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Africa: Migration, Inequalities, & Human Rights
AfricaFocus Bulletin
Oct 13, 2011 (111013)
(Reposted from sources cited below)
Editor's Note
Issues related to the situation of refugees and other
migrants are hotly contested in locations as diverse as
Libya, South Africa, Kenya, Western Europe, and the United
States. Anti-migrant sentiment is a recurring phenomenon,
featuring restrictive legislation, official abuses against
immigrants, and in extreme cases, xenophobic violence. Yet
these issues are most often considered in isolation, rather
than also as among the most telling indicators of
fundamental structural inequalities between nations.
As regular readers of AfricaFocus are aware, migration is
one of the issues regularly covered in AfricaFocus Bulletin
(see http://www.africafocus.org/migrexp.php). I am pleased
to report that a new 95-page paper I wrote for the Nordic
Africa Institute's Current African Issues series is now
available.
The systematic inequality in today's world, which condemns
millions of people to grinding poverty and untimely death,
should be as unacceptable as slavery, colonialism, and
apartheid. In this essay I argue that addressing specific
migration issues, such as xenophobic violence, "brain
drain," or the contribution of remittances to development,
is insufficient without also rethinking assumptions about
the relationship of life chances and rights to nationality
as an accident of birth, which, like race, gender, or
ethnic group, should not serve as justification for
differential treatment.
Topics included in the paper include: framing migration,
the diversity of African migration, migration frameworks:
international and internal, migration and global
inequalities, migration and development, migration and
human rights, varieties of migrants' rights organizing,
and framing advocacy agendas. There is also an extensive
set of references, including books, reports, articles, and
websites.
This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains the foreword to the
paper, by Fantu Cheru, the executive summary, and an annex
on "Implications for Development Goals and Measures."
The full text of the paper is available for download from
the Nordic Africa Institute at http://nai.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2:442755,
and will also be available later on the AfricaFocus website
as well. Additional excerpts on specific topics will appear
in future issues of AfricaFocus Bulletin.
Update Oct 24, 2011
The paper is also now available in sections, in html format,
at
http://www.africafocus.org/editor/nai-migration.php
++++++++++++++++++++++end editor's note+++++++++++++++++
African Migration, Global Inequalities, and Human Rights:
Connecting the Dots
William Minter
Current African Issues, no.46
Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, Uppsala 2011
http://www.nai.uu.se/publications
Foreword
Professor Fantu Cheru
Research Director
The Nordic Africa Institute
The era of the so-called Washington consensus of market
fundamentalism is long past. The developed countries are
mired in structural economic crises, while emerging powers
such as China, India and Brazil are advancing their
economic presence on the world scene and inspiring new
policy debates about the prerequisites for development.
And a recent joint study by China's International Poverty
Reduction Centre and the Development Assistance Committee
of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) suggests that "Africa will be the next
big emerging region".
The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) set povertyreduction
targets for the year 2015, but they did not
fundamentally break with the ideology of market
fundamentalism. Addressing only "poverty", these goals
avoided fundamental issues of international inequality and
social injustice. However, it is now clear to many people,
including many policymakers in both rich and poor
countries, that economic growth is meaningless unless it
is accompanied by measures to reduce the structural
inequalities in societies. The post-MDG agenda must focus
on addressing the underlying structures of production,
distribution and ownership â and of power â that
perpetuate imbalances.
In Africa, that means we need developmental states that
have the capacity to advance both economic growth and
social justice. We need new politics that empower the poor
and values that advance common objectives and ethical
principles. We need new institutions that really work on
behalf of the marginalised segments of society. There must
be incentives to improve productivity growth, jobs and
incomes, as well as resources for realising human
aspirations and human security.
But in our globalised and globalising world, no country,
large or small, can advance its own interests without
considering its neighbours, its trading partners, its
region and, indeed, the entire global order. Developmental
states need a developmental world.
In this essay commissioned by the Nordic Africa Institute,
William Minter takes migration as an indicator of the need
to move beyond the national dimension. Migration, he
argues, should not be seen as a self-contained issue,
considered in the destination countries as a problem to be
managed or in countries of origin as an adjunct to
development. Rather, migration should be understood as a
process emerging from the relationships between countries,
especially inequalities of power and wealth. New measures
beyond the MDGs must include the national level of
analysis, but also directly address the imbalances between
countries.
One must also focus on the rights of migrants themselves.
