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let’s Raise Migrants’ Voices

for an Open and Constructive Debateon Migration, Says IOM’s 2011 World Migration Report

Embargoed until 0001 cet 6 december

No.2/2011- Migrants’ voices must be heard in today’s all too often biased, polarized and negative debate on migration, says IOM’s World Migration Report 2011: Communicating Effectively about Migration.

The report states that although we live in an era of the greatest human mobility in recorded history, with greater acknowledgement that migration is one of the defining features of our contemporary world, it remains one of the most misunderstood issues of our time.

It, therefore, calls for a fundamental shift in the way we communicate about migration, especially during economic downturns when political discourse, media reports and public opinion on the nature, purpose and socio-economic impact of migration tend to be negative.

“It is all too evident that migration is often the catch-all issue that masks public fears and uncertainties relating to unemployment, housing and social cohesion in host countries. Migration can also be blamed for the loss of human capital and for economic dependency in countries of origin,” says IOM Director General William Lacy Swing.

The report argues that distorted communication about migration contributes to widespread anti-migrant sentiments, which have recently resurfaced in many parts of the world. Harmful stereotypes, discrimination and even xenophobia have reappeared in societies of destination, resulting in controversy on the value of multiculturalism.

Yet the report does not call for an uncritical bias on migration issues. An open discussion about migration means understanding and directly addressing what drives people’s fears and the negative attitudes as expressed in polls in order to reduce public hostility.

“Accurately informing the wider public about migration may be the single most important policy tool in all societies faced with increasing diversity,” Swing adds.

Analysing public perceptions of migrants and migration, the World Migration Report shows that people in destination countries tend to significantly overestimate the size of the migrant population, sometimes by as much as 300%. For example, the actual percentage of migrants in Italy was around 7% in 2010. Yet polls showed that the population perceived this percentage to be around a staggering 25%.

Similarly, in the United States of America, some public opinion polls showed that in 2010, the public believed the percentage of migrants in the population was at 39%, a far cry froman actual 14%.

The report notes that public attitudes towards migration continue to be strongly influenced by the socio-economic status, age and level of education of respondents andtheir level of interaction with migrants.

In Germany, a 2009 poll shows that 65% of youngpeoplesay they have more positive attitudes towards migration because theyregularly interactwith migrants.

The perceived availability of jobs and prevalent perceptions that migrants take jobs away from nationals and/or place a strain on a country’s resources also influence attitudes and poll results.

However, thereportnotes thatopinion polls can be unreliable as their results may be based on false assumptions of what a migrant is or is not.It also underlinesthatsurveys andmedia reports rarely pay attention to or echo the voice of employers, who remain key actors in today’s global migration scene.

The World Migration Report suggests that questions relating to the changing compositions of our societies and cultural diversity can be addressed by integrating diversity into mainstream media and by encouraging migrants to use new social media tools to regularly engage with host and home societies.

“Whilst honest and balanced media reportingis paramount to foster a more enlightened debate on migration, migrants mustalso find their voices to tell their own stories.All too oftenperceivedaspassive, helpless and marginalized individuals,migrants would then be seenfor what they are:shapersof their owndestiny,” says Director General Swing.

The report underlines the critical need to communicate effectively about migration since managing migration also implies managing how migrants are perceived in society.

Initiatives such as the EC-funded Migrants in the Spotlight, which brought together young media professionals and migrants in countries such as the Czech Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania and Slovakia, offer a glimpse of what could be done to foster a better informed migration debate.

“In our increasingly interconnected world, communicating effectively about migration is paramount to promotea wider understanding that migration isboth a reality and a necessity. If intelligently and humanely managed, migration is also highly desirable,” says Swing.

The report also includes a review of migration trends and major policy issues in 2010/2011. In celebration of IOM’s 60th anniversary, a special section of the report is dedicated to a historical look at work of the Organization, in terms of its policy and its operations. A ten year statistical overview of IOM’s programmes completes the picture.

The full report and press kit can be downloaded from Friday 2nd December.

A live webcast of the launch on 6 December will take place at from 1100 CET

The launch of the World Migration Report in Brussels will take place on 8 December from 10am at the Renaissance Hotel, Rue du Parnasse 19. For registration please contact .

For additional information:

Jean-Philippe Chauzy Tel: 41 22 717 9361 - Mobile: 41 79 285 4366

Jemini Pandya Tel 41 22 717 9486-Mobile: 41 79 217 3374,

Jumbe Omari Jumbe Tel: 41 22 717 9405 – Mobile: 4179 812 77 34, Email:

ISDN Line: 41 22 788 38 61