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Home > Lessons from COVID-19: Managing Borders in the Next Global Public-Health Crisis

Policy Briefs
March 2024

Lessons from COVID-19: Managing Borders in the Next Global Public-Health Crisis

By  Meghan Benton and Lawrence Huang
Border Security
Border Enforcement
Technology & Infrastructure
COVID-19 Analysis and Data
Immigration Policy & Law
Visa Policy
International Governance
International Cooperation
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In March 2020, the global mobility system shut down in previously unimaginable ways. As COVID-19 cases multiplied, governments closed borders and introduced sweeping travel restrictions, entry bans, and suspensions of asylum and refugee resettlement. These policies evolved over time, giving rise to a complex web of mobility restrictions, conditions, and exemptions for certain groups, with undeniable consequences for societies and economies around the world.

Four years on, migration has returned to the pre-pandemic norm, but governments should not forget the costs of unplanned, long-lasting, and stringent travel restrictions. This is a key moment to examine the pandemic’s lingering impacts on mobility as well as to build a bench of evidence-based tools to manage mobility during future public-health crises. This brief highlights the importance of mobility measures that are clear, equitable, streamlined, and prepared to adapt to future challenges.

This capstone brief concludes a series of studies by MPI’s Task Force on Mobility and Borders during and after COVID-19 that explores opportunities to improve international coordination regarding border management during public-health crises. Regional case studies in this series look at Asia and the Pacific, Europe, the Middle East and North Africa, and South America. Its thematic studies consider the role of digital health credentials in facilitating movement, the use of risk analysis to shape border policies, and the rise of remote work and “digital nomads.”

Table of Contents 

1  Introduction

2  COVID-19 and the Mobility Shutdown

3  Lessons for Policymakers
A. Restricting Travel during Public-Health Emergencies
B. Mitigating the Risks and Costs of Travel Measures
C. Preparing for Future Emergencies

4  Conclusion

Media Resources

Contact 

Michelle Mittelstadt
202-266-1910
[email protected]

Experts 
Photo of Natalia Banulescu-Bogdan

Natalia Banulescu-Bogdan is Deputy Director of MPI’s International Program. Full Bio >

Photo of Kate Hooper

Kate Hooper is a Senior Policy Analyst with MPI's International Program. Full Bio >

Links 

Press Release


Source URL:https://www.migrationpolicy.org/research/lessons-covid-19-borders