
for individuals, their families and countries of origin and destination. Migrants
who enjoy rights on paper often face barriers to their enjoyment in practice.
Laws, policies and practices are needed to ensure accessibility. Below are some
examples of indicators for the accessibility attributes of the rights to education,
health and decent work.
The right to education and accessibility of education facilities and services
Examples of indicators that track the degree to which states ensure access to
compulsory and non-compulsory education in accordance with international
human rights standards.
Structural
Process
153
Outcome
The right to health and accessibility of health facilities, services and goods
Examples of indicators that track the degree to which states ensure access to
health facilities, services and goods.
Structural
Process
Outcome
154
The right to decent work and access to just and safe working conditions
Since migrant workers are very often exploited, the degree to which working
conditions are just and safe is a critical attribute of the right to decent work.
Access to justice and official enforcement of labour rights, in both cases
regardless of migration or residence status, are also vital because, in the absence
of these protections, employers may dismiss, deport or intimidate workers who
challenge exploitative conditions.
Examples of indicators that track the degree to which states ensure just and safe
working conditions.
Structural
Process
Outcome
Adapted from Human rights indicators for migrants and their families: Overview,
UNICEF, OHCHR, World Bank, Migration Forum in Asia, ILO (pp.67); document
prepared for KNOMADs Thematic Working Group 7: Migrant Rights and Social
Aspects of Migration.
156
NHRIs established in accordance with the Paris Principles can play a crucial role in
advancing the rights of all migrants and ensuring a human rights-based approach to
migration. As noted above, the UN Secretary-General encourages cooperation and
constructive relationships between NHRIs and governments, parliaments, civil society
and other national institutions concerned with the promotion and protection of human
rights. Given that NHRIs are established by legislation and required to report on their
activities, parliamentarians can play an important role in ensuring that the mandates
and work of NHRIs give due consideration to the specific situation of migrants and
theirfamilies.
157
Box 5.11 The role of NHRIs in promoting and protecting the rights of
migrant workers
NHRIs are a vital part of strong national human rights protection systems.
They also play a key role in linking the international and domestic human rights
systems. Their mandate enables them to engage with all relevant actors at the
national level, as well as interact with regional and international mechanisms, to
advocate laws, policies and practices that bolster protection for vulnerable groups,
including migrant workers and members of their families.
Although NHRIs have broad mandates which require them to protect and
promote all human rights for all people, the particular vulnerability of migrant
workers whether documented or in an irregular situation requires NHRIs to pay
consistent and focused attention to the human rights issues they face.
Promoting and protecting the rights of migrant workers is a priority for NHRIs in
all parts of the world, with many international and regional meetings of NHRIs
convened over the past decade to discuss emerging issues, exchange good
practice and develop individual and shared programmes of action. The 8th
International Conference of National Institutions for the Promotion and Protection
of Human Rights, held in October 2006, specifically addressed the role of NHRIs
in promoting and protecting the rights of migrants. The Santa Cruz Declaration,
adopted at the conclusion of the conference, highlights the critical importance
of NHRIs using all aspects of their mandates to promote positive change for
migrants and migrant workers, including advocacy, research, monitoring,
investigation, reporting and public education functions (Santa Cruz Declaration,
8th International Conference of National Institutions for the Promotion and
Protection of Human Rights, Santa Cruz, Bolivia, 2327October2006).
Given the complex and transnational nature of the issues involved, NHRIs are also
encouraged to develop strategic partnerships with a broad range of national
stakeholders, including civil society, as well as cross-country cooperation with
NHRIs in neighbouring countries and sending, transit and receiving states
(para.18).
A key recommendation of the 8th International Conference, as well as other
regional meetings, is that NHRIs develop a comprehensive strategy to promote
ratification of ICRMW. NHRIs are also encouraged to promote ratification of other
key international human rights treaties and ILO conventions, as well as relevant
regional human rights standards.
Adapted from Promoting and protecting the rights of migrant workers: The role of
national human rights institutions, Asia Pacific Forum of National Human Rights
Institutions, Sydney, Asia Pacific Forum, August 2010, pp. vi vii.
