News Archive

News Archive

Find below archived news and updates on migration and development globally and from the regions. You can use the filter to refine the selection of news.


In this edition:

  1. Editorial: Important events in the second semester of 2016
  2. XVIII Jornadas Migratorias, Santiago de Chile (24-25 August)
  3. Release of the Advocacy Paper: “Migration and Citizenship at the Service of People: Advances and Setbacks in the Americas” (September)
  4. MADE Americas Regional Meeting, Asunción, Paraguay (1-2 November)
  5. Regional Network of the Civil Organizations for Migrations (RROCM) Annual Assembly, (12-14 November) and XXI Regional Conference on Migrations (CRM), San Pedro Sula, Honduras (15-18 November)
  6. Follow up on the definition of the Migration Bill in Paraguay
  7. Voting of the new Migration Bill in Brazil: a huge step forward for migrant people in the country
  8. Civil Society Days of the Global Forum on Migration and Development – GFMD, Dhaka, Bangladesh (8-9 December)

 

MADE Americas News
August - December 2016

 

Welcome to MADE Americas!
 
The MADE Americas programme, active since January 2014, has contributed to the strengthening of civil society networks and their advocacy activities surrounding migration and development policies within the region of Latin America and the Caribbean.
 
MADE Americas is one regional part of the global project Migration and Development (MADE). The Scalabrini International Migration Network - SIMN, through the Scalabrini Foundation (Fundación Scalabrini) and the International Network of Migration and Development (INMD /Red Internacional de Migración y Desarrollo – RIMD), have been working and participating together in the activities presented in this second newsletter of 2016. 
 
In this edition:

 

Editorial: Important events in this second semester of 2016

 

A number of events involving the MADE Americas partners occurred during the second half of this year.

In Chile, the XVIII Jornadas Migratorias (national annual conference on migration issues) took place on August 24th and 25th in the city of Santiago. To mitigate the years-long wait for a new Migration Bill, the Jornadas presented this year some governmental and non-governmental actors from various areas that are contributing to a joint work towards a multi-sectorial management of migrations in the country. In September, the SIMN published its Advocacy Paper “Migration and Citizenship at the Service of People: Advances and Setbacks in the Americas”, inspired from the results that came out of the last National Multi-Stakeholder Meeting in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic (DR). At the regional level and as part of the MADE advocacy activities, the Scalabrini Foundation organized the third MADE Americas Regional Meeting in Asunción, Paraguay. The first day was dedicated to the “Satellite Meeting” for the GFMD, and the second one, to the redaction of a joint Civil Society Declaration to be presented to the members of the XVI South American Conference on Migrations (CSM for its initials in Spanish) on the following days. Going further north, the countries of Central America had their XXI Regional Conference on Migrations (CRM) on December 15th to 18th in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, preceded by the annual assembly of the Regional Network of Civil Organizations on Migrations (RROCM), which took place in the same city.
 
Further on, you will be informed on the progresses and projections of the Migration Bills in Paraguay and Brazil, where the SIMN is actively involved in the negotiation and definition processes with the members of their respective governments. Finally, we will present to you some results of the 2016 GFMD Civil Society Days that took place on December 8th and 9th in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

 

XVIII Jornadas Migratorias: “Immigration, Integration and Multiculturalism; the necessity of a multi sectorial management”, August 24th and 25th, Santiago de Chile

 

