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Home > The End of Asylum? Evolving the Protection System to Meet 21st Century Challenges

Reports
July 2024

The End of Asylum? Evolving the Protection System to Meet 21st Century Challenges

By  Susan Fratzke, Meghan Benton, Andrew Selee, Emma Dorst and Samuel Davidoff-Gore
Border Security
Technology & Infrastructure
International Governance
International Cooperation
Refugee & Asylum Policy
Asylum Seekers
Cover image for The End of Asylum?
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The international protection regime is under increasingly untenable pressure, and the obsolescence of the policy architecture on which it relies is becoming more and more apparent. The territorial asylum system, which requires asylum seekers to reach another country’s territory in order to seek protection, has proven itself to be a blunt tool with which to address the protection challenges of the 21st century.

New crises, protracted displacement situations, and expanding norms about who merits protection have created a growing population of individuals in need of humanitarian protection. At the same time, other mobility pressures—including those rooted in demographic shifts, economic inequality, and climate change—have produced high levels of mixed migration, adding to the strain on border and asylum adjudication systems.

This report, which concludes the Beyond Territorial Asylum: Making Protection Work in a Bordered World initiative led by MPI and the Robert Bosch Stiftung, sets out a vision for the ongoing evolution of the international protection system, with a focus on the future of asylum. It analyzes promising developments and best-in-class ideas around facilitating orderly entry, ensuring system efficiency, and building regional capacity, and how these elements could foster a system that is better at providing protection for those who need it and at securing public trust by reducing chaos at borders and within public systems that must manage migration.

Table of Contents 

1  Introduction

2  The Asylum Labyrinth and Its Consequences

3  A Protection System for the 21st Century: What Could an Agenda for Action Look Like?
A. Address Displacement at a Regional Level through Longer-Term Capacity-Sharing
B. Encourage the Use of Safe and Orderly Means of Entry to Seek Protection
C. Provide Sufficient Resources for Asylum Processing and Streamline Procedures
D. Create Orderly Processes at Borders
E. Expand Non-Protection-Based Avenues for Migration

4  Conclusions

Media Resources

Contact 

Michelle Mittelstadt
202-266-1910
[email protected]

Experts 
Photo of Kathleen Newland

Kathleen Newland is a Senior Fellow and Co-Founder of the Migration Policy Institute. Full Bio >

Hanne Beirens photo

Hanne Beirens is an MPI Europe Fellow and is former Director of MPI Europe. Full Bio >

Links 
  • Press Release
  • Beyond Territorial Asylum initiative

Source URL:https://www.migrationpolicy.org/research/asylum-system-21st-century