158
159
160
with national employment policies and development strategies, and that the parts of the
government tasked with administering the policy have the capacity and resources to do
so. The key regulatory policies and practices for migrant origin countries, which can be
and often are mandated and enabled by legislation, include:
Close government supervision and monitoring of employment agency recruitment
activities, to minimize malpractice and abuses against nationals recruited for
employment abroad;
Criminal proceedings against serious offenders and revocation of their licences
ifregistered;
Supervision of the recruitment and deployment of workers especially vulnerable to
malpractices and abuses, such as female domestic workers and low-skilled workers;
Pre-employment orientation seminars and intensified information campaigns, to help
prospective migrants make informed decisions;
Support services such as pre-departure orientation and a welfare fund;
Accurate and reliable information on the rights of migrant workers and support for
community-based organizations, to empower migrant workers and help make their
voices heard in policy design and implementation;
Activities to raise workers skill levels to higher standards to improve their
employment opportunities abroad, taking into account any concerns relating to the
depletion of human resources at home (brain drain);
Training and deployment of labour attachs to countries where nationals are
employed to provide them with the necessary support and services;
Measures to monitor and enforce employment contracts at foreign worksites, in
particular through labour attachs and arrangements with host country governments;
Steps to ensure that the transaction costs of remittances sent home by their nationals
to support families and communities are as low as possible and, while recognizing
that remittances are private funds, enhance their productive investment, including
towards creation of small enterprises; and
Inter-state cooperation between countries of origin and destination, including the
adoption and effective implementation of bilateral agreements or MoUs in conformity
with the international human rights and labour standards described in previous
chapters of this handbook.
Box 5.13 Human interest story: migrant workers get the short end of
thestick
Pakistani migrant workers have very little information about the law in their own
country or the destination country. They are given no pre-departure briefings or
any information about how their embassy can support them once they leave.
As a result, they are left to rely on recruitment agencies, which, being largely
unregulated, can be quite unscrupulous.
162
[B]ut Id paid for and been assured of an automobile drivers job, Maqbool
protested when his employer (kafeel) in Abu Dhabi told him that he would be
driving a herd of sheep, not a vehicle.
I couldnt turn round and go home as the employer wouldnt return my travel
documents and sign my exit permit, says Maqbool, who had sold his mothers
jewellery and other assets to go abroad to materialize his dream of earning enough
wealth to wash away the poverty his family had been facing since generations. []
Noor Elahi, a graduate in mechanical engineering from the University of Engineering
and Technology (UET), Lahore, has a similar story of deception to tell. For the first
two months they paid me the salary agreed upon in the contract but, later, forced me
to accept just 1,500 riyals, he [said].
He had been assured of 4,000 riyals a month salary in Saudi Arabia. However, at
the time of departure, he did not notice that the work permit he had been given
mentioned him as a craftsman much below the status his qualifications deserved.
The employer was forcing me to accept even less than half of the contract
amount as salary, telling me that the visa doesnt mention me as a mechanical
engineer so I have to be content with what was being offered as a technician.
It is encouraging to see, then, that countries across the region are finally thinking
seriously on how to address these issues. The government of Punjab with the
support of the ILO Office in Pakistan recently concluded a three-day South Asia
Labour Conference where all SAARC countries representatives met to discuss,
amongst other things, possibilities of regional cooperation on labour migration
with the technical support of the International Labour Organization. []
Migrant workers get the short end of the stick, ILO Country Office for Pakistan,
Feature Articles, International Labour Office, 2014.
As noted above, most of these measures can and should be mandated and shaped by
legislation. Labour migration legislation and policies for origin as well as destination
countries need to include measures to prevent abusive practices and promote decent
and productive work for women and men migrants in conditions of freedom, equity,
security and human dignity. It is important that legislation, policies and programmes
recognize the similarities and differences in the migration experiences of different
categories of women and men and aim at eradicating all forms of discrimination
and gender inequality, as well as tackling other vulnerabilities, violations and their
consequences. They should also take into account that women migrants are more at
risk of finding themselves in irregular situations, in unregulated sectors of the economy
or as victims of traffickers and subject to many forms of violence and abuse.
As in destination countries, establishing and implementing a comprehensive policy
framework is an essential exercise. It needs to incorporate and reflect the concerns of
multiple stakeholders across government, workers and employers organizations (social
partners) and other civil society actors. Given that labour ministries are the principal part
of government charged with employment matters, and that employers and workers
organizations are at the frontline of the real economy, sufficient attention needs to be
163
devoted to the role of social dialogue in shaping the formulation and implementation
of labour migration policy. Indeed, as discussed in Chapter2, ILO standards directly
concerned with the protection of migrant workers and labour migration governance
specifically recognize the important role of workers and employers organizations in
this regard. Such a policy would normally address the components identified above
and explicitly link the outward and inward migration of labour and skills with the
functioning of the national labour market and the consequences for economic and
social development.
An institutional locus for overseeing preparation, deployment abroad and foreign
employment is essential. A growing number of countries of origin have an office of
foreign employment charged with such tasks as:
Screening recruitment agents to prevent exploitative and fraudulent practices;
Setting minimum standards for the payment of wages and terms of employment abroad;
Negotiating with host countries to extend their labour and other laws to all categories
of migrant workers;
Facilitating emigration processes;
Settling disputes between migrants and recruiters;
Collecting information about employment opportunities and examining future
opportunities for employment abroad; and
Producing statistics and conducting research on labour migration to improve the
knowledge base and evidence needed for policymaking in this field.
