ABSTRACT
The stated aim of the Global Compact for Migration (GCM) is to facilitate ‘safe, orderly and regular migration’. Yet, plain meaning alone fails to reveal who is shaping this formative narrative. The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) has played a crucial role in the preparatory phase of the GCM and is coordinating its implementation. In this article, we shed light on two out of the IOM’s global roles – a first one of coordinating the United Nations Network on Migration and the other role of organising the first International Migration Review Forum (IMRF) of the GCM. Hence, the IOM’s institutional upgrade leads us to question to what extent the IOM has designed the GCM’s narrative of ‘safe, orderly and regular migration’. Through a non-systematic document analysis of UN and IOM reports and briefs, we find evidence that the IOM adjusts the meaning behind the ‘safe, orderly and regular migration’ depending on whether a global, respectively, regional mandate is at stake. To this end, we investigate the IOM’s activities in West Africa where it faces an increasingly divided mission that lies at the intersection of its global and (trans-) regional roles. A closer look at how the IOM applies the narrative at global and West African levels reveals that it deliberately rearranges the order of the adjectives ‘safe, orderly and regular’ to produce different meanings for different policy purposes. Viewed strategically, we find the IOM generates such word combinations to either pursue its abovementioned multilevel strategy, or to affirm its new position among UN agencies. Hence, one and the same adjective deployed at the global and regional level amounts to a different meaning, with implications for policy attribution. In result, the IOM’s strategy to recast the narrative of ‘safe, regular and orderly migration’ depending on whether it is fulfilling a regional or global role, ultimately leads to greater tension within the IOM as a whole.
Acknowledgements
We thank Susan Kaplan for editorial assistance.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1. IOM Regional Office (Dakar) for West and Central Africa https://rodakar.iom.int/; for ECOWAS, the scope of West Africa includes 15 countries. Yet another definition is used by the EU, which often relates to the notion of G5 Sahel, a security and development conglomerate financed by the EU, covering five countries: Mali, Mauretania, Niger, Chad and Burkina Faso.
2. Interview with Karen Abuzayd, UN Special Adviser, 6 May 2016, available at: https://news.un.org/en/story/2016/05/528672-interview-karen-abuzayd-special-adviser-summit-addressing-large-movements, accessed 26 January 2023.
3. Pledges of the IOM to the IMRF Citation2022, available at: https://www.iom.int/sites/g/files/tmzbdl486/files/documents/iom-pledges-v3.pdf.
4. The four IOM issue briefs address ‘Promoting Inclusive Societies and Including Migrants in COVID-19 Response and Recovery’ (Citation2022g), ‘Promoting Safe and Regular Migration’ (Citation2022h), ‘Preventing Loss of Life and Other Tragedies During Migration’ (Citation2022f), and ‘Building Capacity’ (Citation2022e).
5. Article 2 paragraph 6. ‘The United Nations and the International Organization for Migration will cooperate and conduct their activities without prejudice to the rights and responsibilities of one another under their respective constituent instruments’.
6. Missing Migrants Project https://missingmigrants.iom.int/region/mediterranean.
7. Between 2006 and 2008, nearly 50,000 people boarded on Senegalese pirogues and headed for the Canary Islands – the Cayucos crisis preceded the Mediterranean crossings.
8. Missing Migrants Project https://missingmigrants.iom.int/region/mediterranean.
10. IOM MATCH, available at: eea.iom.int/match-hiring-African-talents.
11. Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There, Macmillan, London 1982 is the sequel to Alice in the Wonderland.