Data Can Help Manage Human Mobility, says ECA's Chinganya

"Government should take up responsibilities to manage data and work together to develop partnerships" for migration statistics" - Oliver Chinganya, director of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA)'s African Centre for Statistics (ACS) at the first ever International Forum on Migration Statistics forum held in Paris, France.
22 January 2018

Paris — The ECA's African Centre for Statistics (ACS) this week participated in the first ever International Forum on Migration Statistics that was held in Paris, France.

The Forum, organized jointly by IOM, the UN Migration Agency, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA) brought together 700 statisticians, researchers, policy makers and representatives from civil society.

ACS Director Oliver Chinganya said the Forum was crucial as it offered space for experts to exchange views on how to improve and innovate existing data collection to better understand global migration trends, drivers and impacts, and to support policy evaluation.

Mr. Chinganya, who sat on a panel that discussed "Challenges for improving the production and use of migration statistics", said not much has been done in recent years on migration in terms of tracking stocks and flows.

"And yet migration is a key determinant of demographic patterns and dynamics of population trends. It also contributes to inclusive growth and sustainable development. In other words, it is an engine of economic growth, innovation and sustainable development," the ACS Director said.

Data, Mr. Chinganya said, can help manage human mobility.

He highlighted the challenges not only affecting African countries but also nations in developing regions, including those with good statistical infrastructure.

Mr. Chinganya shared with delegates what the ECA was doing working with other Pan African and international agencies in that regard.

"Political will, funding, partnership and trust, as well as tapping on the big potential are the imperatives if we are to meet the objectives of Agenda 2063 and the Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development as well meet the data requirements," he said.

The two-day event at the OECD Conference Centre in Paris consisted of five plenary sessions and close to forty parallel sessions.

"More and more, we are finding that without access to reliable, comprehensive and global data, managing migration policy becomes a game of blind man's bluff. As we prepare to meet at this forum, we need to consider migration's human faces, of course. But we have to always keep in mind that we can't begin to put smiles on those faces until we first grapple with the data," IOM Director General William Lacy Swing said ahead of the Forum.

Topics discussed included improving the production of migration data, global initiatives on migration, public opinion and migration, data innovation and big data and capacity building.

The Forum brought together experts and policy makers interested in migration measurement issues; explored innovative ways to measure population mobility across countries as well as economic and social immigrant integration; and helped create synergies between different actors and perspectives, with representatives from 'origin', 'transit' and 'host' countries of migrants.

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