Where possible, such agencies or bodies need to be located within the labour ministry,
to ensure coherence with the priorities for employment, training and skills in the overall
national labour market.
Social welfare, including health care, education, housing and community organizing;
Provision for social security coverage and portability of social security benefits; and
Avoiding the detention and criminalization of migrants (see Chapter4).
Labour market coherency and the productive engagement of foreign skills and labour
are closely tied to ensuring the minimum guarantees of protection for migrant workers
in destination countries provided under the framework of international human rights
law and international labour standards. The protection of migrant workers in destination
countries is best secured through legislation in those countries, finding its appropriate
place in the labour code, employment-related legislation, human rights law and other
provisions for the protection of foreign nationals. Special attention needs to be devoted
to the protection of migrant workers under temporary (or circular) migration schemes.
Box 5.14 Scrutinizing and improving circular migration in Sweden
The Parliamentary Committee for Circular Migration and Development was
established in 2009 to examine the relationship between circular migration when
migrants leave their country of origin and subsequently return and development.
The Committee released its final report on the topic in 2011; it affirmed a view of
migration as being of intrinsic benefit to the state, recommended that measures
be enacted to remove obstacles to several forms of circular migration, and
emphasized the protection of rights and individual choice in policies. The report
also expressed a broad view of circular migration that applied to all migrants,
including temporary foreign workers, foreign permanent residents and Swedish
citizens who are migrants to other countries. Its recommendations proposed
reforms covering all such categories, and included the need for greater flexibility
on work permits, increased efforts to combat abusive employers, greater aid for
international students, measures to reduce transaction costs associated with
remittances, and more research. The report contributed to changes in policy that
took effect in 2014, including allowing permanent residents to reside in another
country for up to two years without losing their Swedish residence permits.
As a non-binding and informal consultative process, GFMD has explicitly steered away
from producing negotiated outcomes or normative decisions. While GFMD informal
exchanges are giving increased attention to migration and human rights issues, the
discussions have not been framed from a comprehensive human rights perspective. That
and the absence of a human rights-based approach in GFMD, particularly in relation to
participation, has raised some concerns. It is nevertheless important to acknowledge the
role GFMD has played in building trust and confidence among states.
In 2012, the UN General Assembly requested Member States, the UN system,
international organizations, civil society and all relevant stakeholders especially the
High Commissioner for Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur on the human rights of
migrants and GMG to ensure that the second HLD analyses the linkage between
migration and development in a balanced and comprehensive manner that includes,
among others, a human rights perspective (A/RES/67/172).
The second UN General Assembly HLD on International Migration and Development was
held in New York on 34October 2013. The UN Secretary-Generals report on Migration
and Development to HLD contains an eight-point agenda for action. Significantly, the first
action point concerns the protection of the human rights of all migrants. Member States
are urged to ratify all relevant instruments relating to international migration and to eliminate discrimination against migrants. Special attention is devoted to migrant children in
respect of their access to education and health as well as the avoidance of their administrative detention. The need to protect migrants in irregular status is also underlined and
it is recognized that enhancing labour migration channels based on actual and projected
labour market needs can play an important role in this regard. The second action point
is concerned with reducing the high costs of labour migration, understood broadly to
refer to remittance transfer costs and recruitment fees, but also costs associated with the
non-portability of social security benefits and the non-recognition of migrants diplomas,
qualifications and skills. The remaining six points are all relevant in one way or another to
better governance of international migration, ensuring improved protection for the human
rights, including labour rights, of all migrants.
Box 5.16 UN Secretary-Generals eight-point agenda for action on
international migration and development
V. Making migration work: an eight-point agenda for action
1. Protect the human rights of all migrants
111. Member States should be encouraged to ratify and implement all relevant international instruments related to international migration, including the core international
human rights instruments, relevant ILO conventions, the protocols against human trafficking and migrant smuggling and the Convention relating to the Status of Refugees.
Alternatives to the administrative detention of migrants should be explored, while the
detention of migrant children should be avoided. Countries should eliminate all discrimination against migrants with regard to working conditions and wages and with regard
to fundamental economic, social and cultural rights. Migrant children should have equal
access to education, and all migrants should have access to essential health services.
168
112. Member States should commit to protecting and promoting the human
rights of migrants at all stages of the migration process, including migrants having
an irregular legal status. Access to legal migration channels should be enhanced,
reflecting actual and projected labour market needs while taking into account
human capital requirements in countries of origin and facilitating family unity.