Pursuing the improvement – facing the evidence that none of the sectors of society can, by itself, provide a complete and integral answer to immigration – the Jornadas Migratorias this year seeked to underline the need to address this social phenomenon from an inter-disciplinary and inter-institutional perspective.
The Jornadas is an initiative of the Chilean Catholic Migration Institute (INCAMI), an independent organ of the Chilean Episcopal Conference, and the SIMN, with the collaboration of the MADE Network, the Chilean Ministry of Foreign Affairs through the Consular Policy Director, the Ministry of Interior and Public Security through the Migration and Foreign Department (DEM), the Honorable Senate of the Republic and the International Organization for Migrations (IOM). The event presented speeches from Jaime Esponda from IOM Chile, Mons. Galo Fernandez, President of INCAMI, Father Flor María Rigoni, who has a significant experience working with migrants on the USA-Mexico border, two representatives of local governments of two municipalities of Santiago, Fedérico Agustí, Director of the International and Social Department of the National Direction of Migrations (DNM) of Argentina, Rodrigo Sandoval, Director of the Migration Department (DEM) of the Ministry of Interior and Public Security.
Also for the first time, the Jornadas presented an actor from the private sector, Mr. Marco Antonio González, Manager of Public Policies of the Sociedad de Fomento Fabril (SOFOFA: an association of all the important manufacturers in Chile), who discussed the institution’s perception of immigration as a labour workforce and the challenges brought by its integration. He mentioned SOFOFA as being enthusiastic about immigration and wanting to transmit this favourable attitude the corporate entity has towards it. The DEM Director mentioned that a project is being realized, together with President Michelle Bachelet and the Productivity Commission, where one of the main topics is to facilitate the movement of people and the recognition of foreign diplomas, which would mean a step towards better integration of migrants in Chile. However, more changes and improvements to the Chilean migration policy are still hoped for.
 
Read more on the XVIII Jornadas Migratorias on Fundación Scalabrini’s website (in Spanish)

 

Publication of the Advocacy Paper: “Migration and Citizenship to the Service of People: Advances and Setbacks in the Americas” by the SIMN, September 2016

 

The paper “Migration and Citizenship to the Service of People: Advances and Setbacks in the Americas” aims to reflect on the impact of citizenship policies on access to the benefits and responsibilities of a given country. It examines the advances and setbacks in the Americas and how each model benefits or takes away the human rights of the individuals. The text was prepared by Mr. Kevin Appleby, Director of International Policy of the Center for Migration Studies of New York (CMS) and the SIMN, with the contribution of Dr. Diego Acosta, Senior Lecturer in European and Migration Law, University of Bristol, and edited by Leonir Chiarello, Executive Director of the SIMN and Gabrielle Parenteau, MADE Americas’ Program Coordinator at the Scalabrini Foundation in Santiago de Chile.
Some elements were included from the presentations of the last National Multi-Stakeholder Meeting, disseminated in the first biannual newsletter of this year, as a contribution from the current facts that are happening in the DR and to provide visibility to the claims of the people affected by the processes of naturalization, regularization and denationalization, that present important implementation failures. The document was released for the first time during the Shadow Meeting organized by the CMS on September 20th in New York, following the UNGA High Level Summit on Refugees and Migrations. It was then distributed during the MADE Americas Regional Event.

 

MADE Americas Regional Meeting, November 1/2, Asunción, Paraguay

 

The Scalabrini Foundation in Chile and the SIMN organized on November 1st and 2nd of 2016 the third MADE Americas Regional Meeting, named “Civil Society and Migration Policies in the Region: consolidating proposals for the South American Migration Conference (CSM) and the Global Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD)”, the objective of was to support, strengthen and empower the capacities of Civil Society networks and organizations of Latin America to work towards proposals to governments and joint actions on migrations. The event took place at the Gran Hotel de Paraguay in Asunción and enjoyed the participation of representatives of Argentina, Chile, Brazil, Paraguay, Peru, Bolivia, Colombia, Venezuela, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras and Mexico; among them, members of civil society organizations who work in migrations, leaders of international organizations and Governments members. The event started on November 1st with the GFMD “Satellite” Meeting, the objective of which was to facilitate the Civil Society organizations’ participation in the GFMD previously to its official realization and to give a space to those who will not attend the event in Dhaka through the elaboration of proposals to be brought and presented during the work sessions of the Forum. On that occasion, Claudia León, from the International Network for Migration and Development (INMD), presented to the Civil Society participants the last regional report named Avoiding the "trap": Linking the Global with the National and the Non-Binding with the Binding, aiming to “show in an implicit way how we can clearly link what is discussed in the non-binding processes, such as the agreements made in the Conferencia Regional de Migración (CRM) and the Conferencia Suramericana sobre Migraciones (CSM) and others that came out more recently through the GFMD, as the Migrants in Countries in Crisis Initiative (MICIC), with those that are compulsory to the States such as the UN Committees”, for example.
 
