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Applying Old Remidies toNew Global Challenges will Always Fail!
Introduction
- Id like to thank my good friend John Bingham, and his colleagues for their
invitation to participate in this panel dealing with the global governance for
migration.
- I ampleased to participate in this years GFMD Civil Society Program, and I
wish you every success in finding consensus around specific and forward-looking
recommendations, in an effort to prod governments into taking appropriate policydecisions.
- When it comes to migration, all too many governments are preoccupied with two
overriding issues:
i) illegal immigrants, and
ii) maintaining national policy control
- While the rule of law and an orderly process are as crucial to any viable and
sustainable migration policy --- as they are to any other public policy domain ---
the challenge for governments is to lift their sights beyond their single obsession
with illegals.
- Moreover, governments must move beyond an exclusive national approach, and
begin to build an international framework for migration policy and decision-
making.
- Let me therefore share with you a few thoughts on the theme of migration
governance.
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Ushering in Global Governance
First, our Migration Governance gearbox is stuck in first gear.
- And this a serious problem because the new stretch of super highway that we are
now travelling on, in relation to migration policy, demands a much higher
performing standard.
- We desperately need to shift gears.
- In other words, our political leaders and institutions must provide a coherent
response and for that response to be effective, it must be global in context.
- After all, global challenges require global solutions.
- Migration is already a powerful and unmistakable sign of our globalized times.
This is not about preparing for something that will or might happen in the future.
This is very much about the here and now.
- Migration now touches all lands and all peoples. The old world, characterized by
sending and receiving countries, is just that --- the oldworld.
- Today, migrants leave, enter, or transit through all nations --- big and small, rich
and poor. The movement is South-North; North-South, and increasingly, South-
South.
- As well, the integration of our communities and economic markets are
deepening, bringing heightened pressures for the effective mobility of labor on an
international level.
- We cannot escape the reality --- migration has become a global phenomenon.
- Indeed, we needed to shiftyesterday.
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- Yet, government responses and actions are largely national in scope.
Second, why is migration treated so differently from other global policychallenges?
- After all, in our new world, going it alone is fast becoming the exception; the
old way of doing business.
- Today, cross border issues tend to be the shared concerns of all governments.
- They are also the focus of dedicated multilateral institutions, whose mandate isto bring international management and policy direction to these issues.
- Matters of international trade, labor, health, human rights, intellectual property,
and the environment, are all such examples.
- In short, these issues have the benefit of some semblance of global governance.
- Governments jointly own the opportunities and the burdens, in order to
develop more effective public policies, and advance the global common good.
- Yet, migration is a glaring exception to this rule.
- While there has been a recent increase in transnational efforts by governments,
international organizations and civil society, substantively, little has actually
changed.
- At the end of the day, the political buck continues to stop with nationalgovernments and they continue to restrict themselves to national actions and
initiatives.
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- As a case in point, when I was the Canadian Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, there were no regular, dedicated meetings during the calendar year,
where I could discuss the central issues of the day with fellow Ministers from
around the world. Eighteen years later, despite revolutionary changes to human
mobility, this is still regrettably the case.
- And yet, when I later became Minister of the Environment and of International
Trade, it seemed that I was meeting more with Ministers from all other countries
than I was with my own fellow Canadian colleagues! The same international
connectivity applies to Ministers of Finance, Defense, Health, Labor, and so on.
Third, there is no single, over-arching multilateral institution responsible for
the directing migrations policy traffic.
- Instead, the chore is scattered among some 14 different international agencies.
- Imagine if international trade, global health, or human rights, for instance, were
managed and governed by 14 different entities, rather than the WTO, WHO,
UNCHR, respectively? It would be quite messy and unruly, right?
- Well, why should migration policy accept a messy and unruly solution? How
long should we wait before correcting this institutional dysfunction?
- And what does a 14-headed leadership model really mean for global migration
policy and decision making?
- Frankly, it means that no one is in charge.
- No one agency is responsible nor accountable for strategically shaping and
guiding an international policy of migration.
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- And the Global Migration Group, based here in Geneva, that was established by
the former UN SG in an effort to better coordinate the policy globally, has yet to
provide this global leadership, despite best intentions.
Finally, it is not an issue for national governments to cede sovereignty, as
much as it is to reclaim their collective control of the migration reality.
- The truth is that under an accelerating era of globalization, employers, migrant
networks, agents, individual migrants, and yes, smugglers, have already taken
things into their own hands, irrespective of national policies on admission and
border control.
- While governments may have won a number of battles against unauthorized
migration, there is the much larger, ongoing warfor better control of who enters,
leaves, transits, and remains in our territories.
- How did tens of millions of undocumented individuals, enter our different
countries in the first place? And how does this movement continue, despite the
implementation of even more conservative regulatory and legislative measures
intended to stem these tides?
- In other words, an improved management of migration internationally --- one
that shares both the opportunities and challenges --- is really about countries and
governments reclaiming political sovereignty and control, and exercising it
collectively --- to the advantage of individual States, citizens, and migrants alike.
- And collectively means just that. Building a new international framework is an
obligation not just for some governments. Or, for just developed governments.
- It implies that developing countries, as well as a number of developed nations
who in the past only produced migrants, will now need to change and play policy
catch up, given that increasing number of migrants are today knocking on their
doors, as well.
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- All nations must do their part, since they all now have a vested interest in
steering the one boat they find themselves in together, to a safe harbour. Only then,
will we develop an effective international response.
- Only then will we come up with the global governance model that is missing.
In Closing
- Despite living in a global village, all politics remain local.
- I therefore fully appreciate that elected representatives need to react to localpressures.
- But, there is also an onus on the current generation of politicians to governfor
the times.
- And our times are global.
- Our issues, like migration, are increasingly international in cause and effect.
- Our international community needs greater collaboration, not less.
- Cooperation must become the rule, and not the exception.
- If governments are to rise to the occasion, leaders must recognize that they can
neither talk about the forces of international trade, nor the challenges of world
hunger, disease and terrorism, nor the dangers posed by climate change, nor indeed
about global migration and developmentand then proceed to deal with them in
an isolated fashion.
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- Clearly, beyond addressing domestic priorities and expectations, our politicians
must also exercise responsible, global political leadership.
- Our local politics surrounding migration must find an accommodation with the
urgent need to develop a global governance for migration.
- Ignoring this call will only ensure that the politics surrounding migration will
continue to get nastier and more divisive.
- After all, merely applying the same old remedies to new global challenges will
always fail.
The Honourable Sergio Marchi is a Special Advisor with Pace Global Advantage, a Canadian firmwith offices in Toronto and Geneva. Mr. Marchi also teaches at the US Webster University Campus
in Geneva, in the International Relations Dept. Formerly, he served as the Canadian Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration; Ambassador to the WTO and UN in Geneva; and as a Commissioner
on the UN Global Commission on International Migration.
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