2. Reduce the costs of labour migration
113. There are enormous gains to be made by lowering costs related to migration,
such as the transfer costs of remittances and fees paid to recruiters, especially by
low-skilled migrant workers. In addition, countries can strengthen the benefits of
migration by enhancing the portability of social security and other acquired rights,
and by promoting the mutual recognition of diplomas, qualifications and skills.
3. Eliminate migrant exploitation, including human trafficking
114. Member States should commit to the elimination of all forms of exploitation
affecting migrants, especially trafficking in persons and other forms of modernday slavery. Areas of action include discouraging the demand that fosters human
trafficking, ensuring the protection of victims, prosecuting offenders and ensuring
that companies eliminate forced labour from their global supply chains.
4. Address the plight of stranded migrants
115. The plight of migrants unable to return to their country of origin as a
result of humanitarian crises in their country of destination or transit has often
been overlooked. Member States should strengthen their capacities to assist
migrants and their families in crisis situations through better preparedness,
expanded consular assistance and assisted voluntary evacuation, return and
reintegration.[]
5. Improve public perceptions of migrants
116. There is a need to combat discrimination, xenophobia and intolerance
against migrants and their families by creating greater public awareness about the
situations migrants experience and the contributions they make to countries of
origin and destination. Such efforts could be promoted through a partnership of
the private sector, labour unions, the media, educational institutions and migrants
themselves, based on the latest available evidence and highlighting the rights and
responsibilities of both migrants and non-migrants.
6. Integrate migration into the development agenda
117. Migration is a test of relevance for the development debate and of fair and
effective governance, demanding coordinated action not only among states but
at all levels of government. Member States should mainstream migration into
national development plans, poverty reduction strategies and relevant sectoral
policies and programmes. The international community should define a common
set of targets and indicators to monitor the implementation of measures aimed at
enhancing the benefits and addressing the challenges of international migration,
for consideration in the framework of the post-2015 development agenda. []
169
At the HLD itself, the General Assembly adopted a landmark consensus Declaration
(see Annex III) clearly recognizing the human rights dimensions of international
migration. In the Declaration, Member States reaffirm the need to promote and protect
effectively the human rights and fundamental freedoms of all migrants, regardless of their
migration status, especially those of women and children, and to address international
migration through international, regional or bilateral cooperation and dialogue and
through a comprehensive and balanced approach (para.10). They also emphasize the
need to respect and promote international labour standards as appropriate, and respect
the rights of migrants in their workplaces (para.14).
The second HLD also came at an important moment in preparations for the post-2015 UN
development agenda. The UN Millennium Declaration called on states to take measures to
ensure respect for and protection of the human rights of migrants, migrant workers and their
families (8September 2000, A/RES/55/2, para. V. 25, fifth indent). As observed above, in
the Declaration of the HLD, Member States acknowledged the important contribution of
migration in realizing the Millennium Development Goals, and recognize that human mobility
is a key factor for sustainable development which should be adequately considered in the
elaboration of the post-2015 development agenda (para.8). Another recent expression of
consensus on the need for the effective protection of the human rights of all migrants and
for international cooperation in this respect is found in The future we want, the outcome
document of the Rio+20 UN Conference on Sustainable Development. This document
called uponstates:
170
171
The post-2015 UN development agenda must ensure that goals are aligned with
the concept of freedom from fear as well as freedom from want, incorporating
a focus on personal security, administration of justice and public participation.
Importantly, the outcome document of the UN Conference on Sustainable
Development (2012) also recognized that sustainable development requires the
meaningful involvement and active participation of all affected groups including
migrants (para.43).
II. Why should migrants be included in the post-2015 UN development
agenda?
An inclusive and equal society is more likely to be sustainable. Inequalities and
exclusion are harmful not just for the individuals who are disadvantaged, but for
society as a whole. Highly unequal societies tend to grow more slowly than those
with low income inequalities, are less successful in sustaining growth and recover
more slowly from economic downturns. Excluding large numbers of people from
accessing productive resources and assets, health, adequate food, clean water
and sanitation, quality education, decent work, skills and technology and cultural
life, will result in a reduction and waste of human potential. By addressing directly
particular inequalities and their causes, the dynamics of power and exclusion
which underlie poverty can be tackled. []
Discriminatory laws, policies, social norms and attitudes exclude certain groups
from participating fully and equally in all aspects of life. While not all migrants
are marginalized or excluded, the lack of citizenship attachment to the country of
residence, coupled with other factors such as discrimination based on nationality,
legal status, sector of work as well as on sex, age, linguistic or religious identity
and other circumstance such as statelessness renders certain migrant groups
and individuals more vulnerable to unequal treatment and exclusion from
development. While the exact dimensions and features of inequalities vary from
country to country, a recurrent picture of inequalities for many migrant groups,
including migrants in an irregular situation, low-skilled migrant workers, migrant
women at risk including those who work in particular sectors such as domestic
work, migrant workers in such sectors as construction, fisheries and agriculture,
and child and adolescent migrants is quite clear for almost all regions.
