Let’s be sure to seize this opportunity that comes in the guise of a terrible pandemic.
Migrants working in frontline jobs are twice as likely to contract the coronavirus. They are also less likely to access basic services.
Bringing migrants home during the pandemic is not only a health concern but a social and economic one as well.
With large numbers of migrants returning to their countries of origin due to the pandemic, better reintegration plans are urgently needed.
It is time for EU governments to implement fair migration policies that recognise the vital role of its migrant workforce.
Employers are taking advantage of the COVID-19 crisis to unlawfully dismiss their migrant workforce and to withhold the wages and benefits that are owed to them.
COVID-19 has exposed deep-seated cracks in the Philippines’ export-based and remittance-dependent economy.
Travel restrictions may force more and more West Africans to use irregular channels of migration in the future.
Canada’s embrace of territorial closure during the COVID-19 pandemic has coincided with a spike in xenophobia and racism.
For Atlantic Canada to get through this crisis, a balance between public health regulations and migration are necessary.
Canadians have a front row seat to the spectacle of a society in which immigration and racial diversity have become a political fissure, and they do not like what they see.
In times of pandemic, women migrants are facing restrictions on their mobility and the devaluation of their labor.