SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
 issue10Mortandad en la fronteraLa racionalización de los mexicanos en Estados Unidos: estratificación racial en la teoría y en la práctica author indexsubject indexsearch form
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

Related links

  • Have no similar articlesSimilars in SciELO

Share


Migración y desarrollo

Print version ISSN 1870-7599

Abstract

GHOSH, Bimal. Derechos humanos y migración: el eslabón perdido. Migr. desarro [online]. 2008, n.10, pp.37-63. ISSN 1870-7599.

Protection of migrants' human rights and effective management of migration (in the sense of ensuring that the movements are orderly and predictable and therefore more manageable) are closely interlinked. However, existing literature on migration and human rights, though voluminous, has hardly endeavoured to bring this nexus into sharper focus. Policy making in the two areas has also remained largely peripheral to each other. And, despite fledging signs of a change, coalition between human rights organisations and migrants' associations has continued to be weak. The paper argues that the crucial nexus between human rights and migration constitutes the core of a commonalty of interests between those who are anxious to defend human rights and those concerned with better management of movement of people. Nation states have an abiding interest and inherent stake in protecting the basic rights of their own citizens even when they are abroad. This calls for close inter-state reciprocity and co-operation. Protecting these rights also helps nation states in fulfilling their obligations in other vital areas of their responsibility. The paper concludes by suggesting that a better understanding of these inter-linkages could lay the basis for a rich and proactive common agenda to which the state, human rights organisations, and migrants' associations can all creatively contribute, while advancing, and remaining faithful to their own vocations. As well as bringing migrants' basic rights into the mainstream of the human rights movement, it would lend new vitality and dynamism to the movement itself.

        · abstract in Spanish     · text in Spanish     · Spanish ( pdf )

 

Creative Commons License All the contents of this journal, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License