Bringing together results from areas of research most
often considered separately, Minter stresses that
fundamental human rights are due both to those who decide
to leave their countries and those who decide to stay. The
rights of migrants are threatened by anti-migrant
sentiment, xenophobia and the criminalisation of migration
in places as diverse as Norway, Italy, Libya and South
Africa. And the rights of the global majority in
developing countries are still threatened by a
systematically biased global economic order. Until
fundamental inequalities between countries are addressed,
the pattern of migration in today's world will continue to
evoke the spectre of South Africa's apartheid era, when
authorities tried to confine blacks to their "homelands",
except when their labour was needed elsewhere.
African development and global development, in short,
require more than measures to address growth and poverty.
Conflicts over migration are dramatic indicators that
"development" must also directly confront morally
unacceptable global inequalities.
Executive Summary
The concerns of destination countries and the framing of
migration as a problem have long dominated public debate
on international migration, and to a lesser extent, policy
analysis and scholarly research. Anti-migrant sentiment,
leading to restrictive legislation, official abuses
against immigrants, and in extreme cases xenophobic
violence, is widespread in countries as diverse as South
Africa, Libya, Italy, Switzerland, and the United States.
Migrants are widely blamed for crime, for "taking our
jobs," and for threatening national identity. Empirical
evidence to the contrary has had relatively little impact
on public opinion.
At the same time, there has been increasing attention in
recent years to the impact of migration on the development
of migrants' countries of origin, with emphasis on the
potential contributions of remittances, efforts to counter
the "brain drain" of skilled professionals, and the role
of the diaspora in investment and "co-development."
Migrants' rights organisations, particularly in Western
Europe, have taken the lead in highlighting the need for
protection against abuses of the human rights of migrants
themselves. There is also increasing scholarly attention to
the topic, as well as multilateral institutional attention
by, for example, the UN's Special Rapporteur on the Rights
of Migrants and the European Union Agency for Fundamental
Rights. But it is still true that the rights of migrants
themselves are most often marginalized in official
discussions between migrant-receiving and migrant-sending
countries.
In 2009, the UNDP Human Development Report called for "winwin
-win" approaches to migration policy that would provide
benefits for receiving countries, sending countries, and
migrants. Such scenarios will have little chance of
success unless steps are also taken to address fundamental
issues of global inequality so that both those who stay
and those who move have access to fundamental human
rights. The growing phenomenon of irregular migration, and
more generally of "problem" migration that leads to
conflict, does not result only from specific national
policies. It also derives from rising inequality within and
between nations, combined with the technological changes
that make migration a conceivable option for larger and
larger numbers. Thus trends in migration do not only point
to problems or opportunities for development; they also
signal fundamental issues facing both those who move and
those who do not.
This essay highlights the relationships between different
migration issues and the broader context of global
inequalities. It "connects the dots" rather than exploring
any one issue in depth. It is intended to stimulate further
debate and research that can contribute to re-framing
migration not as a technical issue for migration
specialists, but as one of the fundamental issues that must
be addressed in order to bring about a more just global
order.
While African refugees, numbering some 2.8 million at the
end of 2009, are prominent in the international image of
African migrants, they constitute less than 10% of all
African-born migrants living outside their country of
birth. The majority of African migrants, like the majority
of migrants from other world regions, do not fit the
definition of refugees fleeing violence or political
persecution; rather, they are seeking to escape economic
hardship and find better living conditions. Much of that
migration is indeed "forced," but the force involved is
that of economic inequality between countries and regions.
This paper first reviews African migration by region and
then traces frameworks for understanding migration,
particularly the links between migration and global
inequalities. This sets the context for exploring the
specific issues of migration and development and migration
and human rights. The paper concludes with examples of
migrants' rights organizing, observations on framing
advocacy agendas, and an annex suggesting the implications
of migration for expanding development goals and measures.
In North Africa, the majority of migrants go to Europe or
the Middle East. In Africa's other regions, most migrants
move to countries within the African continent, with
smaller proportions moving to Europe, North America, the
Middle East, or other regions. In West Africa, the movement
is largely within the region, from inland to the coast. In
Southern Africa, migrants flow predominantly to South
Africa. In Central and East Africa, the flows vary markedly
by country, depending on geography and on the history of
colonial and linguistic ties.
In considering migration and development, the dominant
themes of research and debate have been remittances and
the flow of skilled labour (brain drain/ gain). There has
been more attention in recent years to the broader roles of
the diaspora population, but the complexity of diaspora
relationships remains one of the major areas that needs
further attention.
In practice, protection of the rights of migrants,
including both refugees and other migrants, falls far
short of that already agreed in international law.
Although the 1990 Convention on the Rights of Migrant
Workers has been ratified by only 44 states, including no
major destination country, multiple international human
rights agreements require respect for the rights of all
people, regardless of migrant status. The failure to
respect these universal human rights, and particularly the
rights of irregular migrants, is reinforced by antiimmigrant
public opinion, by right-wing political
mobilisation, and by the practices of governments in their
management of migration systems.
