Executive Summary
Migration has the potential to enrich the lives both of migrants and of the communities in which they live, but immigration from developing countries will not be transformed into the voluntary, beneficial and welcome movement of free persons that it could and should be unless global policies are refocused to put poverty reduction at the centre of economic policymaking, instead of merely a hoped-for by-product of economic growth.
Unless and until such a reform takes place controlling immigration will remain an intractable problem for the industrialised world. Worse, the benefits of migration to the sending countries will at best only partly relieve the symptoms of a fundamental malaise, and may well increase the vulnerability and dependency of their economies still further.
Get the publication

Free download
( 837KB )
Written by
Similar publications
Why the Cap Won't Fit
Global migration realities 2010-2050Cast Adrift
How the rich are leaving the poor to sink in a warming worldEcological Debt
Global Warming and the Wealth of NationsSocial investment for community development
Completing the half-built houseVirou fumaça?
Ameaças do impacto do aquecimento global sobre o desenvolvimento humano e respostas frente a ele
nef publications are licensed under a Creative Commons license. You are free to quote, copy and share this publication, as long as you attribute it to nef and do not use it for commerical purposes.
Please contact us if you are interested in translating a nef publication.
