ABSTRACT
Many states lack the standing capacity – housing, food, medical, or legal assistance – if thousands of people cross their border in one day. In addition, developing countries often lack the administrative capacity, expertise, and legal frameworks to process immigration or asylum applications and issue visas or refugee statuses. In response, the United Nations and other international organisations (IOs) propose to build the capacity of states through direct aid, training schemes, consultancies, twinning programmes, and start-up funds. The 2018 Global Compacts on Refugees (GCR) and the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM) were in part created with the mandates to ‘build capacity’ in designated states. This article examines how the meaning of capacity building has changed in migration management over the last 70 years. First, we present a brief history of capacity building and theorise capacity building as a form of intervention-lite that relies on the invitation by the host state and reaffirms an absolutist interpretation of sovereignty. The emerging norm of ‘well-managed migration’ asserts that if a state is not able to make migration safe, then the international community has a responsibility to provide resources and training to those national institutions. The article traces this logic of intervention-lite and the norm of ‘well-managed migration’ in the Global Compacts, particularly UNHCR Asylum Capacity Support Group and UN Network on Migration’s capacity building mechanism. Methodologically, we draw on elite interviews, case studies, policy analysis, project workplans, evaluations, UN white papers and reports to examine the concept of ‘capacity building’ as framed in the Global Compacts and its implications for migration management and sovereignty. While the compacts affirm state responsibility for migration management, the GCR and GCM increase the capacity of international organisations to intervene in domestic institutions, rather than increase the capacity of national institutions.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1. For example, see UNESCO definition of technical assistance: ‘Technical assistance is non-financial assistance provided by local or international specialists. It can take the form of sharing information and expertise, instruction, skills training, transmission of working knowledge, and consulting services and may also involve the transfer of technical data. The aim of technical assistance is to maximise the quality of project implementation and impact by supporting administration, management, policy development, capacity building, etc’. UNESCO, ‘Technical Assistance in Cultural Governance’, http://www.unesco.org/new/en/culture/themes/cultural-diversity/cultural-expressions/programmes/technical-assistance/what-is-technical-assistance.
2. Interview with project coordinator in Ethiopia, July 2022.
3. Authors’ calculation based on dataset from Elaine McGregor, ‘Money Matters: The Role of Funding in Migration Governance’. IMI Working Paper Series 149 (January 2019): 1–37.
4. McGregor coded project level data from IOM using a keyword search. Projects related to capacity building included at least one of the following words: Capacity, Capacities, Administrative, Equipment, Training, IMP, E-learning, Course, Guide, Toolkit, Enhancement, Modernisation, Modernise, Supporting, Facilitating, Improving, Strengthening, Empowering, Technical Cooperation, Ministry, Consular, Police.
5. Interview with senior official at IOM, Ethiopia, July 2022.
6. Interview with senior official at DG-DEVCO, European Commission, Brussels, June 2016.
7. Interview with senior official at DG-ECHO, European Commission, Brussels, July 2016.