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Human Development - a Framework for Migration Policies

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  • Human Development - a Framework for Migration Policies

    PRESS RELEASE
    United Nations Development Programme / Armenia
    14 Petros Adamyan St., Yerevan 0010
    Contact: Mr. Hovhannes Sarajyan, Communications Associate
    Tel: +37410 566 073
    E-mail: [email protected]<mailto:hovhannes.sa [email protected]>
    Web site: http://www.undp.am


    Human Development - a Framework for Migration Policies

    Yerevan, 11 May 2010 - "Armenia's migration policies should be built
    on the human development framework that views migration as a tool for
    realization of the individual's opportunities and freedoms," states
    the 2009 National Human Development Report (NHDR) that was officially
    launched today at the UN Office in Armenia. The findings of the Report
    are based on qualitative data presenting materials of in-depth
    interviews or focus groups conducted with migrants. The quantitative
    data used in the document has a purpose to outline the trends, rather
    than definitive and ultimate statistics. The NHDR is a powerful
    advocacy and policy making tool to highlight major development
    challenges and recommend policies to address these issues and promote
    human development.

    The UNDP commissioned Report, which is entitled Migration and Human
    Development: Opportunities and Challenges, was presented with
    participation of Ms. Dafina Gercheva, UN Resident Coordinator/UNDP
    Resident Representative in Armenia, Mr. Armen Gevorgyan, RoA Deputy
    Prime Minister, Minister of Territorial Administration, Ambassador
    Raul de Luzenberger, Head of the EU Delegation to Armenia, Ms. Ilona
    Ter-Minasyan, IOM Representative in Armenia, Mr. Gagik Yeganyan, Head
    of Migration Agency under the Ministry of Territorial Administration,
    as well as independent national experts directly involved in the
    preparation of the report and representatives of relevant
    international and national structures.

    The prevalent estimate is that about 700,000-1,300,000 people have
    emigrated from Armenia since the first intensive wave of emigration
    from Armenia that started back in 1991. During this period the
    migration processes in the country were driven by socio-economic
    causes and no sufficient attention was paid to human development
    objectives. An overview of causes of migration shows that many of them
    are work-related problems, such as the lack of employment, obstacles
    to doing business and the insufficiency of conditions for people to
    realize their potential and to be appreciated adequately. Reportedly,
    emigration from Armenia has mainly involved qualified human resources
    mostly from the urban areas which had significant negative effects on
    Armenia's development processes, in particular on reproduction of
    social and cultural capital. However, the migration is not a one-sided
    process and although its domestic causes are mostly negative in terms
    of human development, it also contributed to improving key human
    development indicators, such as living standards and children's
    education in Armenia. Moreover, it helped to solve health care
    problems, due to the inflow of remittances provided by migrants to
    their families.

    Addressing the participants of the event, Ms. Dafina Gercheva said,
    "Human development is a process of enlarging people's choices. The
    most critical ones are to lead a long and healthy life, to be educated
    and to enjoy a decent standard of living. UNDP's overarching value
    proposition is its commitment to a more sustainable human development
    path. We have a proven track record in accelerating human development
    through reinforcing institutional capacities of state and non-state
    actors. If human development is the 'what' of UNDP's mandate, then
    capacity development is essentially the 'how.' UNDP in Armenia is well
    positioned to support the government in its efforts to establish
    flexible mechanisms of migration management and to reinforce state
    capacity to address the changing trends in migration through targeted
    policy making and implementation."

    The NHDR argues that migration policy priorities should focus on
    steering migration processes in such a way as to encourage the
    accumulation of innovative and creative human resources with the
    strategic potential of contributing to human development prospects in
    Armenia. The approaches to development adopted in the RoA Government's
    Sustainable Development Program, the main strategic document on
    Armenia's development, need to take into consideration all these
    policy priorities.
    "Migration trends of varying degrees have always been a part of the
    Armenian reality, however during the last two decades Armenia saw
    unprecedented high rates and particular quality of migration flows,
    which grew into challenges that alarmingly affect different aspects of
    our life. For these very reasons, the solution of migration related
    issues not only fails to leave the urgent to-do list of imminent
    challenges faced by the Armenian government but takes on even more
    significance, as demonstrate the reforms implemented in 2009 within
    the state migration management system along with the initiative to
    develop a new strategy for the state policy on migration," said
    Mr. Armen Gevorgyan. He thanked the UNDP for providing a comprehensive
    and a thorough analysis of the linkages between the migration and
    human development processes from the perspective of Armenia's
    strategic development.

    The NHDR consists of five chapters dedicated to the following issues
    concerning migration flows related to Armenia: migration trends in a
    globalizing world in the context of human development; causal
    interplay between migration, poverty, and inequality; relationship
    between migration governance and human rights; role of migrants'
    remittances and the Armenian Diaspora in the human development
    process; and relationship between migration and current human
    development trends.

    The full text of the Report can be accessed on the UNDP/Armenia
    website: http://www.undp.am


    ###
    UNDP is the UN's global development network, advocating for change and
    connecting countries to knowledge, experience and resources to help
    people build a better life. We are on the ground in 166 countries,
    working with them on their own solutions to global and national
    development challenges. As they develop local capacity, they draw on
    the people of UNDP and our wide range of partners. UNDP in Armenia was
    established in 1993 and supports the Government of Armenia to reach
    its own development priorities and the Millennium Development Goals by
    2015.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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