This volume is the first in a new Springer series to examine one
of humanity's most pressing concerns: global migration and its
implications for development. As population mobility grows in an
ever more crowded world, the Global Forum on Migration and
Development (GFMD) has emerged as the most important global
mechanism to deal with the urgent challenges it presents. This book
explores fresh strategies proposed by the GFMD in its fourth year
of operation in Mexico and beyond. Interrogating the relationship
between migration and development, the papers advance the Global
Forum's aims of reducing poverty and empowering low-income families
everywhere.
In 2010, there were 214 million international migrants
worldwide, nearly two and a half times the number in 1965. By 2050,
international migration is likely to expand sharply in scale, reach
and complexity, due to growing demographic disparities,
environmental change, shifting global political and economic
dynamics, technological innovations and social networks. Migration
can bring substantial gains to families in less-developed
countries, and mobile labor is an axiomatic feature of the global
economy. Yet outward migration of skilled workers can seriously
retard development at home, and exert pressure on wages in host
nations. Balancing these and other conflicting concerns requires
the substantive and expert discourse offered in this book.
Contributors discuss, and propose concrete solutions to, vital
issues such as the debilitating costs of cross-border labor
recruitment and the provision of social and income protection for
foreign contract workers. With suggestions on how to facilitate
connections between transnational families, and gender- and
family-sensitive immigration regimes, this book aims to foster
collaborative intergovernmental links as well as partnerships
between governments, civil society and international organizations.
It shows how the GFMD can positively influence policy and
institutional behavior while addressing wider systemic factors in
protecting mobile workers.
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