Abuse and exploitation of migrants in particularly vulnerable situations is often
prevalent, and migrants in need of protection are likely to be denied access to
effective mechanisms including asylum procedures. Inequalities are also a key
driver for precarious migration (from countries of origin, as well as in terms of
onwards movements from countries of transit), which can have severe, and often
tragic, consequences for the human rights of migrants on the move. Redressing
discrimination and inequalities will be essential if global opportunities for progress
are to be shared by those most in need of its benefits.
172
Finally, and in order to ensure the effective inclusion of migrants, the sustainable
development agenda should be concerned with the human rights-based
governance of migration. While international agreements are often drawn up to
facilitate the movement of goods and capital across borders, the movement of
people across borders is less well governed and often takes place in the absence of
effective rights-based regulations. [] Sufficient channels for the regular movement
of migrants should be put in place, which respond adequately to the demand inter
alia for migrant workers and for family reunification. Such policy measures could
reduce the necessity for migrants to seek out irregular channels and the risk that
they will fall prey to traffickers and other abusive facilitators of movement.
III. A question of data
A critical lack of data collection and disaggregation by migrant status conceals
exclusion and inequalities and makes it difficult to measure progress and
dismantle entrenched patterns of discrimination. Where a group of people is
socially, economically or politically excluded, or where chronic human rights
violations are not recognized by the state, the relevant data tends not to be
systematically collected, leading to vicious cycles of exclusion. Experience has
shown that issues relating to migrants tend to become blind spots when priorities
are set, policies defined or budgets allocated with resulting gaps in monitoring
and accountability. [] It is important that a new sustainable development agenda
encourages stakeholders to seek out new and innovative data sources to measure
and monitor the development progress of all migrants, including migrants in an
irregular situation. Moreover, to ensure the visibility of both men and women in
migration, all data should be sex disaggregated.
Including migrants in the post-2015 development agenda, GMG, Working
Group on Migration, Human Rights and Gender, Position Document, May 2014
[footnotes omitted].
Box 5.18 Migration and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
Migration features in the sustainable development goals (SDGs) of the post-2015
UN sustainable development agenda. Specifically, in SDG 8 on the promotion
of sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive
employment and decent work for all, target 8.8 is concerned with the need to
protect labour rights and promote safe and secure working environments for all
workers, including migrant workers, in particular women migrants, and those in
precarious employment. Two other explicitly migration-related targets are found
in SDG 10 on reducing inequality within and among countries:
Target 10.7 - facilitate orderly, safe, regular and responsible migration and
mobility of people, including through the implementation of planned and wellmanaged migration policies;
173
Target 10.c by 2030, reduce to less than 3 per cent the transaction costs of
migrant remittances and eliminate remittance corridors with costs higher than
5per cent.
SDG 17 on strengthening the means of implementation and revitalizing the global
partnership for sustainable development contains target 17.18 on enhancing
capacity building support to developing countries [] to increase significantly
the availability of high-quality, timely and reliable data disaggregated by [inter alia]
migratory status.
The SDGs also contain other targets equally relevant for migrants and enjoyment
of their rights to social protection (1.3), safe, nutritious and sufficient food (2.1),
health (3.8), education (4.1 4.5), safe and affordable drinking water and adequate
and equitable sanitation and hygiene (6.1 6.2), full and productive employment
and decent work (8.5), and equal access to justice (16.3), in a non-discriminatory
and participatory way (10.2 10.3). The use of inclusive language in these targets
(namely, the references to all) underscores that no one, including migrants,
should be left behind.
Moreover, the financing for development action agenda also recognizes inter alia:
The positive contribution of migrants for inclusive growth and sustainable
development in countries of origin, transit and destination, with specific
reference to the role of migrant worker remittances;
The need for international cooperation to ensure safe, orderly and regular
migration, with full respect for human rights; and
The need to promote and protect effectively the human rights and fundamental
freedoms of all migrants, especially those of women and children, regardless of
their migration status.
Sources:
Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, Finalised text for adoption
(1August).
Outcome document of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development: Addis Ababa
Action Agenda, Addis Ababa, 13 16 July 2015, A/CONF.227/L.1 (15 July 2015), paras. 40 and 111.
