Migration Compact is the first, globally negotiated, cooperative framework to facilitate safe, orderly and regular migration.
December 10, 2018—Marrakech, Morocco – Canada believes that
effective international cooperation is essential in order to address
common challenges as well as harness the benefits of global migration.
Today, Canada announced it adopted the Global Compact for Safe,
Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM), the first global framework on all
aspects of international migration. The Honourable Ahmed Hussen,
Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, made the announcement
at the Intergovernmental Conference to Adopt the Global Compact for
Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration in Marrakech, Morocco.
The GCM acknowledges the serious challenges that irregular migration
poses, while emphasizing the positive contributions of migrants, and the
benefits of regular pathways and well-managed migration systems.
Migrant and refugee flows are a growing phenomenon around the world.
According to the United Nations, there are currently about 258 million
people on the move. Of these, 68.5 million are forcibly displaced people
– including refugees and asylum seekers – who are forced to flee their
homes in search of new ones due to violence, discrimination and war.
The Compact sets out 23 objectives, each focusing on one aspect of
migration. Participating states are not expected to implement each
action, but to view them as examples of best practices on how to achieve
the objectives. It emphasizes state sovereignty as a guiding principle
and that it is a state’s sovereign right to control its own borders.
Canada has been actively engaged in the development of the GCM. This includes the majority of the almost 200 action items, which reflect Canadian practices and are aligned with the compact’s objectives and commitments. Following more than a year of negotiations, this is an important milestone and represents the first multilateral framework for the global response to migration.
Quick facts
- In September 2016, the UN General Assembly adopted the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants. That Declaration launched separate processes to create 2 non-legally binding Global Compacts: the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly, and Regular Migration and the Global Compact on Refugees.
- Canada’s engagement on the GCM has been co-led by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada and Global Affairs Canada.
- The number of international migrants worldwide has continued to grow and was estimated at 258 million in 2017. This constitutes a 49 percent increase compared to 2000.
Backgrounder
In response to the Syria refugee crisis and increasing movements of
refugees and migrants, the UN General Assembly in 2016 adopted the New
York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants. That declaration launched
separate processes to create 2 non-binding international agreements: one
for refugees (Global Compact on Refugees) and one for migrants (the
Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration).
The number of international migrants continues to grow and was
estimated at 258 million worldwide in 2017, a 49% increase compared to
2000. International migrants represent 3.3% of the world’s total
population. Most international migration is conducted through regular
channels without incident.
The Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM) was
crafted based on a year of thematic, regional and multi-stakeholder
discussions covering all aspects of migration, followed by 6 rounds of
intergovernmental negotiations in New York. The text addresses a wide
range of issues, sectors, actors and means of cooperation at global,
regional, national and sub-national levels. It seeks to reconcile
tensions underlying international migration, including national security
concerns, human security, dignity and rights.
Considered a historic achievement and the first globally negotiated
cooperative framework to cover all aspects of migration, the GCM aims to
improve cooperation on international migration in order to ‘make
migration work for all’. It draws attention to the challenges that
irregular migration poses, while also emphasizing the positive
contributions of migrants, and the benefits of regular pathways and
well-managed migration systems.
The Compact sets out 23 objectives, each focusing on one aspect of
migration. Each of the objectives is supported by a list of best
practices that states can draw from to achieve the GCM’s objectives. The
text includes mechanisms for follow-up, review and implementation that
will increase migration’s visibility in regional and UN forums. It also
endorses the creation of a UN Network on Migration coordinated by the
International Organization for Migration.
Canada played an active role in the process to develop the GCM and worked closely and constructively with traditional and non-traditional partners to reach agreement on these important and complex issues. The successful negotiation of the GCM in the current global climate related to migration and sovereignty underscores the value of multilateral dialogue on critical global issues and the role the UN can play in supporting a rules-based international system.
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