Any effective defence of migrants' human rights will
require greater organization by migrants themselves, as
well as coalitions with other allies committed to justice
and human rights. As illustration, the essay includes
brief mentions of four cases of migration-related activism
in different contexts: the Sans-Papiers in France, the
Black Alliance for Just Immigration in California, the
Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), and the
Migrants' Rights Network in the United Kingdom. A final
section lays out summary observations about advocacy
related to migrants' rights in destination and transit
countries, to immigration "reform" and "managed
migration," and to migration and global human development.
An annex proposes possible additions to measures of
progress based on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs),
stressing (1) measures of global inequality and inequality
between countries involved in migration systems, (2)
measures that might make the MDG goal 8 of "partnership"
less vague, and (3) measures for countries of origin on
policies related to emigration and relationships with
their diaspora populations.
Annex: Implications for Development Goals and Measures
As an illustrative exercise, this annex examines what it
might mean if migration were to be taken seriously as
showing the need for fundamental changes in common
development goals, rather than only a separate unconnected
issue. The Millennium Development Goals which now define
measures of global progress for 2015 are defined as "antipoverty"
goals52, and do not mention inequality. And, with
the exception of goal 8, which calls for a vaguely defined
"global partnership for development," they all apply only
at a national level, and are applied exclusively to
developing countries.
Yet the failure to find sustainable solutions to protection
of the rights of migrants and the social conflicts related
to migration is a constant reminder that global human
development does not depend only on developments within
individual countries. Relationships between countries, and
in particular, the levels of gross inequality that impel
high levels of migration, also require measurable goals
for progress, even if achievement of those goals faces
formidable obstacles.
While these are unlikely to be included in the least common
denominator of official consensus, and are undoubtedly
more difficult to measure than nationallevel goals, such a
thought experiment should be part of the agenda for
expanding the debate. Yet even current efforts to expand
the scope of measurements of societal progress fail to
consider this transnational dimension.
Such transnational and relational measurements should
include measures of transnational inequality, measures for
developed countries that might make the concept of
"partnership" less vague, and measures for countries of
origin, focused on the effectiveness of their policies on
emigration and the diaspora.
The most important, and also the most unlikely to be
incorporated into official targets, is the level of
transnational inequality. At a global scale, notes
inequality expert Branko Milanovic (2011: 151â152), global
inequality is now at an all-time high of 70 Gini points,
greater than in highly unequal countries such as South
Africa and Brazil. Although the rising level of aggregate
inequality is now being held back by rapid growth in China
and India, inequality both between countries and within
countries continues to grow. The ratio between the average
income of the top 10 percent and the bottom 10 percent is
about 80 to 1. According to the 2010 Human Development
Report, the average income of OECD countries in 2008
($37,077), was 4.7 times that of the developing Arab
states ($7,861) and 18.1 times that of Sub-Saharan Africa
($2,050). Life expectancy of 80.3 years for OECD countries
contrasts with 69.1 for developing Arab countries and 52.7
for Sub-Saharan Africa. For mean years of schooling, the
comparison is 11.4 to 5.7 and 4.5, respectively.
Such high levels of inequality make continued immigration
on a scale far larger than sustainable, with much of it
forced by economic need, unavoidable, regardless of the
levels of restriction imposed or the attempts at management
of migration. Despite rich-country reluctance even to
consider setting goals to reduce inequality, that adds a
practical incentive to the moral imperative for greater
global equality. It also provides a rationale for measuring
inequality not only at the global level but within major
regional migration systems. Changes in both policies and
results will depend on changes in the political and
economic power of developing countries themselves, as
illustrated in the rising prominence of the BRICS54
emerging powers. Despite recent increases in growth rates,
Africa's bargaining power is much more limited. But it is
already time to build a conceptual framework for more
ambitious goals, with measurable indicators, that move
beyond the Millennium Development Goals.
Hypothetically, if one were to take as a goal "reducing
global inequality by half by the year 2050," that could
serve as a baseline for similar goals within more limited
groups of nations. At a global level, using the Gini index
as a measure, that would mean reducing the level of global
inequality to 35 Gini points, slightly higher than levels
of inequality within most European countries, but lower
than that in the United States. Or, taking ratios of
average income, this would mean reducing the level of
inequality between Europe and Sub-Saharan Africa, for
example, to 9 to 1 instead of 18 to 1.