174
Conclusion
Multilateral discussions on international migration governance over the years have
tended to focus on its repercussions for development. But while the discussions
on that track have been fruitful, the importance and centrality of the human rights
perspective should not be overlooked. Viewing migration through that lens is crucial
in its own right as well as in the context of the migration-development nexus, because
human rights are intrinsic to all human beings, regardless of their instrumental value as
units of labour or agents of development. This is expressed most eloquently in one
of the principles enshrined in the Declaration of Philadelphia (see Chapter2), adopted
70 years ago as an annex to the ILO Constitution: labour is not a commodity. In
this context, it is important to remember the central challenge for the post-2015
development agenda as identified in the report of the UN System Task Team on the
Post-2015 UN Development Agenda, Realizing the Future We Want For All: to ensure
that globalization becomes a positive force for all the worlds peoples of present and
future generations (p. i). Parliamentarians can thus play an important role in ensuring
that this agenda and its implementation give due attention to the inclusion of migrants
and that human rights principles are adequately reflected in the governance of
international migration.
175
thus helping to plan for and improve the implementation of international human
rights law and international labour standards at the national level with regard to
all migrants irrespective of their migration status.
55 Parliamentarians are encouraged to advocate the inclusion of targets with respect
to migrants and migration under the relevant post-2015 sustainable development
goals (e.g. decent work, reducing inequality, peaceful societies) and the
systematic disaggregation of indicators by migrant status (including nationality),
and to ensure that implementation of the post-2015 development agenda gives
due attention to the protection of the human rights of migrants.
177
178
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lang--en/index.htm
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Ten ways to protect undocumented migrant workers, Brussels, PICUM, 2005. Available
at http://picum.org/picum.org/uploads/publication/Ten%20Ways%20to%20Protect%20
Undocumented%20Migrant%20Workers%20EN.pdf
Refugee Survey Quarterly: Special Issue on Human Rights and Mobility
Vol. 28, No.4, 2009. Content and abstracts available at: http://rsq.oxfordjournals.org/
content/28/4.toc
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Strasbourg, Council of Europe, 2009.
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181
182
Annex I:
ASEAN Declaration on the
Protection and Promotion
oftheRights of Migrant Workers
[] RECALLING also the Universal Declaration on Human Rights [], as well as other
appropriate international instruments which all the ASEAN Member Countries have
acceded to [];
[] CONFIRMING our shared responsibility to realise a common vision for a secure
and prosperous ASEAN Community by improving the quality of life of its people and
strengthening its cultural identity towards a people-centered ASEAN through, among
others, measures on the protection and promotion of the rights of migrant workers;
RECOGNISING the contributions of migrant workers to the society and economy of
both receiving states and sending states of ASEAN;
RECOGNISING further the sovereignty of states in determining their own migration
policy relating to migrant workers, including determining entry into their territory and
under which conditions migrant workers may remain;
ACKNOWLEDGING the legitimate concerns of the receiving and sending states
over migrant workers, as well as the need to adopt appropriate and comprehensive
migration policies on migrant workers;
ACKNOWLEDGING also the need to address cases of abuse and violence against
migrant workers whenever such cases occur; []
HEREBY DECLARE AS FOLLOWS:
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
1. Both the receiving states and sending states shall strengthen the political, economic
and social pillars of the ASEAN Community by promoting the full potential and dignity
of migrant workers in a climate of freedom, equity, and stability in accordance with the
laws, regulations, and policies of respective ASEAN Member Countries;
2. The receiving states and the sending states shall, for humanitarian reasons, closely
cooperate to resolve the cases of migrant workers who, through no fault of their own,
have subsequently become undocumented;
3. The receiving states and the sending states shall take into account the fundamental
rights and dignity of migrant workers and family members already residing with them
without undermining the application by the receiving states of their laws, regulations
and policies; and
4. Nothing in the present Declaration shall be interpreted as implying the regularization
of the situation of migrant workers who are undocumented.
183
17. Take concrete measures to prevent or curb the smuggling and trafficking in
persons by, among others, introducing stiffer penalties for those who are involved in
these activities;
18. Facilitate data-sharing on matters related to migrant workers, for the purpose of
enhancing policies and programmes concerning migrant workers in both sending and
receiving states; []
22. Task the relevant ASEAN bodies to follow up on the Declaration and to develop
an ASEAN instrument on the protection and promotion of the rights of migrant
workers,[]
DONE at Cebu, Philippines [13January 2007].
