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                                                                                         Updated  January 8, 2019

The Global Compact on Migration (GCM) and U.S. Policy


Congress has demonstrated interest in the global migration
crisis, particularly as a result of the recent flows of migrants
and refugees to the United States from Central America and
Mexico. In 2017, an estimated 232 million international
migrants formed roughly 3% of the world's population. The
International Organization for Migration (IOM) defines a
migrant as any individual who has temporarily or
permanently crossed an international border and is no
longer residing in his/her country of origin/habitual
residence. The decision to move is usually made out of a
choice related to livelihood, improved economic
circumstances, or family ties. However, as discussed below,
certain factors may force individuals to leave involuntarily.
In response to increasing numbers of people on the move,
the U.N. General Assembly High-Level Plenary Summit on
Refugees and Migrants in September 2016 adopted the
New  York Declaration, which aims to save lives, protect
rights, and share responsibility for refugees and migrants on
a global scale. Building on this initiative, U.N. member
states developed two global compacts-a Global Compact
on Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM) and a
Global Compact  on Refugees (GCR). In December 2017,
the Trump Administration withdrew the United States from
the GCM  negotiations. (It later also withdrew U.S.
participation in the GCR.) Refugees are distinct from
migrants because of their specific status and protections
under international law.
In July 2018, U.N. member states finalized the text of the
GCM.  One-hundred  and sixty-four U.N. member states
signed the compact at the U.N. Intergovernmental
Conference to Adopt the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly
and Regular Migration in Marrakech, Morocco, on
December  10-11, 2018. The U.N. General Assembly
adopted the GCM  on December  19, 2018.
International Migration Trends
In recent years, the attention of the media, public, and
governments on migrants, refugees, and other vulnerable
groups on the move has given rise to protection and human
rights concerns, as well as questions pertaining to the form
and extent of state responsibility. While refugees are
granted certain rights and protection under international
refugee law, migrants are not protected by a comparable set
of rules or treaties. Consequently, if migrants enter a
country illegally, they are often without legal protection.
The GCM   is nonbinding but has sought to negotiate
principles to address some of the contentious issues
surrounding migration, such as the root causes of the
decision to leave, the dangers people face on their journey,
and the treatment of migrants at borders. The prevailing
view has been that the challenges of migration cannot be
tackled by one country alone.


Significant refugee and migrant flows are taking place
globally as people have fled conflict and poverty, as well as
natural disasters, which may be sudden events or unfold
over a long period. While movement of people is most
common   among countries in close proximity, worldwide
the main migration routes flow (1) north through Central
America and Mexico  toward the U.S. border; (2) from East
Africa and countries in the Middle East to the Eastern
Mediterranean and toward Europe; (3) from other parts of
Africa across the Mediterranean Sea to Europe; and (4)
from Southeast Asia south toward Australia or north to
other parts of Asia.
Experts often characterize these flows as mixed migration,
defined as different groups of people-such as economic
migrants, refugees, asylum-seekers, stateless persons,
trafficked persons, and unaccompanied children-who
travel the same routes and use the same modes of
transportation. Sometimes referred to as irregular/
undocumented  migrants, these migrants usually do not have
the required documentation, such as passports and visas,
and often use unauthorized border crossings or pay
smugglers to assist them. The distinctions between groups
in these flows have raised questions about their status and
rights. A key policy consideration is whether the movement
is viewed as voluntary or forced. The U.N. High
Commissioner  for Refugees (UNHCR)  asserts that many
arrivals may be from refugee-producing countries and
require due process for asylum claims. Many also need
humanitarian assistance and protection, even if they do not
qualify as refugees. At the same time, at least some of the
arrivals are considered to be economic migrants.
GCM: Selected Themes and Objectives
The GCM   seeks to highlight and optimize the economic
benefits of migration while tackling the challenges for
communities and individuals in countries of origin, transit,
and destination. To minimize irregular/illegal migration, for
example, the GCM  highlights the need for the creation of
bilateral, regional, and multilateral labor mobility
agreements to reflect the demographics, labor markets, and
needs of vulnerable migrants, while recognizing that states
have to evaluate regulations on illegal entry/visa
overstayers and strengthen border management and
capacity. U.N. member states except the United States
typically completed their own consultations across
government policy sectors and levels, along with migrants,
diasporas, local communities, civil society, academia,
private sector, trade unions, national human rights
institutions, the media and various relevant stakeholders in
migration. In the final GCM agreement, U.N. member
states identified 23 objectives, which primarily focus on
several key themes (see text box) that affect vulnerable
migrants and those forced to leave their country of origin
(see Figure 1).


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