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Regulated migration programs can provide the best frameworks for ensuring that migration benefits not only the migrants and their families but also their origin and host countries. Promoting secure, legal migration requires better linked-up labour market and migration planning and policy between origin and host countries, which can ensure income benefits for the migrants and sustainable labour supply for both countries.
Facilitating legal migration could also have a deterrent effect on the incidence of illicit migrant labour recruitment. Enforcing legality can effectively control irregular migration practices, particularly by smugglers and traffickers, and protect public security and stability as well as the human security of migrants, thereby strengthening the credibility of migration and its flow-on effects for development. More regular labour migration programs should undercut the profitability of smuggling and trafficking, and reduce the incidence of exploitation and abuse of migrants and strengthen migrants’ capacities to remit earnings and other resources to needy families and communities.
It is in the interest of all migration and development stakeholders to share the responsibility of promoting secure legal migration through agreements and mutual arrangements, also giving regard to mixed flows of migrants, including asylum-seekers. This can foster mutual trust between countries, and strengthen cooperation in other strategic areas. Where countries lack the ability and resources to do so, there should be bilateral, regional and international capacity building strategies to support them.
This Roundtable will build on the Brussels RT 1 discussions on “good practices” for managing migration to the benefit of development, in particular through bilateral and circular migration arrangements. It also introduces the additional element of security and enforcement, with a specific focus on counter-smuggling and trafficking, including the capacity building needs of countries to better address these issues, and efforts within regional consultative processes to better share the costs and benefits of cooperation.
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