185
186
Annex II:
Article16 of the ICRMW and its
application to migrant workers
and members of their families
in an irregular situation
Protection against arbitrary arrest and detention
23. Article16 protects the right of migrant workers and members of their families to
liberty and security of person (para.1), and provides that identity controls of migrant
workers must comply with the procedure established by law (para.3). Article16,
paragraph4, complements Article9, paragraph1, of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights, adding that migrant workers and members of their families
shall not be subjected individually or collectively to arbitrary arrest or detention. In
order not to be arbitrary, arrest and detention of migrant workers and members of their
families, including those in an irregular situation, must be prescribed by law, pursue a
legitimate aim under the Convention, be necessary in the specific circumstances and
proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued.
24. The Committee considers that crossing the border of a country in an unauthorized
manner or without proper documentation, or overstaying a permit of stay does not
constitute a crime. [] While irregular entry and stay may constitute administrative
offences, they are not crimes per se against persons, property or national security. [See
report of the Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants to the Human Rights
Council (A/HRC/20/24), para.13] [...]
26. In the Committees view, any custodial or non-custodial measure restricting the
right to liberty must be exceptional and always based on a detailed and individualized
assessment. [] The principle of proportionality requires States Parties to detain
migrant workers only as a last resort, and to give preference to less coercive measures,
especially non-custodial measures, whenever such measures suffice to achieve the
objective pursued. In all such cases, the least intrusive and restrictive measure possible
in each individual case should be applied.
27. Administrative detention of migrants that is initially lawful and non-arbitrary may
become arbitrary if it continues beyond the period for which a State party can provide
proper justification. To prevent such a situation from occurring, a maximum period of
administrative detention shall be established by law, upon expiry of which a detainee
must be automatically released in the absence of such justification. [] In cases where
an expulsion order cannot be executed for reasons beyond the detained migrant
workers control, he or she shall be released in order to avoid potentially indefinite
detention.
28. Article16, paragraph5, requires States Parties to inform migrant workers and
members of their families who are arrested of the reasons for their arrest at the time of
187
arrest and, as far as possible, in a language they understand. Moreover, they must be
promptly informed of the charges against them in a language they understand. []
29. Under Article16, paragraph6, the guarantees of certain rights of migrant workers
and members of their families in custody and pretrial detention are applicable to anyone
suspected of committing or having committed a crime.
30. Article16, paragraph7, provides for the right of migrant workers who are deprived
of their liberty to communicate with the consular or diplomatic authorities of their State
of origin or those of a State representing the interests thereof. []
32. Article16, paragraph8, provides for the right of all migrant workers and members
of their families who are deprived of their liberty by arrest or detention to take
proceedings before a court, in order that the court may decide without delay on the
lawfulness of their detention. If the court finds that the detention is unlawful, it must
order the release of the detained migrant worker.
33. The Committee considers that anyone arrested and detained solely for immigration
purposes should be brought promptly before a judge or other officer authorized by
law to exercise judicial power to review the lawfulness of the arrest and/or detention
and the continued necessity of such arrest or detention; and to order unconditional
release and/or less coercive measures, if warranted. [...] The migrant worker must have
access to legal representation and advice, if necessary free of charge, to challenge
the lawfulness of detention. Children, and in particular unaccompanied or separated
children, should never be detained solely for immigration purposes.
34. Article16, paragraph8, of the Convention provides for the right of migrant workers
attending such proceedings to an interpreter, if necessary, without cost to them, if they
cannot understand or speak the language used. []
35. Article16, paragraph9, provides for an enforceable right to compensation for
migrant workers and members of their families who have been victims of unlawful
arrest or detention. []
General Comment No.2 on the rights of migrant workers in an irregular situation and
members of their families, Committee on Migrant Workers, UN doc. CMW/C/GC/2
(28August2013).