Defining similar measures for groups of related countries
could contribute to discussions linking migration issues
with those of the related development trajectories of the
countries involved. Such measures, for example, would be
relevant for evaluating the "Partnership for Democracy and
Shared Prosperity with the Southern Mediterranean"
announced by the European Union in March 2011. Other sets
of regions linked to Africa for which such transnational
measures would be relevant include, at the most general
level, the OECD countries and Africa, European Union and
Africa, North America and Africa, and the non- African
Arab world in relation to East, West, and Central Africa.
Within Africa, in addition to the levels of inequality
within the continent as a whole, the levels of inequality
between North Africa and East, West, and Central Africa and
those between South Africa and the remainder of Sub-Saharan
Africa are both particularly relevant for migration and
the equity of development outcomes. In each case, the
measure of progress should be demonstrable success in
reducing the ratios of inequality between regions at
different levels of development.
Focusing on transnational inequality and migration could
also facilitate exploring measures of "partnership" which
are less vague than those now included in Millennium
Development Goal 8. The first target listed for that goal,
"develop further an open, rule-based, predictable, nondiscriminatory
trading and financial system," could,
ironically, easily be a prescription for increased
inequality. In addition to the familiar indicators already
included on aid, market access, and debt sustainability,
indicators such as the following could shed light on the
realities of partnership:
- Supplement and compare measures of Official Development
Assistance with tracking of illicit financial flows from
developing to developed countries. The non-governmental
organization Global Financial Integrity (http://www.gfip.
org) has begun to build the evidence base for such
measures, identifying some US$6.5 trillion in such flows
out of the developing world from 2000 through 2008 (more
than 7 times ODA for the same period). Data on the
destination of these flows requires reforms in developed
countries on transparency for financial reporting. But
judging the net transfer of resources relevant to global
inequality is not feasible without their inclusion.
- When estimating the financial effects of migration on
origin and destination countries, include not only
remittances but also gains and losses due to migration of
skilled labor. Using the concept of "migration balances,"
researcher Thomas Melonio (2008) has proposed such a
comparative measure, and suggested that destination
countries should assume the obligation (additional to
existing levels of development aid) of compensating origin
countries for such losses of skilled labor.
- There are elaborate measures of policies for integration
of migrants in European and some other developed countries
(http://www.mipex.eu). But this should be supplemented by
measures that also include the level of openness in
relation to the structural demand for migration resulting
from transnational inequalities. One such measure, for
example, might be the ratio of regular immigrants to the
total of irregular immigrants, deportations, and
interceptions. Including deportations and interceptions as
well as irregular immigrants would ensure that the measure
would not be improved by increased restrictions and
enhanced enforcement measures that simply displace
potential irregular immigrants to other countries.
For countries of origin of migrants, probably the most
relevant measures are simply indicators of whether and how
fast they are closing the development gap with potential
destination countries for migrants. More specific measures
of success, with respect to migration, might include the
subjective measure of reducing the number of people who
say they want to leave (as measured by the Gallup
Potential Net Migration Index, available on
http://www.gallup.com) and the more objective measure of
reducing the tertiary emigration rate of professionals
leaving the country.
In terms of the contribution of the diaspora to
development, in addition to the topics of remittances and
investments stressed in recent World Bank reports (Ratha
et al. 2011), attention could also be given to developing
measures of constructive home country to diaspora
relationships. This would, of course, require greater
efforts to collect data on diaspora populations, including
both initiatives by origin countries and collaboration
between statistical agencies in origin and destination
countries.
The failure of many countries to protect their diasporas
has been starkly visible in the crisis of evacuation of
migrants from Libya in 2011, as those left behind have
been disproportionately those from Sub-Saharan Africa. The
extent to which this is a failure only of capacity or also
of will is not clear. But it is clear that few African
countries have adequate consular facilities to protect
their overseas nationals. Significant increases in such
efforts would be a highly visible sign of progress, and
perhaps even a candidate for indicators such as the ratio
of consular officers to diaspora nationals.
Other measures that could be useful should the data be
available might include:
- What proportion of emigrants retain citizenship ties to
the country of origin? While this would reflect in part
the availability of the option of dual citizenship, it
would also be an indicator of the extent of loyalty and
potential contributions to development in the home
country.
- Measures of income and other development indicators for
the set of people born in a country, including both
residents and emigrants, as suggested by Clemens and
Pritchett (2008). In terms of measuring human development,
this would give equal weight to people born in a country,
whether they move or stay.
- An appropriate complement to such a measure would be the
levels of inequality between those in the diaspora and
home-country residents. The greater the gap, the less
likely that relationships with the diaspora would or
should be viewed as sustainable contributions to national
development.
AfricaFocus Bulletin is an independent electronic
publication providing reposted commentary and analysis on
African issues, with a particular focus on U.S. and
international policies. AfricaFocus Bulletin is edited by
William Minter.
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