On November 2nd a MADE Americas Regional Meeting took place, with the objective to formulate proposals and prepare the intervention of two CS representatives in the CSM, to be held during the following days. That second day of the meeting were presented speeches from Jorge Gurrieri of the IOM Regional Office for South America; Juan Emilio Oviedo, Technical Secretary of the Mercosur Permanent Tribunal; Gabriela Pizarro Rodríguez, President of the International Center for Migrants’ Human Rights (CIDEHUM) in Costa Rica and; Hugo Oddone, expert in populations and development.
 
The second day of the meeting was concluded by the general approbation of the Civil Society Declaration towards the XVI CSM, which is currently being reviewed by its Technical Secretary, with the objective of including it in the Conference Official Act. On November 4th, two CS representatives from the MADE Network, Leonir Chiarello (SIMN) and Claudia León (INMD), spoke during the CSM, reiterating the importance of the CSM Action Plan and of the concrete implementation of actions to protect migrant people’s rights in border areas, for example.
 
On November 3rd and 4th, in the headquarters of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Paraguay, took place the XVI South American Conference on Migrations entitled “Toward free movement” (Hacía el libre tránsito). During those days, the members States, presided this year by Paraguay and supported by the IOM as the Technical Secretary, carried out discussions on 4 main topics: 1) Follow-up of the South American Plan on the Human Development of Migrations; 2) Migrations and South American integration; 3) Strengthening of migrations management; 4) International projection of the South American region. It is according to these 4 main topics that the Civil Society realized its work on the definition of proposals during the MADE Americas regional meeting.
 
Stay tuned for the release of the Civil Society Declaration before the XVI CSM that will be available and published by the MADE Network as soon as its integration to the CSM Act will be completed.

 

Regional Network of the Civil Organizations for Migrations (RROCM) Annual Assembly, November 12-14, and XXI Regional Conference on Migrations (CRM), November 15-18, San Pedro Sula, Honduras

 

The RROCM organized its annual Assembly on November 12th to 14th in San Pedro Sula, before the XXI CRM annual meeting that took place during the following days at same location. The Assembly gathered civil society organizations from North and Central America such as the Canadian Council for Refugees (Canadá), Alianza Américas (USA), INCEDES (Guatemala), Pastoral de Movilidad Humana (Guatemala), FONAMIH (Honduras), GMIES (El Salvador), NicasMigrantes (Nicaragua), CIDEHUM (Costa Rica), MENAMIRE-CEALP (Panama) y MANAMIRD (Dominican Republic). In its Declaration presented during the following days to the CRM member States, the RROCM reiterated the necessity to address migrations from these thematic aspects:

  • Visibility for migrants, so that they are recognized and treated as entitled to human rights, with no regard to their migration status.
  • Acknowledgement of migrants’ contribution to the communities and countries of origin, transit and destination.
  • Strengthening of migrants’ organization and participation in the processes to define public policies.

The RROCM Declaration was presented to the CRM meeting that took place on November 15th to 18th in the Centro Social Hondureño Árabe of San Pedro Sula, Honduras. The meeting named: “Migration: a shared responsibility” gathered Civil Society representatives, International Organizations (IOM, UNHCR, UNICEF, ILO and ICRC) and States from North and Central America, making the conference a tripartite discussion on the protection of the most vulnerable migrants and towards the strengthening of the shared responsibility to improve migration governance. Discussions and working sessions were undertaken, according to the core topics of Policy and Migration Management, Migration and Development and Human Rights, which were concluded by a vice-ministerial meeting (one part accessible by live streaming and the other part in a closed-door session) and the formulation of the Declaration.

 

Follow-up on the definition of the Migration Bill in Paraguay

 

F. Jairo Guidini, Director of the Scalabrini Foundation for Migrations in Paraguay, tells us about the progress regarding the definition of the Migration Bill in the country: “We are following up on the Migration Bill here in Paraguay. With the participation of the Federacion de Inmigrantes en Paraguay (FEDIPAR) together with the Scalabrini Foundation for Migrations, we encouraged the elaboration of a Public Policy on Migrations in Paraguay, which still did not have any defined and written policy on the topic. […] We are expecting the approbation of the new Law for this year. We will meet again with FEDIPAR (Federación de Inmigrantes en Paraguay) to give some suggestions which we think are important. We think it is important that the civil society’s participation in the elaboration of the new Bill is being consolidated.

