migrationpolicy.org
Published on migrationpolicy.org (https://www.migrationpolicy.org)

Home > Building a New Regional Migration System: Redefining U.S. Cooperation with Mexico and Central America

Reports
November 2020

Building a New Regional Migration System: Redefining U.S. Cooperation with Mexico and Central America

By  Andrew Selee and Ariel G. Ruiz Soto
Border Security
Border Enforcement
Smuggling & Trafficking
Technology & Infrastructure
COVID-19 Analysis and Data
Employment & the Economy
Recruitment
Sectoral Employment
Skills
Temporary Workers
Illegal Immigration & Interior Enforcement
Immigration Policy & Law
Employment-Based Immigration
Visa Policy
International Governance
International Cooperation
Migration & Development
Circular Migration
Development Impacts
Refugee & Asylum Policy
Asylum Seekers
coverthumb_rethinking regional migration
Download Report

Migration between the United States and neighboring countries to the south is an enduring if ever-shifting phenomenon. While the COVID-19 pandemic and measures put in place to stop the spread of the virus have severely limited mobility, longer-standing questions about how best to manage regional migration remain as important as ever. These include how to address the mixed movement of unauthorized economic migrants and those fleeing persecution, with many families and unaccompanied children among them, and how to facilitate the legal movement of workers to meet labor demand and make the most of the region’s human capital.

The Trump administration has largely focused on enhancing border controls and sharply narrowing access to asylum at the border, with the aim of deterring migration and turning back those who arrive without authorization to enter. Yet this heavily enforcement-focused strategy is unlikely to be sustainable in the long run.

This report puts forward another approach, one that reflect the many faces of migration through the region and that is rooted in closer cooperation with Mexico and Central American countries. Its key element are:

  1. expanding opportunities for legal movement by extending seasonal work visas to nationals of countries in Central America that have the greatest migration pressures;
  2. re-establishing asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border, but streamlining processes to ensure fair and timely decisions;
  3. professionalizing border enforcement in Mexico and the United States to make it both more effective and more humane; and
  4. investing in economic and institutional development in Central America to address the forces driving people to leave their homes.

While a transition from one approach to another cannot happen overnight—and indeed careful sequencing of policy changes will be essential to avoid triggering a surge in migration throughout the region—it is essential if the United States and its partners are to move the needle towards safer, more orderly, and legal migration.

Para leer este reporte en español, haga clic aquí.

Table of Contents 

1  Rethinking Regional Strategies to Address Migration

2  The Emergence of a Regional Migration System

3  Creating Temporary Labor Migration Pathways

4  Rebuilding Humanitarian Protection Systems
A. Expanding In-Country Protection Systems
B. Supporting Mexico’s Asylum System and Resettlement Initiatives
C. Strengthening Refugee Resettlement to the United States

5  Ensuring Transparent and Rule-Based Border Enforcement

6  Investing in Economic and Institutional Development

7  Towards a New Regional Migration System

Media Resources

Contact 

Michelle Mittelstadt
202-266-1910
[email protected]

Experts 
Photo of Doris Meissner

Doris Meissner, former Commissioner of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, directs MPI's U.S. immigration policy work. Full Bio >

Links 
  • Press Release
  • Rethinking U.S. Immigration Policy initiative

Source URL:https://www.migrationpolicy.org/research/new-regional-migration-system-us-mexico-central-america