1 / 12

Challenges and Opportunities of Data Collection on International Migration

Challenges and Opportunities of Data Collection on International Migration. Jason Schachter Policy Section Population Division UN/DESA. Interregional Workshop on International Migration, Geneva, 23 September 2011. Background. International migration is a growing trend

Download Presentation

Challenges and Opportunities of Data Collection on International Migration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Challenges and Opportunities of Data Collection on International Migration Jason Schachter Policy Section Population Division UN/DESA Interregional Workshop on International Migration, Geneva, 23 September 2011

  2. Background • International migration is a growing trend • In 2010, an estimated 214 million international world-wide (178 million on 2000) • Increased demand for data • 2006 High-Level Dialogue on International Migration and Development • Global Forum on Migration and Development • To advance understanding and cooperation on the nexus between migration and development and foster practical and action-oriented outcomes • Valid, comparable, accessible, and timely data are critical for improving policy making

  3. Examples of policy driven research questions • “Size” of migrant population • Number of emigrants (people moving out of country) • Are current levels of emigration acceptable? • “Characteristics” of migrants • Who is moving in or out? (age, gender, education level, legal status, etc.) • Need to attract highly skilled immigrants/encourage return of highly educated emigrants? • “Impact” of migration on people and areas • Effect of migration on family in country of origin/on local labor market • Need for integration policies of non-nationals?

  4. Defining International Migration • Change of usual residence (time component) • Geography (origin/destination) • Migrant Classifications • Duration of stay • Reason for move • Legal status • Measurement (Stocks and Flows)

  5. International Migration Data Sources • Census • National Household Surveys • Population Registers • Administrative Sources • Residence/work permits • Asylum applications • Consular data • Border collection data

  6. Countries asking three key questions on international migration

  7. Challenges to collecting migration data • Data comparability • Between, and even within, countries • Data harmonization (using same time period, same definitions of migrant groups, same questions, etc.) • Data validity • Coverage (hard-to-find populations) • Using sources whose main purpose is not to collect migration data • Data availability (tabulation & dissemination) • Accessibility • Timeliness

  8. Challenges, cont. • Resources to improve data quality • Sustainability • Getting more from limited resources • Capacity Building • Measurement of all migration-types • Emigration • Remittances • Irregular • Environmental • Repeat/return/circular migration

  9. Opportunities • Harmonization of terms and definitions • Better utilization of existing data sources • Improve dissemination of data • Release more detailed tabulations • Improve documentation and methodology for production of migration statistics • Take better advantage of administrative sources • Automation of border control data • UNHCR refugee databases

  10. Opportunities, cont. • Development of new data sources • Better utilization of alternative sources like household surveys, registers • Improve communication between country stakeholders and between neighbouring countries • Data sharing & exchange

  11. Commission on International Migration Data for Development and Research Policy Migrants Count: Five Steps Towards Better Migration Data • Ask basic census questions (place of birth, country of citizenship, previous residence) and disseminate results • Compile and release existing administrative data sources • Centralize Labor Force Surveys • Include standardized migration survey modules on existing household surveys • Public access to Microdata

  12. Thank you

More Related