 

Voting of the new Migration Bill in Brazil: a huge step forward for migrant people in the country

 

In Brasilia, on December 6th, the new Migration Bill was approved, with 70% in favour of its adoption. This important accomplishment has been in process since August 2015. At that moment, 5 civil society organizations including Missão Paz, the SIMN representation in Brazil, presented a joint Technical Note that contained some suggestions of changes to be made in the Bill. In August of the same year, a special Commission was created to discuss the text, on which some work was done, and which was suspended until March of the present year. Because of a variety of political factors, the Bill had to be voted and signed in the Deputies Chamber in July of this year.

The important achievements, according to Leticia Carvalho, the Missão Paz representative, are: the decriminalization of undocumented migrants who will not be detained and the access to regularization for people who find themselves in an irregular situation in the country. That these two elements were maintained in the Bill represents an important victory for migrants in Brazil and it is hoped will have positive impact on the South American region’s migration policies. On the other hand, Carvalho expressed some concern over the fact that the federal Police will continue managing migration in Brazil. The Migration Bill will be ratified by the Senate next year and then will be submitted for the President’s approval. Missão Paz and other Civil Society organizations were present on voting day and will keep observing and monitoring the process until the final Law publication. 

 

Civil Society Days of the Global Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD), December 8-9, Dhaka Bangladesh

 

On December 8th and 9th in Dhaka, Bangladesh, an important event of the MADE Network took place: the GFMD Civil Society Days. Under the name “Time for Action: Doing right-based governance of migration and development in our communities and across borders”, those two days were an opportunity for Civil Society to evaluate how to act in these directions and to think not just about recommendations, but implementation; internationally, across borders, but also regionally and locally, in our communities. Actions proposals formed the substance of the Civil Society Report presented by Colin Rajah, Chair of the 2016 Civil Society Days of the GFMD, on Saturday December 10th during the “Common Space” gathering the Civil Society and GFMD’s Governments representatives, one day before the governments’ space on December 11th and 12th.
 
Members of the MADE Americas network were actively involved in the discussions, preparations and activities of the GFMD Civil Society Days. Kevin Appleby, from the SIMN in the USA, participated in a panel on the GFMD role and the next step to follow after the recent New York Declaration on Refugees and Migrants, together with representatives from organizations such as IOM, OHCHR and OXFAM. On the second day, Berenice Valdés Rivera, from the Colectivo Migraciones para las Américas, participated in a panel on the Civil Society commitments facing the very next GFMD in Germany that will take place in June of 2017, in barely 6 months. Representatives of the National Union for Teachers (UK), of the Asia Pacific Refugee Rights Network (APRRN) and of VENRO, the local partner for the next GFMD Civil Society Days, were also part of the discussions carried out during the panel. This forum offers a profitable space to share experiences of and raise once again global civil society voices, whose contribution to migration management was acknowledged several time by various Government members during the GFMD.

 

 

Copyright of the photo: Fundación Scalabrini

 

Website
Website

Facebook
Facebook

Twitter
Twitter

Youtube
Youtube

  
The coordination of 
GFMD civil society activities is part of the Migration and Development Civil Society Network (MADE) activities.

 

MADE activities are currently coordinated by seven civil society organisations and networks in Asia (Migrant Forum in Asia), Africa (Caritas Senegal), the Americas (Fundación Scalabrini with assistance from the Scalabrini International Migration Network and International Network for Migration and Development) and Europe (AFFORD UK, Cordaid and ICMC Europe).



The International Catholic Migration Commission (ICMC) acts as the global Coordinating Office for MADE and for civil society activities in the process of the the GFMD. Find out more on the MADE network website.

Responsibility for the information and views set out in this newsletter lies entirely with the ICMC, as global coordinator of MADE. Should you wish to contact us about this mailing, or would like to submit any articles, events or updates please send us an e-mail at info@madenetwork.org

© MADE Global Coordinating Office
International Catholic Migration Commission (ICMC)
Rue Washington 40
Brussels 1050
Belgium


By clicking on the 'update your contact preferences' button below you can update contact details, manage your subscription preferences and sign up for specific regional or thematic updates. 

Update your contact preferences
 
The MADE Programme is co-funded by the European Commission (EC). The contents of this document are the sole responsibility of the Implementing Organisation and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of the EC.

Back