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Annex III:
Declaration of the High-level
Dialogue on International
Migration and Development
The General Assembly,
Adopts the following Declaration:
Declaration of the High-level Dialogue on International Migration and Development
We, representatives of States and Governments, gathered at United Nations
Headquarters in New York on 3 and 4October 2013 on the occasion of the High-level
Dialogue on International Migration and Development,
1. Recognize that international migration is a multidimensional reality of major
relevance for the development of origin, transit and destination countries, and in
this regard recognize that international migration is a crosscutting phenomenon that
should be addressed in a coherent, comprehensive and balanced manner, integrating
development with due regard for social, economic and environmental dimensions and
respecting human rights;
2. Acknowledge the important contribution made by migrants and migration to
development in countries of origin, transit and destination, as well as the complex
interrelationship between migration and development;
3. Decide to work towards an effective and inclusive agenda on international migration
that integrates development and respects human rights by improving the performance
of existing institutions and frameworks, as well as partnering more effectively with all
stakeholders involved in international migration and development at the regional and
global levels;
4. Reaffirm our commitment to address the opportunities and the challenges that
international migration presents to countries of origin, transit and destination;
5. Recognize the need for international cooperation to address, in a holistic and
comprehensive manner, the challenges of irregular migration to ensure safe, orderly
and regular migration, with full respect for human rights;
6. Recognize the need to strengthen synergies between international migration and
development at the global, regional and national levels;
7. Recognize the efforts made by the international community in addressing relevant
aspects of international migration and development, through different initiatives, both
within the United Nations system and other processes, particularly the Global Forum
on Migration and Development and regional processes, as well as in drawing on the
expertise of the International Organization for Migration and other member agencies of
the Global Migration Group;
189
and encourage Member States to ratify, accede to and implement relevant international
instruments on preventing and combating trafficking in persons and smuggling of
migrants;
18. Encourage Member States to cooperate on mobility programmes that facilitate safe,
orderly and regular migration, including through labour mobility;
19. Recognize the particular vulnerabilities, circumstances and needs of adolescents
and young migrants, as well as their potential to build social, economic and cultural
bridges of cooperation and understanding across societies;
20. Recognize also all efforts made by Governments, all relevant bodies, agencies,
funds and programmes of the United Nations system, other relevant intergovernmental,
regional and subregional organizations, including the International Organization
for Migration and other organizations within the Global Migration Group, and nongovernmental stakeholders, including the private sector, in addressing international
migration and development for the benefit of both migrants and societies; and bearing
this goal in mind, further emphasize the need to strengthen partnerships among all
relevant stakeholders;
21. Stress the need to deepen the interaction between Governments and civil society
to find responses to the challenges and the opportunities posed by international
migration, and recognize the contribution of civil society, including non-governmental
organizations, to promote the well-being of migrants and their integration into
societies, especially at times of extreme vulnerable conditions, and the support of the
international community to the efforts of such organizations;
22. Acknowledge the complexity of migratory flows and that international migration
movements also occur within the same geographical regions, and, in this context, call
for a better understanding of migration patterns across and within regions;
23. Recognize the importance of coordinated efforts of the international community
to assist and support migrants stranded in vulnerable situations and facilitate, and
cooperate on when appropriate, their voluntary return to their country of origin,
and call for practical and action-oriented initiatives aimed at identifying and closing
protection gaps;
24. Underline the right of migrants to return to their country of citizenship, and recall
that States must ensure that their returning nationals are duly received;
25. Recognize the need to consider the role that environmental factors may play in
migration;
26. Recognize the necessity to consider how the migration of highly skilled persons,
especially in the health, social and engineering sectors, affects the development efforts
of developing countries, and emphasize the need to consider circular migration;
27. Recognize that remittances constitute an important source of private capital, and
reaffirm the need to promote conditions for cheaper, faster and safer transfers of
remittances in both source and recipient countries;
28. Emphasize the need for reliable statistical data on international migration, including
when possible on the contributions of migrants to development in both origin and
191
destination countries; this data could facilitate the design of evidence-based policy- and
decision-making in all relevant aspects of sustainable development;
29. Acknowledge that the Global Forum on Migration and Development has proved to
be a valuable forum for holding frank and open discussions, and that it has helped to
build trust among participating stakeholders through the exchange of experiences and
good practices, and by virtue of its voluntary, informal State-led character;
30. Acknowledge that the United Nations system can benefit from the discussions and
outcomes of the Global Forum on Migration and Development, in order to maximize the
benefits of international migration for development;
31. Call upon all relevant bodies, agencies, funds and programmes of the United
Nations system, other relevant intergovernmental, regional and subregional
organizations, including the International Organization for Migration and other Global
Migration Group members, and the Special Representative of the Secretary-General
on International Migration and Development, within their respective mandates, to
strengthen their collaboration and cooperation to better and fully address the issue of
international migration and development, in order to adopt a coherent, comprehensive
and coordinated approach, and to consider migration issues in their contributions to the
preparatory process that will establish the post-2015 development agenda;
32. Welcome the recent efforts made by the Global Migration Group to undertake
measures to enhance its functioning and to promote coherence and coordination
among its member organizations, and in this regard stress the importance of regular
interaction between the Global Migration Group and Member States;
33. Request the Secretary-General to continue his substantive work on international
migration and development and, in collaboration with the United Nations system
and relevant organizations, including the International Organization for Migration,
tocontinue assessing the progress made in the field of migration and development;
34. Also request the Secretary-General, in the elaboration of his report on international
migration and development to be submitted to the General Assembly at its sixtyninth session, to give due consideration to the results and deliberations of this HighlevelDialogue.
Resolution 68/4. Declaration of the High-level Dialogue on International Migration and
Development, UN General Assembly, 68th Session, adopted on 3 October 2013.
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