Caribbean Intra-Regional Migration report released

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
53,090
Reputation
14,319
Daps
200,119
Reppin
Above the fray.
*presentation of report is from 9:00 to 29:00

Migration in the Caribbean: Challenges and Opportunities for a Changing Region



= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Caribbean Intra-Regional Migration Movements Are Significant and Diversifying, Aided by Unique Free Mobility Regimes​

March 9, 2023
WASHINGTON — Caribbean migration is often discussed in the context of significant out-migration to the United States, Canada and Europe, with movement within and to the region less examined. Yet as climate change, natural disasters and shifts in global mobility patterns reshape movements within and beyond the Caribbean, the intra-regional share of migration has been growing, a new report from the Migration Policy Institute (MPI) and Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) notes.

coverthumb_caribbean-migration-2023.png
The report, Migration, Integration, and Diaspora Engagement in the Caribbean: A Policy Review, explores the increasingly different forms beyond labor migration found within and to the Caribbean, offering data on immigrant populations at regional and national levels, as well as the policies and institutions in place to manage this mobility. It also looks at how governments are engaging their significant diasporas, including via remittances and private-sector development efforts.

The primary countries studied are The Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, the Dominican Republic, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago. To a lesser extent, the study also covers Aruba, Curaçao, the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) and the remaining Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Member States.

An estimated 859,400 intra-regional migrants lived within the Caribbean in 2020, outpacing the 745,700 extra-regional migrants—with the intra-regional share of overall migration rising from 46 percent in 2000 to 56 percent two decades later. Haitian migrants represented the largest share of immigrants in the nine countries studied. While immigrants from the United States, United Kingdom, China and Canada were also present in many of these countries, Venezuelans were the second largest immigrant population.

With climate change and natural disasters such as hurricanes and earthquakes representing important drivers of internal, intra-regional and extra-regional displacement, experts predict the frequency and impact of climate-related events are only likely to grow in the years ahead.

Unique regional mobility agreements, including under the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), have represented important pathways for intra-regional migration and have been helpful in facilitating the movement of displaced people during times of environmental crisis. Yet the report notes a notable lack of national-level institutions and regulatory frameworks for asylum and refugee protection throughout the region, with displacement responses largely addressed on an ad hoc basis.
“The Caribbean is particularly vulnerable to the adverse consequence of climate change due to its geographic location, lack of resilient infrastructure and lack of resources and development to build resilience,” the authors write. “Without external funding and assistance in developing climate-adaptation measures, climate change is and will continue to be a major cause of displacement across the region and emigration from the Caribbean to North America and elsewhere.”

After examining integration and diaspora engagement challenges and opportunities, the report concludes with recommendations to support effective migration and integration governance, including building on existing networks and mechanisms for regional coordination and cooperation, financing initiatives to strengthen institutional governance capacity and improving data collection and sharing.
 
Last edited:

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
53,090
Reputation
14,319
Daps
200,119
Reppin
Above the fray.

Comissiong: Haitians ‘key to CARICOM economic development’​


19/06/2024


Barbados’ Ambassador to CARICOM David Comissiong. (FP)


Haiti’s large and youthful population could help unlock solutions to major economic challenges facing the Caribbean region, Barbados’ Ambassador to CARICOM David Comissiong has contended.
Speaking at a CARICOM forum in Canada on Haiti Now: Development Priorities and Interventions, he said Haiti – a full member of the 15-member bloc since 2002 – presented unique opportunities to address labour shortages and stimulate growth amid ageing populations in many member states.
“Haiti could actually be the key to the robust economic development of CARICOM,” the envoy said, noting the nation’s population makes up a significant portion of the 18 million people across the 15-member regional bloc.
He contrasted Haiti’s demographics with Barbados, which he said was underpopulated despite being CARICOM’s most densely populated country. “Barbados does not naturally reproduce its population. Were it not for inward migration, we would have a decline in population and we have a kind of first world profile… an ageing population.”


Ambassador Comissiong argued young Haitian economic migrants could “play a role in building the economy, contributing to the tax revenues, contributing to the social security system” in Barbados and other countries such as Guyana, Suriname and Belize, which he described as “very large geographical spaces with relatively minute populations”.
“Haiti has a demographic resource that could be deployed [and] utilised right across the Caribbean Community,” he said.


But the ambassador acknowledged Haiti would need to achieve a degree of stability to effectively harness this potential, recounting a situation in 2018 when a visa-free regime for Haitians coupled with new flights from Panama led to so many arrivals in Barbados that “the whole situation became untenable”.
“If we could only stabilise Haiti so that there’s not that great push factor where so many Haitians are seeking to leave, we could have a more orderly and managed migration policy,” Ambassador Comissiong said. “A CARICOM well-thought-out, well-constructed migration policy with Haiti at the centre of it can be the key to the future development of our Caribbean Community.
“CARICOM must play a very central role and one of the critical components of that central role must be a migration policy with Haiti at the centre of it,” Comissiong said
 
Top