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MPI discusses interesting developments and seek to peer around the corner on pressing migration topics in conversations with top experts

Migration Policy Institute Podcasts Migration Policy Institute

    • Onderwijs

MPI discusses interesting developments and seek to peer around the corner on pressing migration topics in conversations with top experts

    World of Migration: What Does It Take to Increase Refugees’ Access to Education and Work? Insights from Ethiopia

    World of Migration: What Does It Take to Increase Refugees’ Access to Education and Work? Insights from Ethiopia

    In recent years, the Ethiopian government has pledged to increase access to education and employment for the more than 900,000 refugees living in Ethiopia, most in camps. There have been ups and downs along the way, but a few key trends have emerged. In this episode of our podcast, Migration Policy Institute Europe Associate Director Camille Le Coz speaks with researcher Abis Getachew about the major policy shifts to open classrooms and jobs to refugees and whether they have been successful.

    • 30 min.
    Changing Climate, Changing Migration: Confronting the Ethical Questions around Climate Change and Migration

    Changing Climate, Changing Migration: Confronting the Ethical Questions around Climate Change and Migration

    Do countries that are major polluters have a moral responsibility to aid people displaced by hurricanes, sea-level rise, and other events driven or exacerbated by climate change? What form might that responsibility take? For this episode, we are joined by Jamie Draper, who focuses on political philosophy and ethics at Utrecht University. While he argues that certain countries do have a responsibility to aid displaced people, labeled “climate migrants” by some, in his view that does not necessarily translate to offering them protection.

    • 29 min.
    Changing Climate, Changing Migration: Could a Loss and Damage Fund Compensate Climate Migrants?

    Changing Climate, Changing Migration: Could a Loss and Damage Fund Compensate Climate Migrants?

    The world is grappling with the idea of restitution for people who have been negatively affected by the impacts of climate change—potentially including displacement within a country or across international borders. World leaders are at the early stages of creating a global loss and damage fund to financially compensate these climate victims. Much remains unresolved, including complicated and controversial questions about which countries owe money to whom, and how to attach a dollar figure to intangible losses such as destruction of natural land. In this episode, we speak with Adelle Thomas from Climate Analytics to wade through the thicket of challenges ahead, in particular as relates to climate migrants—those displaced by hostile environmental conditions linked to a rapidly changing climate.

    • 26 min.
    Changing Climate, Changing Migration: Moving Mountains: Climate Migration in High Altitudes

    Changing Climate, Changing Migration: Moving Mountains: Climate Migration in High Altitudes

    Many people are leaving rural mountain areas around the globe because their livelihoods are becoming less profitable and the threat of landslides and other disasters is increasing. As the impacts of climate change grow, these mountain residents may face additional challenges dealing with environmental disruption. And by moving to urban areas, they may face a new set of issues and lose connection with their homelands. In this episode, we speak with Amina Maharjan from the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development about the unique climate migration issues that are witnessed in mountain regions.

    • 26 min.
    Changing Climate, Changing Migration: Are the Pacific’s Climate Migration Experiments a Preview for the World?

    Changing Climate, Changing Migration: Are the Pacific’s Climate Migration Experiments a Preview for the World?

    A landmark climate migration deal inked in late 2023 would allow hundreds of climate-vulnerable residents of the small island nation of Tuvalu to move to Australia. The pact is the latest step for a region that is at the leading edge globally in policy experimentation to address climate displacement. This Australia-Tuvalu deal, which is not uncontroversial, follows a brief and ultimately shelved attempt by New Zealand to create a “climate refugee” visa. How are these policies playing out, and what can the rest of the world learn from the Pacific experiences? This episode features renowned legal scholar Jane McAdam, who directs the Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law at UNSW.

    • 31 min.
    Migration, Integration, and Development in Secondary Cities

    Migration, Integration, and Development in Secondary Cities

    Secondary cities are increasingly gaining attention as homes to refugees and other migrants and, as result, they are targets of development programming and international support. In Africa, these secondary cities are seeing their overall populations swell even as migrant numbers also increase, placing pressure on services such as education, health care, and sanitation. At the same time, refugees and other migrants often find it difficult to access jobs and build livelihoods, preventing them from achieving self-reliance.
    In order to surmount these challenges and achieve long-term socioeconomic inclusion, public policy changes and support are needed, along with partnerships that could facilitate the path to inclusion. Marking the release of the report, Migration and Displacement in Secondary Cities: Insights from Côte d’Ivoire and Uganda, this webinar examines the challenges that refugees and other migrants face in—and place on—secondary cities, and the capacity of these municipalities to respond to these needs. Speakers explore possible strategies that local governments and partners can take to address socioeconomic and inclusion challenges while being sensitive to gender dynamics. The webinar asks what types of support are needed at national, regional, and international levels, and how development actors can better partner with secondary cities and local communities in their programming.

    • 59 min.

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